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3. The NFL (aka the most successful league in the US) has done reverse standings drafts and I've never heard a single person complain about it because it's not an issue, the NHL just loves to pretend they're smart and makes up problems to make convoluted "solutions" to
Not that I couldn’t be swayed by your argument, but based off of nothing other than my suspicions, I suspect the value of the #1 overall in the NFL draft isn’t as valuable as it is in the NHL as:
- Larger rosters, greater injury risks, and shorter careers mean any one player has less of an impact on the success of a franchise; especially over the course of several seasons
- Greater role specialization and a greater disparity between the value of certain roles means there is greater variance between the value available at the top of the draft from year to year (think years when the consensus top talent is a QB versus a year when the consensus top talent is a defensive back)
- NFL draft classes have much smaller sample sizes of competition to use as evaluation data points. Though all players time are coming through the same feeder system, there can be large talent, coaching, and resource disparities between individual programs; which can make it difficult to determine how much is the player and how much is the program
- There are simply far more Alexandre Daigle level busts in the NFL
The local and recent case in point for all this: the Niners trade three consecutive 1st round picks + a 3rd rounder so they could draft QB Trey Lance at 3rd overall. He played 8 games over two seasons, suffered two significant injuries that impacted his availability or play, and was traded in his third season to the Cowboys for a 4th rounder. He is their 3rd string quarterback.
The Niners are in the superbowl this weekend, being lead by their 2nd year quarterback they drafted with a compensatory pick at the very end of the draft.
Converse to all this is the NHL, and to an even greater degree the NBA, where smaller roster sizes, lower variability in positional value, and draft eligibles with greater evaluation sample sizes and better parity amoung jr programs (less so I suspect, for college basketball than jr hockey) make top draft picks much more valuable.
To be clear I have absolutely no data to back any of this up and I’ve speculated the entirety of my rationale.