If I were the Otters GM, I'd spend my days prepping for the draft by looking not just at the film reel but the young men behind the plays as well. Everyone gets a fair chance to pile on impressive stats during the regular season, but a successful franchise in the long run is one that finds quality teammates and engaged players who will bring loyalty to their team and put winning above their own accolades. This is a difficult proposal, we saw the media's post-season player rankings and all-pro awards reveal the ugly side of players that felt they deserved better, and dramatic statements by S2 prospects like Clegane and Pest showed that players may put their own preferences ahead of their careers. Some GMs may be impressed by a player's motivation to be elite or their fierce loyalty to their teammates, but with all the positives you also need to see the character negatives. Self-centered or egotistic players will hurt more in the long run if they abandon the team or sabotage the GM's plans for their own benefit.
Beyond that, the Otters have plenty of holes to fill and no shortage of ways to fill them. The expansion draft set them back even farther with the loss of several key players and trades that may not benefit the Otters in the end. The risk of losing Clegane due to his sky-high draft stock may put their run first offense back on the drawing board, so my top priority would be finding a way to get him in the first round, or find a suitable replacement to keep the Otters elite O-line in shape.
Beyond that, the Otters have plenty of holes to fill and no shortage of ways to fill them. The expansion draft set them back even farther with the loss of several key players and trades that may not benefit the Otters in the end. The risk of losing Clegane due to his sky-high draft stock may put their run first offense back on the drawing board, so my top priority would be finding a way to get him in the first round, or find a suitable replacement to keep the Otters elite O-line in shape.