imac_21 wrote:Being fast does not equal being a deep threat. Who are the best deep threats in the game right now? Vincent Jackson, DeSean Jackson, Alshon Jeffrey, Brandon Marshall....
If a team is reliable strictly on speed to stretch the field, it's relatively easy to defend. It's harder when the WR has the ability to go over top of the DBs in a jump ball situation.
Ellington runs a 4.3. Boldin ran a 4.7. So, in .3 seconds Ellington has run 40 yards. In 4.3 seconds Boldin has gone 37 yards. Given that we tend to only see WRs running behind DBs when there is coverage breakdown, how important are the 3 additional yards Ellington gets?
Crabtree is listed as 4.54 (though he never ran at the combine), so he goes 38 yards in 4.3 seconds. How crucial is that extra 2 yards Ellington covers?
Now, part two of the question is which of the WRs are you more confident in catching the ball:
Ellington vs Boldin?
Ellington vs Crabtree?
Ellington has a use in the offense, but he's not a deep threat, and he should not be playing over Crabtree (or Boldin or Johnson). If we're looking to add a deep threat, he shouldn't play over Lloyd, though he likely fits what we're doing on offense currently more than Lloyd.
2 or 3 yards beyond the DB = wide open for a long pass. And who is more likely to catch a pass, a receiver who is covered by the DB or a receiver that has 2 or 3 yards on a DB?