Right, but if you're a GM for 5 years, assuming you have 7 picks per draft, you're drafting 35 players. If you consistently go against the odds, they catch you. Miami has literally been up against the odds for years based on the players and coaches they've drafted and hired. If I'm a GM and I'm looking at a guy who has a strong chance to fail - whether it be due to athletic testing, mediocre performance in college, or some other factor - I want to have a good reason for taking that gamble. You want some elite characteristics that make you believe this player will defy the trends. Players with Tannehill's college career and pro career to date more often than not fail to become franchise QB's. You can point to reasons that it's been harder for Tannehill, but a lot of QB's who had similar career paths and failed to meet expectations also had reasons.
Take one of my favorite players from the 2014 draft, Ryan Shazier. I had him ranked as the 3rd best player, and I was generally laughed at for the ranking. A lot of people had question marks about his size and instincts, but I insisted that he's as close to can't miss as it gets. Guys with that combination of athleticism and production at the LB position very rarely fall short of excellence - let alone fail. KNOWINGFINFAN recently pointed out that his closest peer in recent years as a prospect was Patrick Willis, but Willis did not test or produce as well as Shazier. He got laughed at for mentioning it, but I warned that it wasn't to be taken lightly. One preseason half into his career, Shazier has 9 solo tackles, 1 INT, 1 PD, and 2 solo ST's tackles. All of a sudden, people are writing articles about how he moves like a CB at 237 lbs. That's the kind of guy you want to target. The guy that has All Pro written on his forehead. When was the last time Miami landed a true stud like that?