Ayt wrote:I gave this pick an A and I'm feeling really good about it.
I have waited until this moment, but I hit the 'A' and it felt good.
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Ayt wrote:I gave this pick an A and I'm feeling really good about it.
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crkone wrote:
Treebeard wrote:He's a better reciever than expected, too
M-C-G wrote:crkone wrote:
Watching him churn for 7 yards in a pile and guys trying to tackle him in the cold, yeah, he is going to be a problem with us having home field advantage. Not hard to see this scenario is exactly why the Packers thought he was worth a 2nd round pick, even though he was a '3rd string RB'
ReasonablySober wrote:M-C-G wrote:crkone wrote:
Watching him churn for 7 yards in a pile and guys trying to tackle him in the cold, yeah, he is going to be a problem with us having home field advantage. Not hard to see this scenario is exactly why the Packers thought he was worth a 2nd round pick, even though he was a '3rd string RB'
Ironically, that list is making a case for not spending a second round pick on a runningback. Not that I'm complaining or saying that I wouldn't have done so. I like Dillon.
MikeIsGood wrote:ReasonablySober wrote:M-C-G wrote:
Watching him churn for 7 yards in a pile and guys trying to tackle him in the cold, yeah, he is going to be a problem with us having home field advantage. Not hard to see this scenario is exactly why the Packers thought he was worth a 2nd round pick, even though he was a '3rd string RB'
Ironically, that list is making a case for not spending a second round pick on a runningback. Not that I'm complaining or saying that I wouldn't have done so. I like Dillon.
I get what you're saying and ultimately don't totally disagree, though maybe for different reasons, but this list also makes a case (to me) to not take this stat seriously. Latavius Murray has struggled to stay on the field for the Ravens, for example.
That said, I have no idea what these stats are or mean, and maybe I'm reading it wrong. I've literally never heard of this before.
And all of that aside, I liked Dillon then and I love him now.
Success Rate (running backs): A measure of running back consistency based on the percentage of carries where the player gains 40% of needed yards on first down, 60% of needed yards on second down, or 100% of needed yards on third or fourth down. Small adjustment in fourth quarter based on whether team is more than a touchdown behind or running out the clock. A running back above 50% is very consistent; below 40% is very inconsistent.
ReasonablySober wrote:MikeIsGood wrote:ReasonablySober wrote:
Ironically, that list is making a case for not spending a second round pick on a runningback. Not that I'm complaining or saying that I wouldn't have done so. I like Dillon.
I get what you're saying and ultimately don't totally disagree, though maybe for different reasons, but this list also makes a case (to me) to not take this stat seriously. Latavius Murray has struggled to stay on the field for the Ravens, for example.
That said, I have no idea what these stats are or mean, and maybe I'm reading it wrong. I've literally never heard of this before.
And all of that aside, I liked Dillon then and I love him now.
I hear you. I think I read it a couple times and thought I knew what it was before, but I had it wrong (I thought it was a percentage of plays that went for a minimum number of yards, weren't stuffs, it's not that). As defined in this case:Success Rate (running backs): A measure of running back consistency based on the percentage of carries where the player gains 40% of needed yards on first down, 60% of needed yards on second down, or 100% of needed yards on third or fourth down. Small adjustment in fourth quarter based on whether team is more than a touchdown behind or running out the clock. A running back above 50% is very consistent; below 40% is very inconsistent.
Which, okay? That seems like a very weird stat that applies situational context where it shouldn't.
MikeIsGood wrote:ReasonablySober wrote:MikeIsGood wrote:
I get what you're saying and ultimately don't totally disagree, though maybe for different reasons, but this list also makes a case (to me) to not take this stat seriously. Latavius Murray has struggled to stay on the field for the Ravens, for example.
That said, I have no idea what these stats are or mean, and maybe I'm reading it wrong. I've literally never heard of this before.
And all of that aside, I liked Dillon then and I love him now.
I hear you. I think I read it a couple times and thought I knew what it was before, but I had it wrong (I thought it was a percentage of plays that went for a minimum number of yards, weren't stuffs, it's not that). As defined in this case:Success Rate (running backs): A measure of running back consistency based on the percentage of carries where the player gains 40% of needed yards on first down, 60% of needed yards on second down, or 100% of needed yards on third or fourth down. Small adjustment in fourth quarter based on whether team is more than a touchdown behind or running out the clock. A running back above 50% is very consistent; below 40% is very inconsistent.
Which, okay? That seems like a very weird stat that applies situational context where it shouldn't.
So doesn't this seem to favor third-down backs on good teams with good run blocking and play calling?
skones wrote:Hadn't realized he was rankings 2nd overall amongst running backs by PFF.
M-C-G wrote:crkone wrote:
Watching him churn for 7 yards in a pile and guys trying to tackle him in the cold, yeah, he is going to be a problem with us having home field advantage. Not hard to see this scenario is exactly why the Packers thought he was worth a 2nd round pick, even though he was a '3rd string RB'