I do not think the two first round picks were for Stafford, in my opinion the Rams paid one first round pick and a third for him, which makes sense as the Lions wanted a first round pick for Stafford but since there were so many teams interested the Rams had to offer a little bit more for him so they could get him, the other first round pick was for the Lions to accept Goff’s contract since it was Impossible to have both Goff and Stafford on the organization at the same time, so they needed a trading partner for Goff and with that contract no one wanted him so they made a deal with the Lions since they could take the hit of having Goff on their team.
In a way this reminds me of the Browns-Texans trade for Brock Osweiler and those kind of moves at least to me tells me of an organization that is only thinking short term but that over the long term will suffer, as it is the case of the Texans right now, the Lions are the big winners of this trade, they are picking a QB this year if Goff works out and improves his game then they can trade him and get more picks, if not then just cut him and build around the future QB of the franchise, on the other hand the Rams are on a win now mode, they got Stafford and 12.75 millions in cap space, they are still 19 millions over the projected cap but it can be solved if they smart.
The Rams really screwed themselves. Twice. Once when the signed Goff to a "franchise QB" contract, and again when they changed their minds. Not that I'm complaining, although I would have been happy to see Goff stay in the NFC west, if you catch my drift.
I agree that the Lions got the better end of the bargain, and the Rams still have a cap hit for this year, along with little room to do much. Stafford might have a stronger arm, but if Sean McVay thinks that's going to solve the Rams' problems, he's in for rude awakening.
I also don't get the digs on Goff. I think he's a fine quarterback, with a lot of talent. He's had issues with turnovers, but there's plenty of blame to go around for a significant portion of them, not excluding the coaching staff. This past year he had the best completion percentage of his career, he started 15 games, played in all 16, while hurt for a few of them, including the playoffs.
Speaking of caps, I can't wait to see the tricks Saints come up with to get under the cap. They're over by like a hundred mil last time I checked.
I read that somewhere recently, also. They always seem to come up with some tricks, but usually it had to do with Drew Brees restructuring his contract.
What are your predictions?
Most of the Bucks' players haven't been to a superbowl, so there's a chance that the big-stage jitters will give the Chiefs the advantage. I think the Bucks covering the spread is a safe bet, but it's pretty darn close. I have a feeling the Bucks are going to win, they have a slight edge on Defense, and as the saying goes "Defense wins championships."