Megatron said:Your not my father.
Are you absolutely sure about that??
Megatron said:Your not my father.
Muck said:That's right I'm not your father. Chet Steadman's not your father. Your mother doesn't even know who your father is!!
Your father's some guy who left town......
In the recent past the supplemental draft is a 3 tier weighted lottery. Meaning every team with 6 or fewer wins last year will have a chance to have a higher pick.Muck said:I think a 2nd gets him for sure. A 3rd should also do the trick, since the only team with a better chance of getting him in that round is San Francisco, who plays a 3-4 defense.
As for supplemental draft procedures, this is straight from the folks at NFL headquarters who would oversee such a draft: Each club’s draft position is weighted by assigning the weakest club the greatest number of lottery chances and the strongest club the fewest number. Team strength and weakness will be determined by the original order of the first round of the prior to the April draft and before any trades (i.e., the weakest club, which from the 2003 season is the San Diego Chargers, will have its name in the drawing 32 times, the next weakest 31 times, etc., until the Super Bowl winner, which would have its name in once).
There is a three-step drawing process that works in the following order:
1. Teams that won six or fewer games in the prior regular season are placed together in a container and drawn to determine the initial arrangement of places in the selection order;
2. The remaining non-playoff teams are placed together in a container and drawn to determine their places following those determined in the first drawing;
3. Playoff teams are placed together in a container and drawn to determine the remaining places in the selection order.
That fact is not being debated. The debate concerns whether or not the supplemental draft is conducted just like the regular draft. Either each pick is made public when the pick is made (like the reg. draft), or bids are placed on each player a team is interested in and the round they are willing to make the pick in. Then the league configures all this info and determines who placed the earliest bid for each player and therefore is awarded that player. There is a risk here due to not knowing how early a team is willing to bid for a certain player. The latter is my contention, however I do not have a link. It's just what I've been led to understand.Dphins4me said:In the recent past the supplemental draft is a 3 tier weighted lottery. Meaning every team with 6 or fewer wins last year will have a chance to have a higher pick.
I knowPatsSuck456 said:Hopefully this is true.
Sorry, the answer to your question is Bids are placed.Dolfan4life! said:The debate concerns whether or not the supplemental draft is conducted just like the regular draft. Either each pick is made public when the pick is made (like the reg. draft), or bids are placed on each player a team is interested in and the round they are willing to make the pick in.