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Brandon Marshall Thread (1 Viewer)

az_prof

Footballguy
Rather than bump a post talking about how Marshall might be an ok WR2 or how he had done ok with Walker out but wasn't a featured type WR because he hadn't put up any monster games, I decided to start a new post and those who have doubted Marshall can forget about the past and jump on the bandwagon.

He has been one of the most consistent receivers all year, putting up double digit fantasy points in PPR almost every week, but he hadn't had a monster game. Now he has. 10 for 115 and 2 TDs, which is nearly half of his team's receiving production. And he looks better than his stats sheet actually.

 
football guys talked me into trading for this character earlier this year, gave away roy williams for bradon marshall AND a first rounder, definately the best trade of the year for me, lets hope cutler still has upside which i think he does...cause that will be the only ceiling for BMarsh's talent, the guy is a stud

 
Had him as a rotating #3 WR (with Bowe) all year. Started him this week and he covered my decision to bench Torry Holt. :unsure:

 
E-15 never leaves FavreCo's starting lineup......EVER.

Oh yeah, Jennings either. I love 80 yard TD's.

 
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Saw in the injury thread he got hurt....his shoulder maybe. Anyone have any update on this? Is it serious? TIA.

 
All reports are he looked fine after the game.

SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?

Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:

Marshall - #1

Walker - #1a

edit for spelling

 
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Rather than bump a post talking about how Marshall might be an ok WR2 or how he had done ok with Walker out but wasn't a featured type WR because he hadn't put up any monster games, I decided to start a new post and those who have doubted Marshall can forget about the past and jump on the bandwagon. He has been one of the most consistent receivers all year, putting up double digit fantasy points in PPR almost every week, but he hadn't had a monster game. Now he has. 10 for 115 and 2 TDs, which is nearly half of his team's receiving production. And he looks better than his stats sheet actually.
I'm not changing my position in the slightest. For those who aren't clear on my position, here it is in a nutshell.Brandon Marshall has a ton of upside. He is very talented, and he's very young, so he's almost certainly going to continue getting better. With that said, while he's clearly a top-20 FANTASY wide receiver, he is not currently one of the top 20 receivers in the NFL. He will almost certainly crack that list someday, but he's not there today. As a result, as of today, he's just not a very good WR1 (with "good WR1" being defined as a top-16 WR).Hell, many people are going to think I'm REALLY out of my mind now, but I'd say that Stokley has been playing better this season than Marshall, today notwithstanding. He doesn't get as many targets so he doesn't put up the eye-popping stats... but when we're in a key 3rd-and-long, I hope that Cutler looks Stokley's way, not Marshall's.
 
All reports are he looked fine after the game. SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:Marshall - #1Walker - #1aedit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
 
All reports are he looked fine after the game. SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:Marshall - #1Walker - #1aedit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
marshall is having a far superior second year in the league then walker did as a sophmore. its not even close. while i agree that walker, if healthy, is currently better than marshall, i also think you are being naive to think marshall is not a top 20 wideout now. it's one thing to stand up for your argument, but there is no shame in waving the white flag when you have been proved wrong. marshall is clearly proving that he is light years ahead of where you currently value him.edit to add: Marshall's on pace for 93 receptions 1300 yards and 7/8 Touchdowns. Those sound like WR1 numbers to me.Also, can you imagine if Cutler wasnt throwing to him? wow.
 
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All reports are he looked fine after the game.

SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?

Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:

Marshall - #1

Walker - #1a

edit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
Marshall has almost surpassed Walker's yardage and TD totals from last season. And it's only week 14. Your argument has no foundation in statistics, just your irrational man love for Walker. Let's face it. Compare Walker's second year in the league to Marshall's second year in the league and there really is no comparison. True that Marshall is more of a possession receiver than Walker was in his heyday, but as Marshall improves his chemistry with Cutler, and adds muscle to that big frame (a la TO), he will be a RAC monster.

That you would even mention Stokely in the same breath as Marshall, much less say he's more dependable, reveals the truly irrational nature of your argument.

 
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All reports are he looked fine after the game. SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:Marshall - #1Walker - #1aedit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
He was the #14 WR in PPR prior to this week. Today's performance probably put him in the top 10. His worst performance this year was 11 points - to me that's approaching WR1 status.
 
All reports are he looked fine after the game. SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:Marshall - #1Walker - #1aedit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
You cant be serious, please post Walkers stats from last year and Marshall so far this year. I want some of what you are on. :pickle:
 
That you would even mention Stokely in the same breath as Marshall, much less say he's more dependable, reveals the truly irrational nature of your argument.
Agreed. I'm a big fan of Javon Walker and when healthy I think Walker is a very talented WR. But there's no question in my mind Marshall is as good as Walker. For all of Walker's talent, it's not like he's had a string of monstrous NFL seasons. He's had two. The majority of his career, in fact, has been a disappointment. That doesn't change the fact he's a very talented player but the bottom line is his talent has not translated into top-level production during the majority of his career thus far. Marshall has already shown he's a better WR in his second NFL season than Walker was in his. And his potential is off the charts. If Walker can return healthy next season, the Broncos are going to have a scary passing game. But even if he cannot, they still will have a legitimate No. 1 WR in Brandon Marshall. This kid is legit.
 
All reports are he looked fine after the game. SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:Marshall - #1Walker - #1aedit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
You cant be serious, please post Walkers stats from last year and Marshall so far this year. I want some of what you are on. :pickle:
Walker - 69 catches 1084 yards 8 TDMarshall (in 13 games) 75 catches 1029 yards 6 TD :bag:
 
All reports are he looked fine after the game. SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:Marshall - #1Walker - #1aedit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
You cant be serious, please post Walkers stats from last year and Marshall so far this year. I want some of what you are on. :pickle:
Walker - 69 catches 1084 yards 8 TDMarshall (in 13 games) 75 catches 1029 yards 6 TD :bag:
Walker had a rushing TD last season too. Don't forget about that. Here are the stats from each WR's second season:Marshall (through 13 games) 75-1,029-6Walker - 41-716-9And Walker was playing with a MUCH better QB too. I like Cutler but he isn't in Favre's class. In terms of career production, Marshall has clearly had a better start to his career than Walker had to his.
 
