'Ministry of Pain said:
I'm might rusty SSOG, take it easy on an old man. let me answer back the post.
1. Housh had a high water mark of about 2 years, the rest he might have been in the top20 but he was nowhere near as impactful as the way you are framing it but hey it is what it is.
2. Reggie Wayne??? No way, he was on everyone's radar and I never once heard the term 1 year wonder used. Joe Horn??? He flashed explosion on his way out the door with KC and then signed with NO, the rest was a pretty nice run for a few years in new orleans...not sure what I am missing. Steve Smith??? I find it incredible you keep bringing up guys that easily passed the eyeball test with most folks but OK. I don't feel Lloyd stacks up with any of these 3 WRs but if you want to put Lloyd in the same breath with Wayne, Horn, and Steve Smith then I don't really think there is much to discuss. Different stratosperes as far as I'm concerned and even Housh I was pretty vocal about him not being all that and a bag of chips...once he sigend for WR1 money in Seattle it was over.
And for the record there are a lot more WR 1 year wonders than guys who turn the switch at 29/30 in their career. Furthermore I was perfectly accepting of other posters who basically feel they have a "gut feeling"...no problem with that but SSOG you are comparing Lloyd to Wayne, Horn, and St.Smith...I just can't agree with that and if that means you have a dominant post over me then so be it. I look forward to how this plays out over the season. I hope since so many folks are going to pick Lloyd that I'm wrong and you guys all take the trophy with him. Good Luck!
I can't promise to take it easy, MoP, because I wasn't trying to take it hard in the first place. Guys like me have learned long ago that we have to take it however we can get it

. Anyway, to respond...Houshmandzadeh: I don't know how I'm "framing" Housh as more impactful than he was. I'm merely relaying his fantasy finishes, taken directly from PFR. In 2005, at age 28, he finished as WR14. In 2006, at age 29, he finished as WR11. In 2007, at age 30, he finished as WR7. If you want to make the claim that Houshmandzadeh was considered a 1-year wonder, then he would have had to have been considered such after his 2005 season. If that's the claim you make, he's a terrible example of a "1 year wonder falling back to earth", since he followed up that campaign with two even better campaigns first.
Wayne: It's possible I'm misremembering, or I'm extrapolating an argument I heard over a much larger population than actually believed it. Either way, he probably didn't belong on the list as a young former 1st rounder. I'll retract the example.
Horn: You claim he "flashed explosion on his way out the door"? He went for 35/586/6 and finished as WR49, but because he flashed explosion, he wasn't a 1-year wonder? Well, hell, by that analysis, Lloyd's been "flashing explosion" his entire career, so he's not a 1-year wonder, either. Prior to last year, Lloyd had already posted two seasons better than Horn's best KC year. He flashed so much explosion in San Fran that Washington gave up two picks to get him. I saw a highlight reel of his on Youtube when he went to Chicago that labeled him "The savior of the bears" (no, seriously, it's still up on Youtube). You don't get called that unless you've flashed explosion. Therefore, by your "flashed explosion validates big seasons and means someone's not a one-year-wonder" criteria, Lloyd shouldn't be regarded as a 1-year wonder, either.
Smiff: The archives have long since been purged, but I very clearly and distinctly remember posting a scathing screed railing against how ludicrously low Smiff's draft position was heading into 2005. I made the argument that either Carolina was capable of supporting elite production from a fantasy receiver (in which case Smiff needed to be ranked substantially higher), or else Moose Muhammad was such a transcendent talent that he was able to produce mind-blowing numbers in a less-than-ideal situation (in which case he needed to be ranked substantially higher). Smith was being drafted in 2005 significantly below what his age and 2003 production should have dictated because there was substantial concern over his diminutive stature. In fact, Smiff and Santana Moss in 2005 were as integral to destigmatizing short receivers as MJD and Chris Johnson have been to destigmatizing smaller RBs.
Anyway, the point that I'm making isn't that Brandon Lloyd is as talented as Steve Smith (who I think is one of the top 5 receivers of the last decade). I'm saying that Brandon Lloyd 2011 is as comparable to Steve Smith circa 2004-2005 as he is to David Boston circa 2002. Obviously we know the outcome of Steve Smith circa 2004-2005 and the outcome of David Boston circa 2002, so the most likely outcome for Brandon Lloyd is that it turns out he's better than David Boston and worse than Steve Smith. I'm just saying that selective memory means you're only comparing Brandon Lloyd to guys who were perceived as 1-year wonders
FOR WHOM THAT PERCEPTION WOUND UP BEING TRUE, while completely ignoring all those guys who were perceived as 1-year wonders for whom that perception wound up being unequivocally false. This naturally creates a biased and non-representative set of comps for Brandon Lloyd which dramatically overstates his likelihood of busting. Against that biased set of comps, sure, it looks like Lloyd is a bad bet this year. Include guys like Horn, Smiff, Ellard, Drew Hill, and Ed McCaffrey on his list of comps, though, and his outlook looks a lot rosier.
Oh, and by the way, as much as you object to some of the comps I have thrown out (justifiably so, in some cases, such as with Reggie Wayne), it's not like your comps are all that and a bag of chips, either. David Boston had an unreal season in year 3, at age 23. Michael Clayton's breakout season came as a rookie. Germane Crowell's came in year 2. None of them is remotely comparable to Lloyd, because nobody on the planet thought those guys were 1-year wonders- they thought they were young up-and-comers. If anyone who has a big season is a potential comp for Lloyd, then I'm adding Randy Moss and Anquan Boldin to my list of comps. Patrick Jeffers was injured by a cheap shot in the preseason after his breakout year and never played a healthy down in the NFL again- how is that comp even remotely relevant to Brandon Lloyd? Has someone secretly wrecked Lloyd's knee without telling us? Really, you're just playing a game of "throw out a list of 1-year wonders, then say that Brandon Lloyd belongs on that list without providing any tangible connection or commonality other than that both Lloyd and the 1-year wonders had a big year". And it's no more valid a counterfactual than if I played a game of "throw out a list of uberstuds and claim that Lloyd belongs on that list without providing any tangible connection or commonality other than that both Lloyd and the uberstuds had a big year".
The simple fact is that there are not many comps for Brandon Lloyd. Very few WRs bounce around the NFL for years, get written off completely, and then break out in their late 20s. Throwing out a few dishonest, biased, terrible comparisons of guys who we know were 1-hit wonders now that we have the benefit of hindsight does not have any bearing whatsoever on a discussion of Brandon Lloyd. If you want to play the anecdotal evidence game, then that's fine, but you have to find a list of guys who were comparable in year N+1 (with N being their breakout year) to Brandon Lloyd in his year N+1.
In fact, I'd love to play the anecdotal evidence game, here. I think it'd be very enlightening. You say "And for the record there are a lot more WR 1 year wonders than guys who turn the switch at 29/30 in their career.". I'm going to take you up on that challenge. Let's try to come up with a list of every WR who had an out-of-nowhere breakout year after he was older and had been around for a while. First, we're going to have to define "older" and "breakout", though. I would propose the following definitions:
Older: 27 and up
Breakout: A top-12 finish by a player who had no previous top-30 finishes to his name
How many names can you come up with that meet both of those two criteria? I can start you off with four, right off the bat: Ed McCaffrey, Joe Horn, Jimmy Smith, and Drew Hill. How many can you add?