That's my thought but Johnson over the top should prevent that from happening, if Fitzpatrick can be a game manager and sling it to Andre Johnson this should be a great run-based Offense, no?Not with defenses loading the box.
Well thought out introduction and explanation for starting this thread.
Exact reason why this thread is a dud, well that, and there is another thread.Well thought out introduction and explanation for starting this thread.
The correlation between workload and decline is shaky at best, and Foster is 27 (28 in August). I doubt he returns all the way to form as a FF stud, but that's due to team / situation changes as opposed to having too many touches. Early ADP has him going as a high end RB2 -- I'll likely be passing at that price. Guys like Spiller, Morris, Bush, and Matthews are available later and seem to present more value at the RB2 spot.no, the mileage thing rears its head again
Running backs dont come back from having wear and tear use
um actually its notThe correlation between workload and decline is shaky at best, and Foster is 27 (28 in August). I doubt he returns all the way to form as a FF stud, but that's due to team / situation changes as opposed to having too many touches. Early ADP has him going as a high end RB2 -- I'll likely be passing at that price. Guys like Spiller, Morris, Bush, and Matthews are available later and seem to present more value at the RB2 spot.no, the mileage thing rears its head again
Running backs dont come back from having wear and tear use
Age matters, workload probably doesn't.um actually its notI believe in last years "Running backs get them" thread (I am pretty sure it was that one) a lot of the posters gave great input and statistics into past running backs, their age, usage and subsequent rapid decline. Once I get a break from work I will try and find it and highlight the postsThe correlation between workload and decline is shaky at best, and Foster is 27 (28 in August). I doubt he returns all the way to form as a FF stud, but that's due to team / situation changes as opposed to having too many touches. Early ADP has him going as a high end RB2 -- I'll likely be passing at that price. Guys like Spiller, Morris, Bush, and Matthews are available later and seem to present more value at the RB2 spot.no, the mileage thing rears its head again
Running backs dont come back from having wear and tear use
We really don't need two active Foster threads.Exact reason why this thread is a dud, well that, and there is another thread.Well thought out introduction and explanation for starting this thread.
Quantity over quality is the key to life, right!?Well thought out introduction and explanation for starting this thread.
Every carry for a RB is a chance at a major injury so a high workload RB has a higher chance of being injured. However, high workload backs get those carries because they can be trusted to stay healthy.Age matters, workload probably doesn't.um actually its notI believe in last years "Running backs get them" thread (I am pretty sure it was that one) a lot of the posters gave great input and statistics into past running backs, their age, usage and subsequent rapid decline. Once I get a break from work I will try and find it and highlight the postsThe correlation between workload and decline is shaky at best, and Foster is 27 (28 in August). I doubt he returns all the way to form as a FF stud, but that's due to team / situation changes as opposed to having too many touches. Early ADP has him going as a high end RB2 -- I'll likely be passing at that price. Guys like Spiller, Morris, Bush, and Matthews are available later and seem to present more value at the RB2 spot.no, the mileage thing rears its head again
Running backs dont come back from having wear and tear use
In a recent dynasty draft spiller and morris went late rd3 while foster went mid 4th. I thought that was pretty good value...The correlation between workload and decline is shaky at best, and Foster is 27 (28 in August). I doubt he returns all the way to form as a FF stud, but that's due to team / situation changes as opposed to having too many touches. Early ADP has him going as a high end RB2 -- I'll likely be passing at that price. Guys like Spiller, Morris, Bush, and Matthews are available later and seem to present more value at the RB2 spot.no, the mileage thing rears its head again
Running backs dont come back from having wear and tear use
Yeah, it's pretty inconclusive. RBs get a high workload early on because they're both talented and durable. Those same high workload RBs are more likely to remain at that level of involvement relative to their lesser workload peers as they age because their still typically more talented and durable than are the RBs that weren't able to command that high workload.Every carry for a RB is a chance at a major injury so a high workload RB has a higher chance of being injured. However, high workload backs get those carries because they can be trusted to stay healthy.Age matters, workload probably doesn't.um actually its notI believe in last years "Running backs get them" thread (I am pretty sure it was that one) a lot of the posters gave great input and statistics into past running backs, their age, usage and subsequent rapid decline. Once I get a break from work I will try and find it and highlight the postsThe correlation between workload and decline is shaky at best, and Foster is 27 (28 in August). I doubt he returns all the way to form as a FF stud, but that's due to team / situation changes as opposed to having too many touches. Early ADP has him going as a high end RB2 -- I'll likely be passing at that price. Guys like Spiller, Morris, Bush, and Matthews are available later and seem to present more value at the RB2 spot.no, the mileage thing rears its head again
Running backs dont come back from having wear and tear use
Age and major injuries are what end RB careers. A low mileage RB might have a better shot at playing well past 30 (Priest Holmes, Barber, Riggins, Thomas Jones) but in the end age and injury catch up to everyone.
Curtis Martin disagrees.pantherclub said:no, the mileage thing rears its head again
Running backs dont come back from having wear and tear use