All reports are he looked fine after the game. SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:Marshall - #1Walker - #1aedit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
I would say that I agree, but the more I see the kid play the more and more I see him grow and become a better WR. Sure it was the Chiefs this week but the kid has skills. And when Walker gets back this is going to be right there with the top WR tandems in the league. I won't call it Harrison/Wayne but it's damn close....
 
Rather than bump a post talking about how Marshall might be an ok WR2 or how he had done ok with Walker out but wasn't a featured type WR because he hadn't put up any monster games, I decided to start a new post and those who have doubted Marshall can forget about the past and jump on the bandwagon. He has been one of the most consistent receivers all year, putting up double digit fantasy points in PPR almost every week, but he hadn't had a monster game. Now he has. 10 for 115 and 2 TDs, which is nearly half of his team's receiving production. And he looks better than his stats sheet actually.
I'm not changing my position in the slightest. For those who aren't clear on my position, here it is in a nutshell.Brandon Marshall has a ton of upside. He is very talented, and he's very young, so he's almost certainly going to continue getting better. With that said, while he's clearly a top-20 FANTASY wide receiver, he is not currently one of the top 20 receivers in the NFL. He will almost certainly crack that list someday, but he's not there today. As a result, as of today, he's just not a very good WR1 (with "good WR1" being defined as a top-16 WR).Hell, many people are going to think I'm REALLY out of my mind now, but I'd say that Stokley has been playing better this season than Marshall, today notwithstanding. He doesn't get as many targets so he doesn't put up the eye-popping stats... but when we're in a key 3rd-and-long, I hope that Cutler looks Stokley's way, not Marshall's.
My position has not changed in the slightest either. Marshall is the number one receiver until Walker proves otherwise.By the way, I think Bloom and Chaos Commish started the Marshall bandwagon a couple years ago, so the OP is actually a little late on this.
 
All reports are he looked fine after the game. SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:Marshall - #1Walker - #1aedit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
marshall is having a far superior second year in the league then walker did as a sophmore. its not even close. while i agree that walker, if healthy, is currently better than marshall, i also think you are being naive to think marshall is not a top 20 wideout now. it's one thing to stand up for your argument, but there is no shame in waving the white flag when you have been proved wrong. marshall is clearly proving that he is light years ahead of where you currently value him.edit to add: Marshall's on pace for 93 receptions 1300 yards and 7/8 Touchdowns. Those sound like WR1 numbers to me.Also, can you imagine if Cutler wasnt throwing to him? wow.
I never said that Marshall wasn't a FANTASY WR1. 1300/8 might be FANTASY WR1 numbers, but they aren't necessarily real-world WR1 numbers.Also, to back up my claim that Marshall is not currently a top-20 WR... Randy Moss, Terrell Owens, Braylon Edwards, Reggie Wayne, Marvin Harrison, T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Chad Johnson, Larry Fitzgerald, Plaxico Burress, Torry Holt, Joey Galloway, Marques Colston, Steve Smith, Roy Williams, Calvin Johnson, Andre Johnson, Santonio Holmes, Hines Ward, Dwayne Bowe, Donald Driver, Lee Evans, Laveranues Coles, Brandon Stokley, Wes Welker, Deion Branch, Darrell Jackson, Javon Walker, Santana Moss, Derrick Mason, Terry Glenn. That's 30 WRs. Can you name 11 guys on that list who Brandon Marshall is better than right now? I'm not saying that he's not better than ANYONE on that list, I'm just saying that I can't pull 11 names that I'd take Marshall over, assuming those guys are healthy.
Marshall has almost surpassed Walker's yardage and TD totals from last season. And it's only week 14. Your argument has no foundation in statistics, just your irrational man love for Walker. Let's face it. Compare Walker's second year in the league to Marshall's second year in the league and there really is no comparison. True that Marshall is more of a possession receiver than Walker was in his heyday, but as Marshall improves his chemistry with Cutler, and adds muscle to that big frame (a la TO), he will be a RAC monster. That you would even mention Stokely in the same breath as Marshall, much less say he's more dependable, reveals the truly irrational nature of your argument.
You might want to double check before telling me my argument has no foundation in statistics. Here are some statistics that support my argument pretty strongly: Marshall coming into today was averaging 7.9 yards per target in a strong passing offense with Henry/Young/Stokley drawing coverages off of him. Last year, Walker averaged 8.6 yards per target, despite changing teams, coming off of a severe injury, and playing in a worse passing offense with a dramatically worse running game and no legit #2 to draw coverage off of him. Then, too, you have the fact that Walker is an ELITE red-zone target, much better than Marshall, as evidenced by these numbers:percentage of touchdown conversions to targets in the red zone (WRs with 25+ targets 2004-06)Player Targets TD PercentageLarry Fitzgerald 39 15 0.384615385Marcus Robinson 30 11 0.366666667Javon Walker 28 10 0.357142857Terrell Owens 48 17 0.354166667Marvin Harrison 69 24 0.347826087Deion Branch 26 9 0.346153846Joey Galloway 36 12 0.333333333Roy Williams 40 13 0.325Darrell Jackson 38 12 0.315789474Numbers from between the 6 yard line and the 20 yard linePlayer Year Targets Tds PercentageLarry Fitzgerald 2004--2006 28 9 0.321428571Javon Walker 2004--2006 25 8 0.32Deion Branch 2004--2006 25 8 0.32Terrell Owens 2004--2006 35 11 0.314285714Hines Ward 2004--2006 47 14 0.29787234Muhsin Muhammad 2004--2006 48 14 0.291666667Roy Williams 2004--2006 32 9 0.28125Keenan McCardell 2004--2006 25 7 0.28Marvin Harrison 2004--2006 50 13 0.26Donte Stallworth 2004--2006 27 7 0.259259259Brandon Marshall, for what it's worth, has 19 targets in the red zone for 4 TDs (21%). Between the goal and the 5, he's got 1 TD on 6 targets, and between the 6 and the 20, he has 3 TDs on 13 targets. Both rates are significantly behind Walkers'. If you like DVOA, Walker last year beats Marshall this year pretty handily there, too, despite playing in a worse offense with worse QB play and no one to draw coverage. So, as it turns out, if you look at the stats in any but the most superficial manner, there is a pretty strong support for the sentiment that Walker last year was significantly ahead of Marshall this year. Superficial stats don't support that because of the difference in targets (Marshall's already surpassed Walker's target total from last season), but per-play stats clearly show the difference.As for the idea that Stokley is more dependable than Marshall... again, it's all there in the stats. Stokley has a better catch%, a better DVOA, and a significantly better conversion rate on 3rd downs. Marshall's 39 targets on 3rd or 4th down have resulted in 16 first downs (41%), while Stokley's 30 targets have resulted in 18 first downs (60%). In fact, there isn't a single receiver in the league with as many targets on 3rd down as Stokley and a higher conversion rate.Feel free to ignore all of this, though. Apparently facts make for irrational arguments.
He was the #14 WR in PPR prior to this week. Today's performance probably put him in the top 10. His worst performance this year was 11 points - to me that's approaching WR1 status.
FANTASY WR1 status, absolutely. I have no problem with that whatsoever. I'm talking real-world value.Also, a note to everyone who is comparing Marshall's second season to Walker's second season: please stop. I'm not arguing that Walker was a better 2nd-year receiver than Marshall, I'm arguing that Walker is better at the moment (assuming full health) than Marshall. If I say that Brandon Marshall is a better WR right now than Jerry Rice, are you going to tell me that Rice had 1600 yards and 16 scores in his second year, too?
 
