NFL writers assigning letter grades to teams’ performances in the draft are pretty silly exercises for a number of reasons. First and foremost: there’s no possible way to know how a draft is going to turn out until at least a couple years from now. Until then, it’s all speculation based on projection — and people trying to sound smart by creating causal connections where they quite possibly do not exist. Secondarily, those who analyze the draft for publication are more informed than, say, the average person on the street but almost certainly less informed than, say, the teams who have a vested interest in the players they are selecting.