At the end of a run during 11-on-11 drills on Tuesday, Eagles running back DeMarco Murray went right to the ground, and was quickly surrounded by trainers. At the time, it looked to be a hamstring pull, or something that might have the team's new $40 million running back missing some time.@EliotShorrParks:
Murray is down. Getting looked at by trainers. Came at the end of a run. #Eagles
"Thank God Demarco got hit in the balls" said every Eagles fan.At the end of a run during 11-on-11 drills on Tuesday, Eagles running back DeMarco Murray went right to the ground, and was quickly surrounded by trainers. At the time, it looked to be a hamstring pull, or something that might have the team's new $40 million running back missing some time.@EliotShorrParks:
Murray is down. Getting looked at by trainers. Came at the end of a run. #Eagles
After practice, Murray revealed what kept him on the ground.
"I got hit in the balls," Murray said as he walked into the locker room.
Ouch.
The shot to his manhood only cost Murray a few plays in what was an otherwise successful practice for the running back.
Murray has looked more and more comfortable out on the practice field as the weeks have gone by, and pulled off a few long runs on Tuesday. He has also started to look better catching the ball out of the backfield, a requirement for all of the running backs in head coach Chip Kelly's offense.
Eagles reporter Sheil Kapadia projects roughly 17 carries per game for DeMarco Murray, nine for Ryan Mathews and two for Darren Sproles this season.
Murray averaged a whopping 24.5 carries per game for Dallas last year on his way to a league-leading 392 rushes. But the Eagles have a high-quality backup in Mathews and Chip Kelly has expressed a desire to spread the ball around a bit more. Murray is also a threat to lose a decent amount of passing-down work to Darren Sproles, just like LeSean McCoy did last year. Owners should be expecting something in the range of 300-320 total touches for DeMarco, way off the 449 he piled up last year.
Related: Darren Sproles, Ryan Mathews
Source: Philly Mag: Birds 24/7
Jun 16 - 9:10 AM
Murray DID sign first. Mathews was set to sign and I believe was in the building (or at least in philly) when the whole fanfare, Demario's jet landing media explosion happened. Then they both signed, Mathews after Murray.I don't expect too much deciphering will be needed with Murray-Matthews-Sproles...I am in the camp that thinks Chip Kelly was caught by surprise when the Cowboys let Murray slip. He did not see that coming and, hence, ended up with both Murray and Matthews on contract. If he had signed Murray first, I don't think Mathews would have ended in Philly. He is a great, but also quite expensive insurance to have.
Since Murray is the better back in all aspects of the game, I expect him to be the lead guy while healthy. Mathews role is going to be to spell out Murray + maybe some goalline work. Matthews' historical brittleness is another reason I would expect under 10 touches (mostly carries) per game for him when all are healthy - it just doesn't make sense to put more. Sproles will syphon some passing down opportunities here and there, but he has a very specific role that is practically a non-RB one. If he gets hurt, I doubt any of the other two RBs picks up volume.
Not necessarily disagreeing. Chip got ~30 running plays per game in both 2013 and 2014, so 35 won't be far off.Murray DID sign first. Mathews was set to sign and I believe was in the building (or at least in philly) when the whole fanfare, Demario's jet landing media explosion happened. Then they both signed, Mathews after Murray.I don't expect too much deciphering will be needed with Murray-Matthews-Sproles...I am in the camp that thinks Chip Kelly was caught by surprise when the Cowboys let Murray slip. He did not see that coming and, hence, ended up with both Murray and Matthews on contract. If he had signed Murray first, I don't think Mathews would have ended in Philly. He is a great, but also quite expensive insurance to have.
Since Murray is the better back in all aspects of the game, I expect him to be the lead guy while healthy. Mathews role is going to be to spell out Murray + maybe some goalline work. Matthews' historical brittleness is another reason I would expect under 10 touches (mostly carries) per game for him when all are healthy - it just doesn't make sense to put more. Sproles will syphon some passing down opportunities here and there, but he has a very specific role that is practically a non-RB one. If he gets hurt, I doubt any of the other two RBs picks up volume.
I think that chip plans on running the ball 35+ times a game and needs the horses to do it.
i don't think Demarco should be taken 7th overall in PPR. You are better off taking a stud WR like Julio.Just found out I have the 7th pick. I'm thinking Demarco is a safe bet.