Also, a note to everyone who is comparing Marshall's second season to Walker's second season: please stop. I'm not arguing that Walker was a better 2nd-year receiver than Marshall, I'm arguing that Walker is better at the moment (assuming full health) than Marshall. If I say that Brandon Marshall is a better WR right now than Jerry Rice, are you going to tell me that Rice had 1600 yards and 16 scores in his second year, too?
The second-year comparison is valid in my opinion in terms of projecting where Marshall could go and if he could surpass a healthy Javon Walker as the No. 1 WR on the Broncos. That Marshall has put up considerably better numbers with a worse QB in his second season than Walker did in his speaks volumes about Marshall's potential in my opinion. Like I said, I like Javon Walker but the fact is he has had only two standout seasons in six seasons. Now two of those seasons (2005 and 2007) were destroyed by injuries but this is a bottom line business and the bottom line with Walker is that for all his talent, he has not been a consistently elite NFL wide receiver. That's what the Packers expected him to be when they drafted him with a first-round pick and it's what the Broncos expected him to be when they traded for him. As we sit here today I think Marshall has a higher ceiling than Walker.
 
SSOG, do you watch the Broncos games every week? You are one of, if not the best Broncos fan posting on this board and I respect your opinion a lot. I just cannot understand how you can still believe Walker is the better guy to have. Marshall has appeared to be nothing but a beast. If I had to choose today which WR I would rather have on the Broncos, it would be Marshall. And that is strictly from a fan perspective, and it is not close.

 
percentage of touchdown conversions to targets in the red zone (WRs with 25+ targets 2004-06)Player Targets TD PercentageLarry Fitzgerald 39 15 0.384615385Marcus Robinson 30 11 0.366666667Javon Walker 28 10 0.357142857Terrell Owens 48 17 0.354166667Marvin Harrison 69 24 0.347826087Deion Branch 26 9 0.346153846Joey Galloway 36 12 0.333333333Roy Williams 40 13 0.325Darrell Jackson 38 12 0.315789474Numbers from between the 6 yard line and the 20 yard linePlayer Year Targets Tds PercentageLarry Fitzgerald 2004--2006 28 9 0.321428571Javon Walker 2004--2006 25 8 0.32Deion Branch 2004--2006 25 8 0.32Terrell Owens 2004--2006 35 11 0.314285714Hines Ward 2004--2006 47 14 0.29787234Muhsin Muhammad 2004--2006 48 14 0.291666667Roy Williams 2004--2006 32 9 0.28125Keenan McCardell 2004--2006 25 7 0.28Marvin Harrison 2004--2006 50 13 0.26Donte Stallworth 2004--2006 27 7 0.259259259
Those stats are nice and all but look at the company he's with Branch, Muhammad, Stallworth, McCardell, Marcus Robinson. Not exactly elite players are they? The fact that guys like that are on the list doesn't exactly prove that Walker is elite. Some players on the list are obviously great like Harrison/Owens but a lot of them are not. The fact that you put Stokely on that list of top 30 wr's is really funny. He's not in the top 50 let alone top 30. Definitely in the top 30 #3 wr's though.
 
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A few criticisms: Your redzone statistics are too small of a sample to draw any meaningful conclusions. Your point about the offense being better than last year's (which you make ad nauseum) is merely an opinion, I have not seen tangible facts on this.

Also who is this supposed #2 WR drawing all the coverage away from Marshall? Stokely? Oh yes, he strikes fear into the hearts of his opponents. All of your cherry picked stats and per play metrics can't make up for the fact that Marshall is more productive than Walker.

All your numbers don't even take into account how much better of a blocker Marshall is than Walker. Maybe that's why the running game is better this year? Because Marshall is willing to get dirty and actually block somebody!

