SSOG,Agreed with what you have to say about YAC (to a point).  It is an overrated stat, but I don't think you're giving YAC it's just due by lumping it in with yards while tightroping the sideline.  To me, YAC can be reflective of a WR's level of explosiveness (notice I said "can be").  Guy's who get seperation, are excellent at cutting out of their breaks, selling routes and powerful enough to break tackles are usually good YAC guys.  What does it say about a guy that gets minimal YAC?  Generally that when he catches the ball the closest defender is right on top of him.  You say there's no difference between those two guys.  Well, maybe not that year in terms of fantasy p.p.g. but over the longhaul?  YAC can tell you quite a bit.
		
		
	 
In my experience, the guys with the best YAC are the guys catching the ball on the shortest pass patterns, and the guys with the worst YAC are the guys catching the ball on the longest pass patterns. Not always, certainly, but it definitely has a big impact on the ratings. Guys on deep patterns generally have a defender right on top of them because the ball hangs up in the air, or because they have to adjust to the ball while it's in flight.I'm not saying that YAC isn't a good thing, I'm just saying that if two players are averaging the same yards per reception with the same catch% and the same number of targets, I don't care who is getting more YAC. YAC would suggest a difference in usage patterns, but not a difference in ability. Both are producing at exactly the same level, and that's what it's all about- production.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			You cannot be serious. This is an invaluable stat that most ceratainly is a skill that good/great receivers posess.  Why would you not want a receiver who can change a play into a seriously long run?
		
		
	 
I could use the same argument against you. Why wouldn't you want a receiver who doesn't HAVE to change a play into a seriously long run, because he's already catching the ball 20 yards downfield?If two guys have the same catch%, yards per target, and yards per reception, what difference does YAC make?
	
		
	
	
		
		
			End of the year, Jennings and Holmes had very similary numbers. In year two, Jennings is blowing away Holmes. On top of that, Holmes is on the injury report every week. It appears that Jennings is also more durable.Not to mention how brutal Marshall was in year one, yet he's the one everyone is so high on. I can see you're not ever going to change your mind here and that's fine. But it might be good to watch the guy play before making these kind of assumptions.
		
		
	 
2006-Greg Jennings = 43% catch%, 6.02 yptBrandon Marshall = 54% catch%, 8.35 yptSantonio Holmes = 57% catch%, 9.58 yptDoesn't look like Jennings and Holmes had similar production in 2006 at all. Also, it certainly doesn't look like Marshall was brutal at all in 2006 (not that it matters, since I'm less high on him than everyone else is). I also question how Jennings (who was hurt last year and, according to everyone in this thread, had that injury drastically impact his production) is less durable than Santonio. Both have had a season completely healthy, and a season with nagging injuries.For what it's worth, here are the 2007 numbers-Greg Jennings = 63% catch%, 11.11 yptBrandon Marshall = 60% catch%, 7.89 yptSantonio Holmes = 65% catch%, 10.60 yptJennings is obviously producing as much as Holmes is this year. I've said multiple times that it's entirely possible that I've got a big blind spot on Jennings, and I've explained multiple times why that might be, but by all means, if you guys want me to say it again- I have a big potential blind spot on Greg Jennings because he was so awful last year and because Brett Favre has a history of making good WRs look great.
	
		
	
	
		
		
			I think I get it now. When you say "Holmes will regress to the mean", it has absolutely nothing to do with statistics or facts at all. What you really mean is "Holmes will regress to my personal projection".
		
		
	 
Ummm... yeah? Isn't that what this is all about- PROJECTING what happens in the future? I never knew there was a pro-football-reference that already had next year's stats on it, or I obviously wouldn't spend so much time trying to figure out what a player's true mean was, as determined by talent and situation, and then figure out where their numbers were going to go from this season as a result.Here, I'll spell it out for you. Holmes is not the 57th most talented WR in the league. He's not playing in a system which I think will repress his numbers in the long-term. As a result, I expect his targets to increase. Marshall is not the 2nd most talented WR in the league. He's not playing in a system which historically has funneled passes into a single target to this degree. As a result, I expect his targets to decrease. In both cases, I view this as "regression to the mean". If you want me to back up any of my claims with facts or statistics, I'd be more than happy to do so, but in the end, this is my personal projection, supported by facts, data, and analysis.