It doesn't seem like many teams stay White friendly for very long, they always seem to go back to what most of the league looks like. The Patriots seem to have the longest streak, but even Bellicheck is afraid to go all out and drafts a ton of affletes, they just happen to be beaten out by White players that no other team wanted. He finally drafted a top pass rusher in Bequette, I think they will go to more of a 4-3 base now that 3-4 teams are more popular. He still isn't playing Woodhead to his full potential as long as Welker is 100 percent, we saw him used a little more in the passing game in the Superbowl with Gronkowski injured but he went away from that in the 2nd half. I think they would have kept things flowing if he kept it the same. Woodhead should see his role expanding but he drafted 2 backs, neither of them showed much so I think they are gone soon and then he picked up Ryan Grant this offseason after losing Lawfirm. I mean I understand using rbbc but Woodhead should at least be in a Warrick Dunn type role. He could have been using Edelman as an outside receiver this entire time but hasn't, only when a half dozen dbs were injured he was put in on defense. He could have had the final piece on offense by drafting someone like Riley Cooper or Kris Durham. You aren't going to find many receivers 6'3 or taller that can stretch the field as well as run block/run underneath stuff as well. Now they are going with Brandon Lloyd who is older, only had 1 great season and has been in the league for a while.
I am guessing the league wants everything evenly distributed with Whites spread out among teams. No White vs black matchups like with Bird/Magic in basketball. The only problem is nfl players have come out and said lockerrooms are divided, some differently than others, some are offense/defense, and many White/black. I think it was Heath Evans was the last person who said something like this. A White guy going to a blacker team isn't going to have many players on his side.
Danny Coale just compared to Wes Welker, typical.