Frank Coztansa wrote:
Jeez, I didn't even see that. "Without fail gets 4YPC?"
Wow. I'd also like a few pitchers on the Sox that "without fail" win 25 games a year, hitters that "without fail" hit 40 Homers and drive in 120, and an RB on the Bears who will, again "without fail" get at least 3.4 YPC. Because if he does that, 3.4 yards per carry 100% of the time (without fail), every 3 plays is a first down and the Bears would never punt, and thus win almost every game they played.
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A RB that gets a guaranteed 4 yards every play doesn't exist - never has. So let's get back to talking about actual existing human beings. AP is actually a great RB today.
No shit Sherlock. That's why I said it was an extreme scenario. I could la out a more realistic scenario, but then we're going to have to get into more complicated mathematics to arrive at the same argumetnt. So I gave the most simplified example mathematically possible.
Anyway, consistency is necessary in the running game. Running plays never gain as much per play as passing plays, for any team, not even good running teams. The main advantage is consistency; you can count on a certain number of yards per play, on average. If you don't have that consistency, you have to make up for it by having those long runs frequently.
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Therefore, you think Barry Sanders was a terrible running back.
Er, except for the part where I said this:
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If he's Barry Sanders and he's just averaging so much more than everyone else, you'll take that.
Barry Sanders also averaged more yards per carry than pretty much everyone else at the time. He had more long TD runs than anyone else. Yes, he was boom or bust, but he boomed more often and thereby raised his value. It's not a Barry Sanders v. Curtis Martin argument, because they're not the same averages. It's more like Willy Parker vs. Curtis Martin (and no, I haven't looked up the YPA for any of the four.)
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almost ANY long run in the NFL can be attributed in some regards to poor defense.
True, but that's not what I said. It wasn't "the only reason AP broke the carry was because the defense was bad." That's probably always true to some degree; if a defense plays something perfectly, the play won't work. What I said was that three Bears defenders had him wrapped up; he wasn't going anywhere. Period. In the process of bringing him down/attempting to strip the ball, Kevin Payne
flew into their backs and knocked them off of him. If Kevin Payne doesn't exist (if only), or if the Bears have 10 players on the field for whatever reason, that play is a 10 yard gain.