 
A few criticisms: Your redzone statistics are too small of a sample to draw any meaningful conclusions. Your point about the offense being better than last year's (which you make ad nauseum) is merely an opinion, I have not seen tangible facts on this.

Also who is this supposed #2 WR drawing all the coverage away from Marshall? Stokely? Oh yes, he strikes fear into the hearts of his opponents. All of your cherry picked stats and per play metrics can't make up for the fact that Marshall is more productive than Walker.

All your numbers don't even take into account how much better of a blocker Marshall is than Walker. Maybe that's why the running game is better this year? Because Marshall is willing to get dirty and actually block somebody!
really :thumbup:
 
SSOG was happy to see that slant thrown to Mark Jackson rather than Vance Johnson. Johnson was a much better athlete, and had much more of an upside. But on that one play, I'm sure he would have chosen Jackson over Johnson. I think that's where he's going with the Stokely argument.

 
Also, a note to everyone who is comparing Marshall's second season to Walker's second season: please stop. I'm not arguing that Walker was a better 2nd-year receiver than Marshall, I'm arguing that Walker is better at the moment (assuming full health) than Marshall. If I say that Brandon Marshall is a better WR right now than Jerry Rice, are you going to tell me that Rice had 1600 yards and 16 scores in his second year, too?
The second-year comparison is valid in my opinion in terms of projecting where Marshall could go and if he could surpass a healthy Javon Walker as the No. 1 WR on the Broncos. That Marshall has put up considerably better numbers with a worse QB in his second season than Walker did in his speaks volumes about Marshall's potential in my opinion. Like I said, I like Javon Walker but the fact is he has had only two standout seasons in six seasons. Now two of those seasons (2005 and 2007) were destroyed by injuries but this is a bottom line business and the bottom line with Walker is that for all his talent, he has not been a consistently elite NFL wide receiver. That's what the Packers expected him to be when they drafted him with a first-round pick and it's what the Broncos expected him to be when they traded for him. As we sit here today I think Marshall has a higher ceiling than Walker.
The thing is, I'm not arguing where Walker and Marshall will be 2 years from now, I'm arguing where they're at right now, and where they'll be next season. As a result, pointing out how Marshall's learning curve compares to Walker's doesn't mean a whole lot to me. Mentioning Marshall's ceiling doesn't mean a whole lot to me, either.
SSOG, do you watch the Broncos games every week? You are one of, if not the best Broncos fan posting on this board and I respect your opinion a lot. I just cannot understand how you can still believe Walker is the better guy to have. Marshall has appeared to be nothing but a beast. If I had to choose today which WR I would rather have on the Broncos, it would be Marshall. And that is strictly from a fan perspective, and it is not close.
I watch the Broncos games almost every week, although I miss some since I live in Florida. Today's was the second that I've missed this year.The thing with Marshall is that I think he's a very deceiving WR. There are very, very, very few WRs in the league who do better things with the ball in their hands (Boldin, Owens, and Smiff are the only three that spring immediately to mind, although I'm sure that I'm missing a couple). As a result, you see a lot of highlight-reel plays from Marshall, and you remember all of his good plays (because you're always watching the guy with the ball). The problem is that, as good as he is with the ball in his hands, Marshall isn't that great at all when the ball is in Cutler's hands, or when the ball is in the air. Walker's better at beating coverages, he's better at tracking the ball in the air, he's better at plucking the ball out of the air at the highest point, he can run a wider array of routes, he has much better awareness of the field, and he's more athletically gifted. The problem is that we often don't see those things, because our eyes (and the camera) focus on the ball at all times.

Those stats are nice and all but look at the company he's with Branch, Muhammad, Stallworth, McCardell, Marcus Robinson. Not exactly elite players are they? The fact that guys like that are on the list doesn't exactly prove that Walker is elite. Some players on the list are obviously great like Harrison/Owens but a lot of them are not.

The fact that you put Stokely on that list of top 30 wr's is really funny. He's not in the top 50 let alone top 30. Definitely in the top 30 #3 wr's though.
Seattle traded a 1st rounder to acquire Branch. Muhammad had 16 TDs in one year from that sample, ranked as the #1 fantasy WR, and made that list primarily on the strength of that one season. Stallworth is a good WR with a knack for scoring TDs- it's easy to forget just how good he looked at the beginning of the year last year in Philly before he got hurt. McCardell is #8 in receptions in NFL history, so he must be doing SOMETHING right. Marcus Robinson is really the only head-scratcher on either list, in my opinion. And even if one or two head-scratchers crashes the party, does that invalidate the entire list? I mean, Furrey led the NFC in receptions last year, so does that completely invalidate using receptions as a rough guide to which receivers are pretty good, too?As for Stokley... I think you're selling him short. He's another guy who does amazing things with the ball in Cutler's hands or with the ball in the air, but who is only ho-hum with the ball in his own hands. Guys like that are always underrated. On third down, though, Stokley is ALWAYS OPEN. Read some of the previous game threads and see my play-by-play reaction to Brandon Stokley sometime.

Marshall vs. Stokley reminds me a lot of Chambers vs. Welker. Not because Marshall is an overrated turd like Chambers is (as I said, I think Marshall is very good, one of the best WR2s in the league, and will continue to improve), but because Marshall's skillset leads to a lot of highlights while Stokley's does not. As a result, everyone was convinced that Chambers was this superstud who was going to set the world on fire, while Welker was a veritable afterthought, a clear fluke. Fast forward to this year, and Chambers is still far more physically gifted... while Welker is still consistently making the plays that matter.

A few criticisms: Your redzone statistics are too small of a sample to draw any meaningful conclusions. Your point about the offense being better than last year's (which you make ad nauseum) is merely an opinion, I have not seen tangible facts on this.

Also who is this supposed #2 WR drawing all the coverage away from Marshall? Stokely? Oh yes, he strikes fear into the hearts of his opponents. All of your cherry picked stats and per play metrics can't make up for the fact that Marshall is more productive than Walker.

