I agree 100%.
When you are building a young team and stockpiled lots of draft picks, I see no real reason not to draft multiple OL each year. We made a mistake not drafting 2 OL in 2019, IMHO. While I'm on record many times being frustrated by our ridiculously bad philosophy for drafting OL that almost guarantees that we never keep OL chemistry, that is no reason to stop drafting them. We need to draft multiple OL in 2021. When you draft projects, there's no way they all work out. When you draft low ceiling guys, there is no way they all work out. When you need 5 starters and at least 2 subs every year, there's just no excuse for not drafting at least 1 OL each year.
I have high hopes for Austin Jackson. IMHO, he is an elite prospect 2021 draft choice that came out a year too early and his draft status fell, which is why we drafted him late in round 1 of 2020. Had he stayed in school and not played this year at all, he would have probably been a top 10 pick in 2021. But, physically he is not ready yet. Nor is he ready experience-wise. And his technique is very spotty and raw in places. He needs the reps to become the player his athleticism makes possible, because right now he isn't that player. I can see Jackson not starting in 2020.
Hunt is physically ready. If he gets the technique down he can play right away. But, being a small school guy, the jump in speed will be shockingly tough. He will have to learn the technique on the fly because the kid is raw. Then he'll have to master it, then he'll have to instantly process what he sees decide how to act and make that action instantly 10+ times per play. For him it will be a question of when/if he can learn that much, change how he plays the game that much, and be instantaneous processing that information and making those decisions each play. He has the explosion, power, and size to do what is asked ... but he simply has not done it before and does not know what to do.
It's like coming into your first day of high school and realizing they're putting you into advanced applied mathematics. In the 3 summer months you need to learn Pre-Algebra, Algebra, Trig, Pre-Calculus, Calculus, and Statistics. At the end of those 3 months you will be expected to have mastered all of those and be put on a speed test to see how many questions you can answer out of 100 in 20 minutes and measured against a class of Mathematics PhD's. Can you learn it all? Yes. But that's a LOT of new stuff to learn in a short period of time. Can you mater all that? Maybe, but it will definitely take time. Can you prove you're better than all those other PhD's the NFL is pitting against you? Hard to accomplish, but not impossible.
I would not consider him a bust if the answer is no in 2020. Most people on this board seem to think it's a given that he will master all that. Very few small school guys can make that jump in 1 year. It really is asking a lot of the player. Many never can make that jump, because the competition is razor sharp and projecting someone learning that much is just that ... a projection.
IMHO, we need to give these OL draft picks time to adjust, time to grow, and time to become the players they can be. None of them is plug and play, no matter what Daniel Jeremiah says.