The Columbus Dispatch

Teams weigh when to draft replacemen­ts

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Derrick Johnson has always been a company man, willing to do whatever it takes to help the Kansas City Chiefs win playoff games and someday end their long Super Bowl drought.

Restructur­e his contract? OK. Tutor young linebacker­s? Sure thing.

The point where Johnson draws the line is in telling the Chiefs when he'll finally hang up the cleats. The 34-year-old is coming off a second seasonendi­ng Achilles tendon injury, and he knows he's entering the twilight of his career. But he doesn't know if the end will come after the upcoming season or the one after that, when his current contract is due to expire.

"I struggle with that," he said. "The older you get, the more you know it's coming to an end at some point. But I just hope and pray when football is over for me I can have peace and rest."

Therein lays the challenge for every team in the NFL: When is it the right time to draft replacemen­ts, especially when extra roster spots have become invaluable, time limits on practice are more constricti­ve, and the pressure to win has never been greater?

"You're always trying to work ahead and trying to prevent the roster from taking a major, major hit at any position. That's the nature of the National Football League," said Titans general manager Jon Robinson. "As veteran players age or hit a level where they become maybe too expensive for your football team, that's something that you have to look at and manage."

Precisely how teams manage it varies in just about every respect.

First there's the timeframe.

Teams try to forecast about three years ahead, but several GMs said that has become increasing­ly difficult. More players are walking away from the game early because of the increased risks of injuries and concerns over head trauma, while the shelf life of some positions may only be a few years to begin with, making it difficult to forecast even a year in advance. Then there are positional difference­s.

There are some jobs where a player can be drafted and slide right into the starting lineup with minimal experience, while it may take others several years of developmen­t before being ready for games.

Finally, there are philosophi­cal difference­s.

Teams such as the Packers prefer to shore up holes almost exclusivel­y through the draft, while others are more willing to dip into free agency. The draft carries the significan­t benefit of financial flexibilit­y, but the downside is the pressure of enduring a crash-course on life in profession­al football.

"You can't predict the future," Robinson said, "but you just try to set yourself up so the rosters can kind of weather the storm of losing guys, and you can still play winning, productive football."

In Kansas City, Johnson is still capable of playing at a high level, even if nobody is quite sure how long that will last.

"One of the neat things we have going is we bring in good competitio­n at all spots. There are no positions absolutely guaranteed," Chiefs coach Andy Reid said. "If a guy goes down, the next one comes in, and you have to maintain that, maintain that level of competitio­n. And you obviously keep the best guys that create the most competitio­n."

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