All your numbers don't even take into account how much better of a blocker Marshall is than Walker. Maybe that's why the running game is better this year? Because Marshall is willing to get dirty and actually block somebody!
You want some tangible facts that the offense is better this year? I'm happy to oblige. This year's offense ranks 7th in ypa passing and 3rd in ypc rushing. Last year's offense ranked 19th in ypa passing and 9th in ypc rushing, averaging almost a full yard less per pass. This year's offense is 8th in yards, last year's was 23rd. This year's offense is 10th in DVOA, last year's was 23rd. Oh yeah, there's the "eye test", too. Ask someone who's watched a lot of games from both seasons which offense is better sometime.Marshall's a stud blocker, yes. I asked last week whether it was too soon to start mentioning him with the likes of Hines Ward, so you're preaching to the choir, here. With that said, Marshall's more productive than Walker, but Marshall is also averaging more targets from a better QB in a better offense. In addition, Marshall wasn't changing teams or coming off of a season-ending surgery that historically has had a 2-year recovery timeframe. But, by all means, feel free to continue ignoring surrounding circumstances and looking strictly at receptions and yardage as if they are the gospel when it comes to how good of a player someone is. Chris Chambers must be a stud, too, because if you target him 160+ times he can crack the top 10 of fantasy WRs.

SSOG was happy to see that slant thrown to Mark Jackson rather than Vance Johnson. Johnson was a much better athlete, and had much more of an upside. But on that one play, I'm sure he would have chosen Jackson over Johnson. I think that's where he's going with the Stokely argument.
I have to admit, I was a pretty casual football fan until the Shanahan era. I didn't follow details like that, I just wanted the big-name guys on my team to score lots of TDs and win by a million points. I'm ashamed to admit that I was basically no different than those guys you hear calling in to sports talk radio all the time. Hey, we all have to start somewhere, right?Anyway, the point is that I don't really know the specifics of the situation you mention, but I do think that's about what I'm saying. Marshall might be a beast with the ball in his hands, but Stokley is far more reliable. Stokley's going to be more likely to get open, going to be more likely to catch the ball when it's in the air, and going to be more likely to maintain awareness and convert the down after getting the ball. More good things happen when Denver throws to Stokley on 3rd down than when Denver throws to Marshall. On 1st or 2nd down I prefer passes to Marshall, because he's more likely to do something he shouldn't be able to do and turn a good play into a great play... but when it really matters, when it's convert or go home, Stokley's the guy.

To make another Welker comparison... I don't think it'd be blasphemous if a New England homer said that they'd rather see Brady throwing to Welker than Moss when it's 3rd-and-6.

 
No way walker is more athletically gifted.
Marshall is stronger and has better balance and drive, but Walker is MUCH faster and a MUCH better leaper. They're Baby Moss and Baby TO, with Walker playing the role of Moss.
 
Hey I respect that you have an opinion and use stats to back it up, but you definitely pick and choose your explanations and the stats so they favor your argument.

I don't see how you can minimize Marshall for getting more targets than Walker and I don't see how that diminishes what Marshall is doing this year. Have you considered that the reason Marshall gets more targets is because he gets open and Cutler trusts him? Have you considered that the reason the offense is better is because Marshall's presence as the #1 WR makes it better?

See your arguments cut both ways. Sure Cutler's development has a lot to do with it, but its foolish to think that the all around game that Marshall brings isn't also a big factor in the improvement of the Broncos offense

 
football guys talked me into trading for this character earlier this year, gave away roy williams for bradon marshall AND a first rounder, definately the best trade of the year for me, lets hope cutler still has upside which i think he does...cause that will be the only ceiling for BMarsh's talent, the guy is a stud
I traded Jamarcus Russell & Chris Chambers for Baylon Edwards & Brandon Marshall early on and it was the best move I made this yr. Kid has talent and everytime he touches the ball he gets extra yards. I'm all aboard!
 
Rather than bump a post talking about how Marshall might be an ok WR2 or how he had done ok with Walker out but wasn't a featured type WR because he hadn't put up any monster games, I decided to start a new post and those who have doubted Marshall can forget about the past and jump on the bandwagon.

He has been one of the most consistent receivers all year, putting up double digit fantasy points in PPR almost every week, but he hadn't had a monster game. Now he has. 10 for 115 and 2 TDs, which is nearly half of his team's receiving production. And he looks better than his stats sheet actually.
I'm not changing my position in the slightest. For those who aren't clear on my position, here it is in a nutshell.Brandon Marshall has a ton of upside. He is very talented, and he's very young, so he's almost certainly going to continue getting better. With that said, while he's clearly a top-20 FANTASY wide receiver, he is not currently one of the top 20 receivers in the NFL. He will almost certainly crack that list someday, but he's not there today. As a result, as of today, he's just not a very good WR1 (with "good WR1" being defined as a top-16 WR).

Hell, many people are going to think I'm REALLY out of my mind now, but I'd say that Stokley has been playing better this season than Marshall, today notwithstanding. He doesn't get as many targets so he doesn't put up the eye-popping stats... but when we're in a key 3rd-and-long, I hope that Cutler looks Stokley's way, not Marshall's.
you gotta be kidding....
 
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I never said that Marshall wasn't a FANTASY WR1. 1300/8 might be FANTASY WR1 numbers, but they aren't necessarily real-world WR1 numbers.

