NFL Trade Verdict

Even Trade

Seattle acquired 1989 first round pick (#15-Andy Heck); 1990 first round pick (#10-Ray Agnew Jr.) from Indianapolis Colts / Baltimore Colts on 1988-09-08, sending Fredd Young in return. The trade is best understood as a narrow roster or draft-position move. Seattle acquired 1989 first round pick (#15-Andy Heck); 1990 first round pick (#10-Ray Agnew Jr.) and gave up Fredd Young, with the available evidence supporting a C+ grade rather than a stronger verdict. It should remain in the public database, but the analysis should not pretend it changed the arc of Seahawks history.

September 8, 1988 Seattle SeahawksIndianapolis Colts Baltimore Colts Confidence: medium Tier: standard Provisional Record

Seattle Seahawks Received

  • pick 1989 first round pick (#15-Andy Heck)
  • pick 1990 first round pick (#10-Ray Agnew Jr.)

Trade Summary

Seattle acquired 1989 first round pick (#15-Andy Heck); 1990 first round pick (#10-Ray Agnew Jr.) from Indianapolis Colts / Baltimore Colts on 1988-09-08, sending Fredd Young in return. The trade is best understood as a narrow roster or draft-position move. Seattle acquired 1989 first round pick (#15-Andy Heck); 1990 first round pick (#10-Ray Agnew Jr.) and gave up Fredd Young, with the available evidence supporting a C+ grade rather than a stronger verdict. It should remain in the public database, but the analysis should not pretend it changed the arc of Seahawks history.

Trade Analysis

Seattle acquired 1989 first round pick (#15-Andy Heck); 1990 first round pick (#10-Ray Agnew Jr.) from Indianapolis Colts / Baltimore Colts on 1988-09-08, sending Fredd Young in return. The trade is best understood as a narrow roster or draft-position move. Seattle acquired 1989 first round pick (#15-Andy Heck); 1990 first round pick (#10-Ray Agnew Jr.) and gave up Fredd Young, with the available evidence supporting a C+ grade rather than a stronger verdict. It should remain in the public database, but the analysis should not pretend it changed the arc of Seahawks history. The partner acquired the known player while surrendering draft flexibility.