I like Murray more. I don't quite get the Julio love. He's hurt himself quite a bit and stinks in the Redzone. But it is possible to get jones then Murray. Unless you're in a homer league which Insein might be...i don't think Demarco should be taken 7th overall in PPR. You are better off taking a stud WR like Julio.Just found out I have the 7th pick. I'm thinking Demarco is a safe bet.
Homer league. And first time PPR. I think Murray will be gone by 18 but a good WR may still be there.I like Murray more. I don't quite get the Julio love. He's hurt himself quite a bit and stinks in the Redzone. But it is possible to get jones then Murray. Unless you're in a homer league which Insein might be...i don't think Demarco should be taken 7th overall in PPR. You are better off taking a stud WR like Julio.Just found out I have the 7th pick. I'm thinking Demarco is a safe bet.
The O-Line had problems with run-blocking, especially early in the year when Kelce and Mathis were out, and Kelly said that contributed to him calling less running plays than he wanted to. Provided everyone up front stays healthy, I think he will call more running plays this year.Not necessarily disagreeing. Chip got ~30 running plays per game in both 2013 and 2014, so 35 won't be far off.Murray DID sign first. Mathews was set to sign and I believe was in the building (or at least in philly) when the whole fanfare, Demario's jet landing media explosion happened. Then they both signed, Mathews after Murray.I don't expect too much deciphering will be needed with Murray-Matthews-Sproles...I am in the camp that thinks Chip Kelly was caught by surprise when the Cowboys let Murray slip. He did not see that coming and, hence, ended up with both Murray and Matthews on contract. If he had signed Murray first, I don't think Mathews would have ended in Philly. He is a great, but also quite expensive insurance to have.
Since Murray is the better back in all aspects of the game, I expect him to be the lead guy while healthy. Mathews role is going to be to spell out Murray + maybe some goalline work. Matthews' historical brittleness is another reason I would expect under 10 touches (mostly carries) per game for him when all are healthy - it just doesn't make sense to put more. Sproles will syphon some passing down opportunities here and there, but he has a very specific role that is practically a non-RB one. If he gets hurt, I doubt any of the other two RBs picks up volume.
I think that chip plans on running the ball 35+ times a game and needs the horses to do it.
But it's worth considering what evidence do we have that Chip wants to run even more...other than signing both Murray and Matthews, which as discussed may not be 100% intentional. According to PFF, he went from 4th (2013) to 7th (2014) in the league in rushing attempts (which could be driven by game flow), but from 27th to 5th in pass attempts. He is obviously got his fast-paced offense going, but that translated into a lot more passes with the same absolute number of rushes. Some small re-balancing might happen, but hard to imagine even 30 carries / games going to the RBs.
Trade out of the spot then. Murray at 7 in PPR would be crazy. Maybe not Julio, but you could get (as hard as they would be to draft/cheer for) ODB or Dez at that spot.Homer league. And first time PPR. I think Murray will be gone by 18 but a good WR may still be there.I like Murray more. I don't quite get the Julio love. He's hurt himself quite a bit and stinks in the Redzone. But it is possible to get jones then Murray. Unless you're in a homer league which Insein might be...i don't think Demarco should be taken 7th overall in PPR. You are better off taking a stud WR like Julio.Just found out I have the 7th pick. I'm thinking Demarco is a safe bet.
Mike Clay @MikeClayNFL 3h3 hours ago
DeMarco Murray averaged 4.7 YPC on 393 carries and he continues to get picked apart. Amazing.
Joe Dolan @FG_Dolan 3h3 hours ago
@MikeClayNFL Read that @evansilva called it one of the most underappreciated RB seasons ever. Has to be true, right? Maybe #1.
Evan Silva @evansilva 3h3 hours ago
@FG_Dolan @MikeClayNFL Yeah. Stunning. Dissected to the extent he is now underrated. Bonehead Joe Randle ripping him is hysterical, too.
All these ex-cowboys seem to have total blind allegiances to their former team. Hearing Emmitt and Irvin chime in is comical at times. Didn't smith also say last week that Murray was wrong to join a div rival and he'd never do that?
Irvin actually said it was a huge mistake to let Murray go.All these ex-cowboys seem to have total blind allegiances to their former team. Hearing Emmitt and Irvin chime in is comical at times. Didn't smith also say last week that Murray was wrong to join a div rival and he'd never do that?