Also, to back up my claim that Marshall is not currently a top-20 WR... Randy Moss, Terrell Owens, Braylon Edwards, Reggie Wayne, Marvin Harrison, T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Chad Johnson, Larry Fitzgerald, Plaxico Burress, Torry Holt, Joey Galloway,Marques Colston, Steve Smith, Roy Williams, Calvin Johnson, Andre Johnson, Santonio Holmes, Hines Ward, Dwayne Bowe, Donald Driver, Lee Evans, Laveranues Coles, Brandon Stokley, Wes Welker, Deion Branch, Darrell Jackson, Javon Walker, Santana Moss, Derrick Mason, Terry Glenn. That's 30 WRs. Can you name 11 guys on that list who Brandon Marshall is better than right now? I'm not saying that he's not better than ANYONE on that list, I'm just saying that I can't pull 11 names that I'd take Marshall over, assuming those guys are healthy.
Terry Glenn ??Stokley ??

Bowe & Calvin ??

are you serious ???

there are at least 15/20 wr in that list WORSE than Marshall right now (10 dec 2007)

lol

 
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I've been high on this kid since the Bills game. I had to have him and couldn't. I'm kind of disappointed that he is having a hot streak lately as he is definitely going to be kept in my keep 6 league.

 
For the record, these are the only WR I would take over Marshall: (From SSOG's list)

Randy Moss, Terrell Owens, Braylon Edwards, Reggie Wayne, Marvin Harrison (assuming he comes back healthy), T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Chad Johnson, Larry Fitzgerald, Plaxico Burress, Torry Holt, Andre Johnson, Steve Smith (if no Delhomme, no way).

That's only 12. The rest I do not think are any better than Marshall and most are worse.

----

I noticed Darrell Jackson is on your list. Are you crazy? I mean seriously, that guy is done! He's always had stone hands and now he can't even get open.

 
Also, a note to everyone who is comparing Marshall's second season to Walker's second season: please stop. I'm not arguing that Walker was a better 2nd-year receiver than Marshall, I'm arguing that Walker is better at the moment (assuming full health) than Marshall. If I say that Brandon Marshall is a better WR right now than Jerry Rice, are you going to tell me that Rice had 1600 yards and 16 scores in his second year, too?
The second-year comparison is valid in my opinion in terms of projecting where Marshall could go and if he could surpass a healthy Javon Walker as the No. 1 WR on the Broncos. That Marshall has put up considerably better numbers with a worse QB in his second season than Walker did in his speaks volumes about Marshall's potential in my opinion. Like I said, I like Javon Walker but the fact is he has had only two standout seasons in six seasons. Now two of those seasons (2005 and 2007) were destroyed by injuries but this is a bottom line business and the bottom line with Walker is that for all his talent, he has not been a consistently elite NFL wide receiver. That's what the Packers expected him to be when they drafted him with a first-round pick and it's what the Broncos expected him to be when they traded for him. As we sit here today I think Marshall has a higher ceiling than Walker.
The thing is, I'm not arguing where Walker and Marshall will be 2 years from now, I'm arguing where they're at right now, and where they'll be next season.
That's what I'm doing as well. If we're talking about where they are both right now - Marshall has emerged as a legit No. 1 WR in my opinion - both in fantasy and the NFL. Walker has been reduced to scrub status because of his injury. As far as where they will be next season and beyond, by using the comparison of how both fared in their second seasons we can maybe see if Marshall can overtake Walker. The comparison numbers I posted suggests there is strong evidence that he can and will. Like I said, I like Javon Walker. I think he's a very talented WR. But the fact is his NFL career has not been all that great. He has had only two seasons worthy of the No. 1 pick status afforded to him by the Packers. And how good he'll be next season and beyond is a major question given the serious knee injuries he has now suffered in two of the past three seasons.
 
It occurs to me that SSOG sees the game and it's players with deeper perspective than I (or most here I suspect).

It's refreshing, and I appreciate your posts - agreed or not.

 
http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_7679158

Marshall makes a move after almost every catch — it's usually the same maneuver on which he runs up to meet the pass, then pivots one way or the other — yet the defensive back almost always misses.

"You going to tackle that one move?" Broncos quarterback Jay Cutler said. "You never know where he's going to go. He crosses the field, sometimes he takes it straight up. He's got a gut feel. Just get the ball in his hands, he's probably going to make something happen."

That is how you get open. Go towards the oncoming pass. He can't be stopped. :lmao:

 
SSOG said:
KoolKat said:
No way walker is more athletically gifted.
Marshall is stronger and has better balance and drive, but Walker is MUCH faster and a MUCH better leaper. They're Baby Moss and Baby TO, with Walker playing the role of Moss.
It is yet to be seen if Walker will return at the same speed and leaping ability. Knees are very important for both.
 
FavreCo said:
http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_7679158

Marshall makes a move after almost every catch — it's usually the same maneuver on which he runs up to meet the pass, then pivots one way or the other — yet the defensive back almost always misses.

"You going to tackle that one move?" Broncos quarterback Jay Cutler said. "You never know where he's going to go. He crosses the field, sometimes he takes it straight up. He's got a gut feel. Just get the ball in his hands, he's probably going to make something happen."

That is how you get open. Go towards the oncoming pass. He can't be stopped. :thumbup:
He really has an unreal ability to make a routine 5 yard catch very exciting by making guys completely miss and/or just powering right through them. I watched some of the clips from the game on NFL.com (Link :35 mark of the 2nd video in the more videos section) and on one completely ordinary catch where 90% of the wr's in the league are tackled, he makes several electric moves where he single handedly made 3 guys miss/broke tackles and picked up about 13 extra yards.
 
