"Even after one of the top cornerbacks fell to within striking distance, even after the best pass-rushing defensive ends had flown off the board, general manager Howie Roseman said, the Eagles got their man in last weekend's NFL draft.
For seven months, he said, he had eyed Baylor guard Danny Watkins.
It started with an August conversation with Art Briles, the Baylor head coach who had mentored Eagles quarterback Kevin Kolb in high school and college. In a visit to the Eagles, Briles raved about his offensive tackle. Roseman knows Briles well, so when he started watching tape in September, video of Watkins' junior year was one of the first he checked out. He saw toughness, pass protection, run blocking, and smarts.
"He was one of the players that the minute you watch you want on your team," Roseman said.
But the Eagles had two other big needs - cornerback and defensive end. And on Thursday's draft day, one of the best corners in the 2010 class slid closer and closer. Nebraska's Prince Amukamara dropped to within seven picks, then six, then five.
Did the Eagles try to move up? Firm answers are elusive.
"Prince is a good player, and we liked him," Roseman said Tuesday. But Roseman said the team wanted the "flexibility" of keeping picks later in the draft.
"For us, the better outcome was picking the guy we picked and continuing to get more players," he said.
Pressed on the issue, Roseman added, "You always look into what things would cost to get up there, but we felt very comfortable" picking at 23.
Amukamara's fall hints that some teams liked him less than draft analysts did, though it was also due in part to an early run on quarterbacks that pushed others down the board. Media perceptions don't always match NFL scouting reports, Roseman said, though he said he wasn't speaking specifically about Amukamara.
With Giants fans chanting "We want Prince!" the Eagles' rivals grabbed the corner at 19. The Eagles will see how good he is twice a year.
The Eagles picked four slots later. The top defensive linemen left, including Cameron Jordan and Cam Heyward, were better suited to the 3-4. Cornerback Jimmy Smith was there, but character questions dragged him out of the Eagles' plans."