Says the guy who wants to draft a Center in the later rounds to bring up behind Barnes. The continuity stuff isn't as applicable because Barnes was only the starter for one year in which a lot of the surrounding cast changed. He's also not a starting caliber C in the NFL.
Yea. That's the best of both worlds. We get continuity and a better talent to develop.
The continuity stuff is definitely applicable. Barnes started all 16 games last year and each of the other 4 OLs started games last year.
Barnes is a starting caliber C. That was proven in 2015.
But we DON'T have the opportunity to "have an OL that has gelled from day 1". We had three starters miss time from injury and guys like Reynolds playing 3 different positions. That's hardly allowing the oline to gel. Sure we can have familiarity but don't mistake it for actual experience or extended chemistry.
With that being said, bringing an improvement for the difference of 1 or 2 million dollars seems like bettering the team NOW. So, from my perspective having him lock down the center position means we ARE trying to do better -- starting now.
I think you're also underrating what someone like Wis would bring to the table. Physically, I think he brings much more than you're stating he does and the gap between him and Barnes is sizeable. But aside from that, he brings MUCH NEEDED veteran, starting experience at a position where experience significantly matters. Not to mention we're counting on two rookies (one of whom is coming back from a season ending injury) and a slow-learning, young LT to start. Adding another experienced player on the line can help mitigate some of the growing pains these young linemen will experience.
An upgrade is an upgrade and I think team should seriously consider ones that are available. With guys like Mack and Wis making their way to the market the Rams would be foolish not to take a look.
Bringing in little to no improvement for $1 million to $2 million more does nothing for me.
And yes, we do have an opportunity for an OL that has gelled from day 1. Each of these guys were on the team last year and started games. That's actual experience, that's familiarity, and as we saw near the end of last year, that's chemistry. Jamon Brown is the only guy that wasn't really out there over the second half of last year but he still started the first 9 games next to Barnes.
I'm not underrating what someone like Wisniewski brings to the board. If anything, the market told us last year what NFL teams think of him. What he brings to the board got severely overrated last year (and I was one of the people that fell into that trap). Seems like it's happening again. Wisniewski's name value is higher than his actual value to NFL teams.
I'm sure the Rams will take a look. They took a look at Wisniewski last year and then left him on the market. Anyways, I've said my piece. Moving on.