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Michael Dwyer/Associated Press

For the last four months, you have clicked on every link for 2018 mock drafts that you have stumbled across. You can recite the names of every projected top-100 player. What you haven't heard enough about, though, is the tendencies that general managers and teams have on draft day.

To address that issue, we went team-by-team, searching for the themes their GMs have shown in previous drafts to figure out what makes these decision-makers tick. For the most part, we focused on the first four rounds, which are more important than the last three.

Is the team picking two slots ahead of your franchise more likely to take that wideout or cornerback? Will your team have to trade up to nab the guy you wanted when the draft starts Thursday at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas? These are the type of questions we hope to answer.

Outside of just three general managers (Buffalo's Brandon Beane, Green Bay's Brian Gutekunst and Houston's Brian Gaine), every other decision-maker has at least one season under his belt as the man in charge on draft day.

We were able to find interesting trends, such as the team that has made one first-round pick in five seasons or the squad that refuses to draft a 5'10" cornerback. Some franchises like misfits. Others like Power Five pedigrees. Nearly every team has a trait that distinguishes it from the rest of the pack.