I feel like a good bit of EDCs roster building philosophy on offense is influenced by Lamar, and on defense it’s been circumstantial. Lamar makes for an unorthodox offense and a RB/TE group gets a shit ton more value out of Lamar for less capital than WRs and OL, but it hasn’t worked out long term because the OL has just been ignored too much.
On defense I think it’s just been hard to get our hands on edge and interior rushers, and much easier to find high end talents(at the time) at positions like S, CB, and LB.
It really is a shame that year after year it feels like the obvious best player available has been a db because that’s just how the board fell, there’s been an abundance of DB talent coming out of college to the point that they keep falling to our late first.
I wouldn’t have wanted any available player over Wiggins or Hamilton for example, not at the time of picking, not even close. I loved Jordan Davis but I was ecstatic that the eagles jumped us for him instead of Hamilton, and I was ecstatic that Wiggins was the guy that fell instead of Terrion Arnold. Hard to fault Eric for those picks, but when it keeps happening we really suffer as a team, especially when the defensive playcalling is nullifying the huge investment we’ve made.
I frankly have no issues with how we've approached first round picks, or what we've done with the secondary.
For me, it comes down to understanding your organizational strengths/weaknesses, and most importantly, understanding which positions you can without high end players and which one's you can't. It's not universal of course, but it's not overly hard.
The main questions are around positional value. Was paying $20M/yr to an off-ball linebacker the best use of financial resources? As good as he was last year, there's questions about whether giving $15M/yr to a 30 year old RB is a good use of financial resources. You could question whether paying $13M on a 5th year option to an OLB who doesn't have a strong track record of getting to the QB is a good use of financial resources. Was $11M for Mark Andrews a good use of financial resources?
I think if you looked league wide, off-ball linebackers and RBs are two positions that a lot of teams simply go "cheap" on, because most running games live or die by the Olineman in front of them, not a lot of teams can run the ball well anyway (making off-ball LB play less important), teams run a lot more Nickel/Dime packages than ever, which takes off-ball LBs off the field, and most of them can't cover anyway.
I think even if you look at the EDC era, I think our draft strengths are in the secondary and at TE, meaning I feel better about our ability to draft and develop players in those groups than I would paying for them. I actually think our Dline work has been pretty good, especially in run D, though its hard to find premier interior rushers where we typically draft.
Where we are clearly weak, draft-wise, is on outside pass rushers and interior Oline. We've struggled in that area for a long time now. That, in my opinion, means we should prioritize those positions via FA or via trade markets. The latter we've done some of, the former we've done very little of.