I know Irvin said that, I was mentioning Smith's comments.Irvin actually said it was a huge mistake to let Murray go.All these ex-cowboys seem to have total blind allegiances to their former team. Hearing Emmitt and Irvin chime in is comical at times. Didn't smith also say last week that Murray was wrong to join a div rival and he'd never do that?
http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2015/05/15/michael-irvin-eagles-the-favorites-because-of-demarco-murray/
Of course he is which is why his comments on Murray were so shocking.I know Irvin said that, I was mentioning Smith's comments.Irvin did say the eagles were favourites for the div. But in general, he is always sticking up for the cowboys/Dez/etc.Irvin actually said it was a huge mistake to let Murray go.http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2015/05/15/michael-irvin-eagles-the-favorites-because-of-demarco-murray/All these ex-cowboys seem to have total blind allegiances to their former team. Hearing Emmitt and Irvin chime in is comical at times. Didn't smith also say last week that Murray was wrong to join a div rival and he'd never do that?
Can't remember who it was but I remember a few people saying that signing Mathews after Murray signed was a courtesy type thing...like they had the offer out to Mathews but when Murray signed, they didn't want Mathews as much anymore but they didn't want to pull the offer either. No clue how true that is and Mathews ended up signing anyways obviously.I don't expect too much deciphering will be needed with Murray-Matthews-Sproles...I am in the camp that thinks Chip Kelly was caught by surprise when the Cowboys let Murray slip. He did not see that coming and, hence, ended up with both Murray and Matthews on contract. If he had signed Murray first, I don't think Mathews would have ended in Philly. He is a great, but also quite expensive insurance to have.
Since Murray is the better back in all aspects of the game, I expect him to be the lead guy while healthy. Mathews role is going to be to spell out Murray + maybe some goalline work. Matthews' historical brittleness is another reason I would expect under 10 touches (mostly carries) per game for him when all are healthy - it just doesn't make sense to put more. Sproles will syphon some passing down opportunities here and there, but he has a very specific role that is practically a non-RB one. If he gets hurt, I doubt any of the other two RBs picks up volume.
The article mentions RB DeMarco Murray had the most carries of any player in NFL history in a season before he changed teams but Murray is also the first healthy leading rusher in NFL history to change teams so it makes sense he'd have the most carries in NFL history before changing teams because no team has ever traded away or let someone who produced league leading numbers get away so it will be interesting to see what Murray does this year.DeMarco Murray will attempt to do something this year that very few running backs in NFL history have done: Avoid a pronounced decline following a season with a huge workload.
Murray’s 497 touches last year — including the playoffs — are sixth-most in NFL history...
... A list of the 20 other seasons with the most touches in NFL history includes 17 players
... Of the 17 players on the list, nine — a little more than half — were never the same the rest of their career:
... The only players who showed no sign of any long-term decline after a season with at least 460 touches were Eric Dickerson and Curtis Martin, both Hall of Famers.
Here’s the most interesting thing we found: From 1983 through 2006, a span of 24 years, 25 backs had at least 450 touches. About one per year. From 1997 through 2000, nine did.
But over the last eight years, only two have reached the figure — Foster in 2012 and Murray last year.
NFL teams seem to be realizing how risky it is to the long-term health of running backs to give them that many touches. Most offenses are pass-oriented now, and the teams that do run the ball a lot use multiple backs.
Where does Murray fit in?
The odds say he’ll drop off this year, but there have been notable exceptions, and the presence of Ryan Mathews will certainly take some pressure off him.
But history says Murray is in dangerous territory.
Let’s take a look:
531 … Terrell Davis, 1997
Davis followed his NFL-record 531-touch season with a 2,000-yard rushing season in 1998. But he played only 17 games the rest of his career and was out of the NFL before his 29th birthday.
519 … Emmit Smith, 1995
Smith averaged 1,604 yards per season and 4.6 yards per carry through 1995. He averaged 1,016 yards and 3.8 yards per carry the rest of his career.
517 … Jamal Anderson, 1998
Anderson averaged over 1,300 yards per season and 4.2 yards per carry through his 517-touch season. After that? He played just two games the next year and averaged only 424 yards and 3.5 per carry the rest of his career. Anderson was out of football before his 30th birthday.
516 … Emmit Smith, 1992
Smith’s dropoff didn’t come immediately. In 1993, a year after getting 516 touches, he ran for nearly 1,500 yards and led the NFL with 5.3 yards per carry. After that? He was never quite the same player. He averaged 4.5 through 1993 and 4.1 the rest of the way.
