Bill Belichick's first draft pick as an NFL head coach was a safety. It was 1991. We thought he was nuts.
The top cornerbacks were on the board and, besides, nobody in football's modern era had ever taken a safety as high as No. 2 overall. A safety!
Well, not only did the late Eric Turner outplay the corners picked below him, Belichick also showed that he knew way back when which direction NFL offenses were heading with their multiple receivers spread out and their big, pass-catching tight ends creating mismatches for little corners and bulky linebackers.
Fast forward a couple of decades and, well, it's good to be an NFL safety.
Ed Reed and Troy Polamalu are wrapping up Hall of Fame-caliber careers. Seattle won a Super Bowl by crushing Peyton Manning with a dominant secondary featuring the league's best safety tandem in Earl Thomas and Kam Chancellor. And a month after the Saints gave Jairus Byrd a safety-record $26.3 million guaranteed at the start of free agency, Thomas topped that this week with an extension containing $27.8 million guaranteed.
"You need safeties that can cover slot receivers and also play the deep middle of the field as well as down in the box," said Alabama's Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, the top safety available in next week's draft. "You need more versatile [interchangeable] safeties in this league right now."
Safety hasn't overtaken cornerback in terms of overall value, but it is pulling closer. Clinton-Dix and Louisville's Calvin Pryor, the top free safeties, should be selected somewhere among the second 10 picks, while Jimmie Ward, the highest strong safety on the board from Northern Illinois, could sneak into the bottom of the first round.