Lloyd supporters expected him to get at least 110 targets (I predicted 120) and improve his career catch % - he did BOTH. Nobody expected the Brady/Lloyd chemistry to be so poor, especially after all the reports that the chemistry was good and the fact that Lloyd had already been playing in this offense for two years. If any of the nay-sayers had predicted poor chemistry and a sub 13 ypr stat line, my hat would be off to them. But nobody did. To come claim you saw this coming would be like saying your prediction of a bust was proven correct due to injury. You weren't right on any of your assertions about the situation

Where did I claim that I saw this coming? Maybe you should re-read my previous post. I didn't mention my predictions for Lloyd at all. I was low on his target numbers, but I don't predict injury, and I wasn't wrong on Lloyd's % of NE's targets, I was wrong on the number of attempts that Brady would have. You, however, predicted that Lloyd would improve his catch rate by 13%, which I said was ridiculous. Guess what? I was right, expecting that kind of increase was ridiculous, and didn't come to fruition. You also predicted that his YPC would increase, which it did not. The NE offense isn't a deep ball offense anymore, and those who believed (you-as evidenced by your way too high YPC projection) that it would emphasize the deep ball to accommodate Lloyd, rather than emphasizing Welker, Gronk, and Hernandez (who are much more adept at the short to intermediate routes) was seeing what they wanted to see, not what was likely to happen. Bottom line is you were wrong. You expected the Pats to significantly "tweak" their offense to suit Lloyd's skill set, which many (including myself) found foolish. Then, the Pats went out and didn't change their offense. Without the deep ball, Lloyd wasn't going to get the high YPC, and without the high YPC, he wasn't going to have enough catches to put up monster yards (even with his catch rate increase, due to a better QB and shorter routes).