In PPR, I'll take Moreno every single day, especially at his dirt cheap price. Standard may lean Ball a little bit due to the supposed goalline role, but I won't be surprised at all if Moreno emerges with even more value. IMO we've seen this movie before, and I become more convinced of it day by day. Knowshon Moreno = Joseph Addai circa 2009.
In 2008, Addai played only 12 games, rushed for a whopping 3.5 YPC, had 25 receptions, 7 total TDs, and battled injuries. The Colts turned around and used the 27th overall pick (note - not a late 2nd or 3rd round selection) on Donald Brown. He was the heir-apparent, the guy that was supposed to fix the running game issues for Indy. He was the hot new toy in a Peyton Manning offense. Addai was cooked, until...
Addai wasn't cooked. Fast forward through the 2009 season and Addai finished with 219 carries for 828 yards, 51receptions for another 336 yards, and 13 total TDs. His efficiency metrics? Nothing special - 3.8 per carry, 6.6 per reception. But he won many fantasy titles for his owners as the cheap, old, broken down 26-year old former first rounder who never quite lived up to expectations. Sound familiar?
There's a clear link here -- Peyton Manning.
The beauty of a Manning-led offense is his ability to capitalize ANY GIVEN PLAY on the weakness of the defense. Pass or run, he'll find the area of the field the defense cannot adequately defend, and he'll exploit it. Now do you honestly believe Peyton is going to fully endorse a RB that makes him think twice about audibling to any given play? Especially a pass play because the current RB in the game isn't a great pass protector and he's got to worry about whether he'll get his head taken off? I don't.
Here's the other concern that no one is talking about - given Ball's struggles thus far in pass protection, Denver's probably not likely to put him in those situations, right? If we all know that, don't you think NFL defenses certainly know that? While Manning will help mitigate that to some extent, Drew Brees is also a pretty good QB though, and he wasn't able to fully mitigate defenses keying on the run when another touted rookie Mark Ingram came in the game. Defenses keyed on the run and blew up a lot of plays. Fantasy owners were disappointed. My point is that the Broncos know they've got to be careful to not have a situation where Ball comes in and the offense goes to a running play. Predictability is the enemy here -- or defenses will blow it up every single play.
Give me Moreno... I'll roll the dice there. Not to mention he looks pretty good to me thus far - better as a runner than last year IMO.
Looks like it's playing out exactly like that Colts offense when Brown was drafted to take over for Addai. Now, it's just one game. But the Broncos dropped 49 points on the defending champs, so it's not exactly like the offense struggled.
Brown was a late first rounder, Ball a late 2nd. From what we know historically, that doesn't portend greatness for Ball. Add to that the fact that he has no clue how to pass protect, and likely has his head swimming in the playbook. The kid is going to face a loaded box every time he comes in the game. I don't recall every play, but I do distinctly remember Peyton taking a sack on one of the first plays Ball was in the game as a blitz came delayed up the middle untouched to Manning. They're going to win with his arm... period.
Knowshon isn't special, but he can aggregate points when the defense only has 6 in the box, and with Welker, Thomas, Thomas, and Decker occupying the secondary, Knowshon is going to face a lot of VERY light fronts.
Knowshon's the guy until he gets hurt or someone takes it away from him. I don't see Hillman with the stature to handle that, or the running game chops to do so (not to mention he's still not quite as good in pass pro), but he'll serve a role as an explosive complement. Ball will likely be worked in as the season goes on, and they'll try to give him looks in garbage time to eat the clock. The problem is, as previously alluded to by myself and others, he's going to face stacked fronts as the D knows what's coming. And even if they do check to a pass, Peyton better get rid of it quickly.
The wildcard here is CJ Anderson. Staff must have thought pretty highly of the kid to keep an UDFA RB that missed the last 2 (or was it 3?) weeks of camp due to injury on the 53 man roster. He could take on a much bigger role in this backfield in the future. Honestly, I think the 'Shark Move' if there is one is to roster Anderson and Moreno.