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SSOG said:
thehornet said:
SSOG said:
Lemmiwinks said:
All reports are he looked fine after the game. SSOG, care to analyze how, if Javon Walker had played in this game, he would have had 220 yards and 4 TD compared to Marshall's measly 110 yards and 2 TD?Changing of the guard next year if Walker is healthy:Marshall - #1Walker - #1aedit for spelling
Why would Walker have needed 220 yards and 4 scores? Sometimes Patrick Crayton gets more yards than Terrell Owens. I'm not saying that Marshall is Crayton, or that Walker is Owens, I'm just saying that it's ludicrous to suggest that a WR needs to outproduce another WR every single week of the season in order to be considered the #1 WR.As I said, in current real-world terms, if Javon Walker is healthy, he's one of the 20 best WRs in the NFL, while Brandon Marshall is not. It is SERIOUSLY premature to begin talking about how Marshall has usurped Walker as the primary receiving threat. If you want to talk about Walker's injury, or speculate that he'll never be healthy again, or anything of that nature, then be my guest... but to suggest that Marshall this year is even close to as good as Walker was last year is to trivialize just how good Walker really was before he got hurt.
marshall is having a far superior second year in the league then walker did as a sophmore. its not even close. while i agree that walker, if healthy, is currently better than marshall, i also think you are being naive to think marshall is not a top 20 wideout now. it's one thing to stand up for your argument, but there is no shame in waving the white flag when you have been proved wrong. marshall is clearly proving that he is light years ahead of where you currently value him.edit to add: Marshall's on pace for 93 receptions 1300 yards and 7/8 Touchdowns. Those sound like WR1 numbers to me.Also, can you imagine if Cutler wasnt throwing to him? wow.
I never said that Marshall wasn't a FANTASY WR1. 1300/8 might be FANTASY WR1 numbers, but they aren't necessarily real-world WR1 numbers.Also, to back up my claim that Marshall is not currently a top-20 WR... Randy Moss, Terrell Owens, Braylon Edwards, Reggie Wayne, Marvin Harrison, T.J. Houshmandzadeh, Chad Johnson, Larry Fitzgerald, Plaxico Burress, Torry Holt, Joey Galloway, Marques Colston, Steve Smith, Roy Williams, Calvin Johnson, Andre Johnson, Santonio Holmes, Hines Ward, Dwayne Bowe, Donald Driver, Lee Evans, Laveranues Coles, Brandon Stokley, Wes Welker, Deion Branch, Darrell Jackson, Javon Walker, Santana Moss, Derrick Mason, Terry Glenn. That's 30 WRs. Can you name 11 guys on that list who Brandon Marshall is better than right now? I'm not saying that he's not better than ANYONE on that list, I'm just saying that I can't pull 11 names that I'd take Marshall over, assuming those guys are healthy.
Honestly, you have Darrell Jackson on that list! Calvin Johnson (omg!!) Stokley, Welker, Santana Moss and Deion Branch!!! Dude, just stop. I think my head is going to explode. I now see that you are not being serious and this is more about your manhood than comparing and analyzing the strength of Wideouts in the REAL WORLD as you put it.
 
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Hey I respect that you have an opinion and use stats to back it up, but you definitely pick and choose your explanations and the stats so they favor your argument. I don't see how you can minimize Marshall for getting more targets than Walker and I don't see how that diminishes what Marshall is doing this year. Have you considered that the reason Marshall gets more targets is because he gets open and Cutler trusts him? Have you considered that the reason the offense is better is because Marshall's presence as the #1 WR makes it better? See your arguments cut both ways. Sure Cutler's development has a lot to do with it, but its foolish to think that the all around game that Marshall brings isn't also a big factor in the improvement of the Broncos offense
From watching the offense, my honest opinions is that the offensive improvement is almost entirely attributable to drastically better QB play, with some also being attributed to an improved running game (which is partly a result of Marshall's blocking, but more a result of better RBs and Daniel Graham). You could argue that Marshall's presence makes the offense better this year, but as I said, after watching Marshall this year and Walker last year, I'm of the opinion that Walker was playing better than Marshall, so I don't agree with that argument.
Like I said, I like Javon Walker. I think he's a very talented WR. But the fact is his NFL career has not been all that great. He has had only two seasons worthy of the No. 1 pick status afforded to him by the Packers. And how good he'll be next season and beyond is a major question given the serious knee injuries he has now suffered in two of the past three seasons.
His career has certainly been great, just marred by injury. You keep mentioning that two seasons thing, but the fact is that Javon Walker hasn't been healthy and stoppable in 4 years now. He was unstoppable at the beginning of this season, he was unstoppable last year, he didn't play at all the year before, and he was unstoppable the year before that. Injuries might have cut some campaigns short, but it's been 4 years since Javon Walker has been able to be stopped. Marshall, on the other hand, was a relative nobody as recently as half a season ago. I fail to see how you can hold the lack of a body of work against Walker when comparing him to Marshall.
No way walker is more athletically gifted.
Marshall is stronger and has better balance and drive, but Walker is MUCH faster and a MUCH better leaper. They're Baby Moss and Baby TO, with Walker playing the role of Moss.
It is yet to be seen if Walker will return at the same speed and leaping ability. Knees are very important for both.
That's a very valid question, and I've said all along that I have no problem with that argument being made. I'm no doctor, I don't know HOW Walker will return from this injury. Everything I post in this thread is based on the assumption that he returns at 100%, but that's just what it is- an assumption. Obviously it's not a foregone conclusion, and that definitely impacts Walker's value.
Honestly, you have Darrell Jackson on that list! Calvin Johnson (omg!!) Stokley, Welker, Santana Moss and Deion Branch!!! Dude, just stop. I think my head is going to explode. I now see that you are not being serious and this is more about your manhood than comparing and analyzing the strength of Wideouts in the REAL WORLD as you put it.
I listed every WR who I thought people might have above Marshall, not every WR who I personally had above Marshall. Darrell Jackson was a STUD when healthy before he went to San Francisco. Which is more likely, that Jackson forgot how to play, or that San Fran is just an offensive black hole? Santana Moss is another guy who was absolutely uncoverable, but who people forget about because he's having an off year. It wasn't too long ago when he was drawing serious comparisons to Smiff. Deion Branch was good enough at one point that Seattle traded a 1st rounder to get him. He's been injured and is another guy suffering from OoSOoM syndrom ("Out of Sight, Out of Mind"), but he can flat out play. Calvin Johnson was viewed as the second coming of Don Hutson as recently as 4 months ago. Stokley is a guy who, watching the Broncos games, is ALWAYS open. Terry Glenn is another guy who suffers from OoSOoM syndrom. Every single WR on that list was a guy who I seriously believe has at least some case for being better than Marshall, even if I don't personally believe they're better than Marshall.
 