499 … Terrell Davis, 1998
As stated above, Davis was never close to the same player after 1998. He averaged 4.8 yards per carry and more than 1,600 yards per season through 1998 and 3.8 yards per carry and 398 yards per season after 1998.
497 … DeMarco Murray, 2014
Murray had the most carries of any player in NFL history in a season before he changed teams.
But they didn't replace him. I don't see McFadden or Randle doing anything near what he did last year.Murray clearly wore down with the workload last season. He runs violently. He intiates, and takes a lot of contact. I don't wanna take away from what he did last season, because he had a great season.......aside from wearing down and costly fumbles. I think Dallas would most definitely be better with him still on their team. But, they did the right thing by not paying him. They've built a juggernaut of an O-line. Murray is not an "elite" talent. He's very good, but can be replaced.
Time will tell if he will be able to duplicate in Philly.
This. This is one of the most interesting stories that I can't wait to see unfold. The Dallas RBs look like dreck to me. DMC ran worse than his other teammates in Oakland over the last few years. I don't know that that line will make a difference for him.But they didn't replace him. I don't see McFadden or Randle doing anything near what he did last year.Murray clearly wore down with the workload last season. He runs violently. He intiates, and takes a lot of contact. I don't wanna take away from what he did last season, because he had a great season.......aside from wearing down and costly fumbles. I think Dallas would most definitely be better with him still on their team. But, they did the right thing by not paying him. They've built a juggernaut of an O-line. Murray is not an "elite" talent. He's very good, but can be replaced.
Time will tell if he will be able to duplicate in Philly.
Exactly. He had the greatest offensive line ever, and never came close to 2,000 yards. Yeah, Murray "left yards on the field," yet still outdid Smith's best season ever.Who cares what E. Smith says? Will Murray regress? Yeah, most likely. It's hard to improve upon 2261 total yds and 13 TDs. He's still a great RB in a very good situation. Philly doesn't have Dal Oline, but theirs isn't bad. Actually, it's pretty good. Murray will be fine.
Exactly. He had the greatest offensive line ever, and never came close to 2,000 yards. Yeah, Murray "left yards on the field," yet still outdid Smith's best season ever.Who cares what E. Smith says? Will Murray regress? Yeah, most likely. It's hard to improve upon 2261 total yds and 13 TDs. He's still a great RB in a very good situation. Philly doesn't have Dal Oline, but theirs isn't bad. Actually, it's pretty good. Murray will be fine.
Or before.At this point you almost have to take Demarco once CJ, Forte and Foster are taken.
Yup. Id take him before CJ and Forte, and maybe before Foster.Or before.At this point you almost have to take Demarco once CJ, Forte and Foster are taken.
That's where he's going based on rankings here (9th) but I agree with before Forte and Foster.At this point you almost have to take Demarco once CJ, Forte and Foster are taken.
Yup, before CJ for sure IMO. Forte maybe, depends a lot on scoring. Foster, probably not.Yup. Id take him before CJ and Forte, and maybe before Foster.Or before.At this point you almost have to take Demarco once CJ, Forte and Foster are taken.
Foster seems to be a forgotten man in fantasy right now. Well, not totally forgotten but people certainly are forgetting how good he is. Foster was RB3 in PPG last year, less than 1 PPG behind Murray who was #1. Foster didn't change teams and we should feel pretty confident in what his usage will be. He also has a much longer track record of high/elite performance. Both have great injury histories and concerns. Injury might be the main factor in why Foster is being largely ignored at the top of the RB rankings. Compared to Murray however, this seems like a push and no reason to downgrade.Are people really taking foster over Murray? This guy is undervalued right now. He's a perfect fit for Kelly's offense. He's going to show the problem was McCoy not the system or line.
No doubt Foster, when healthy is one of the top backs. People have fear of the immediate past though. He was injured last year.Foster seems to be a forgotten man in fantasy right now. Well, not totally forgotten but people certainly are forgetting how good he is. Foster was RB3 in PPG last year, less than 1 PPG behind Murray who was #1. Foster didn't change teams and we should feel pretty confident in what his usage will be. He also has a much longer track record of high/elite performance. Both have great injury histories and concerns. Injury might be the main factor in why Foster is being largely ignored at the top of the RB rankings. Compared to Murray however, this seems like a push and no reason to downgrade.Are people really taking foster over Murray? This guy is undervalued right now. He's a perfect fit for Kelly's offense. He's going to show the problem was McCoy not the system or line.