Marshall is the understood #1 in Denver, even when Walker gets back? Interesting...

Hi, Mike. In consecutive mailbags, you've alluded to Javon Walker likely not returning next year. Why is that? Isn't he under contract? And why would the Broncos want to get rid of him? Is he that much of a cap liability already?

-- Doug Van Doren, Los Angeles

Doug - I believe I had categorized Walker as "possibly" not returning, but after he didn't play Sunday, it may be closer to likely. Walker's contract calls for him to make close to $7.5 million next year in bonuses and salary. That includes $4.4 million in option bonuses during the offseason. He has 20 catches this year. There's no way the Broncos will bring him back for that kind of money coming off such little production.

However, I do think the Broncos will try to bring Walker back - at a reduced rate. The Broncos do like Walker. They would be better with him than without him. Mike Shanahan and general manager Ted Sundquist have a good working relationship with Walker's agent, Kennard McGuire. Discussions will be amicable.

Let's say the Broncos try to bring Walker back for $5 million in 2008. Could he do better in the open market? I don't think so, not with his knee history. It's one thing for the Broncos to give him a huge contract after one major knee surgery. But now that he's clearly experienced a setback with the same knee this year, the risk is far greater.

Another consideration is Walker's feelings. Knowing that Marshall is the No. 1 receiver, Walker may want to seek a team where the top receivers have a bit more age in their legs.
http://www.denverpost.com/broncos/ci_7685196
 
Hey I respect that you have an opinion and use stats to back it up, but you definitely pick and choose your explanations and the stats so they favor your argument. I don't see how you can minimize Marshall for getting more targets than Walker and I don't see how that diminishes what Marshall is doing this year. Have you considered that the reason Marshall gets more targets is because he gets open and Cutler trusts him? Have you considered that the reason the offense is better is because Marshall's presence as the #1 WR makes it better? See your arguments cut both ways. Sure Cutler's development has a lot to do with it, but its foolish to think that the all around game that Marshall brings isn't also a big factor in the improvement of the Broncos offense
From watching the offense, my honest opinions is that the offensive improvement is almost entirely attributable to drastically better QB play, with some also being attributed to an improved running game (which is partly a result of Marshall's blocking, but more a result of better RBs and Daniel Graham). You could argue that Marshall's presence makes the offense better this year, but as I said, after watching Marshall this year and Walker last year, I'm of the opinion that Walker was playing better than Marshall, so I don't agree with that argument.
Like I said, I like Javon Walker. I think he's a very talented WR. But the fact is his NFL career has not been all that great. He has had only two seasons worthy of the No. 1 pick status afforded to him by the Packers. And how good he'll be next season and beyond is a major question given the serious knee injuries he has now suffered in two of the past three seasons.
His career has certainly been great, just marred by injury. You keep mentioning that two seasons thing, but the fact is that Javon Walker hasn't been healthy and stoppable in 4 years now. He was unstoppable at the beginning of this season, he was unstoppable last year, he didn't play at all the year before, and he was unstoppable the year before that. Injuries might have cut some campaigns short, but it's been 4 years since Javon Walker has been able to be stopped. Marshall, on the other hand, was a relative nobody as recently as half a season ago. I fail to see how you can hold the lack of a body of work against Walker when comparing him to Marshall.
No way walker is more athletically gifted.
Marshall is stronger and has better balance and drive, but Walker is MUCH faster and a MUCH better leaper. They're Baby Moss and Baby TO, with Walker playing the role of Moss.
It is yet to be seen if Walker will return at the same speed and leaping ability. Knees are very important for both.
That's a very valid question, and I've said all along that I have no problem with that argument being made. I'm no doctor, I don't know HOW Walker will return from this injury. Everything I post in this thread is based on the assumption that he returns at 100%, but that's just what it is- an assumption. Obviously it's not a foregone conclusion, and that definitely impacts Walker's value.
Honestly, you have Darrell Jackson on that list! Calvin Johnson (omg!!) Stokley, Welker, Santana Moss and Deion Branch!!! Dude, just stop. I think my head is going to explode. I now see that you are not being serious and this is more about your manhood than comparing and analyzing the strength of Wideouts in the REAL WORLD as you put it.
I listed every WR who I thought people might have above Marshall, not every WR who I personally had above Marshall. Darrell Jackson was a STUD when healthy before he went to San Francisco. Which is more likely, that Jackson forgot how to play, or that San Fran is just an offensive black hole? Santana Moss is another guy who was absolutely uncoverable, but who people forget about because he's having an off year. It wasn't too long ago when he was drawing serious comparisons to Smiff. Deion Branch was good enough at one point that Seattle traded a 1st rounder to get him. He's been injured and is another guy suffering from OoSOoM syndrom ("Out of Sight, Out of Mind"), but he can flat out play. Calvin Johnson was viewed as the second coming of Don Hutson as recently as 4 months ago. Stokley is a guy who, watching the Broncos games, is ALWAYS open. Terry Glenn is another guy who suffers from OoSOoM syndrom. Every single WR on that list was a guy who I seriously believe has at least some case for being better than Marshall, even if I don't personally believe they're better than Marshall.
Let it go, Marshall is a beast, Walker is a huge band aid.
 
he's going to be on my team for the next 3 years; drafted him as a rookie

I've seen about 4 broncos games this season and it looks to me like they never throw to him. In the Packer game he got all 3 catches in the late 4th quarter

he's the #16 scoring WR in my league

I don't get to see him enough to review, but if he's not in the top 20 next season it will be due to someone's injury

 

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