Don't you think it's significant that a vast majority of the top RBs drafted by the NFL fit a pretty narrow mold? It is pretty clear that the job description favors a certain skill set which favors a certain body type. The fact that NFL teams favor thick RBs is no less significant than the fact that NBA teams favor tall centers. In both cases the physical quality contributes to success.
Of course it's significant! You're just confused as to its significance. Yes, being of a non-ideal body type makes it much, much harder to make it to the NFL. This is all irrelevant to this discussion, because we're discussing RBs who have
already made it to the NFL. Once the scouts have gotten a hold of a prospect and put him through the ringer, performing all their due diligence, putting him under the microscope, and have still declared him an elite prospect (first three rounds), then that back has a patina of credibility about him. He's been certified. The scouting community has affirmed their belief that, unlike all the other non-ideal backs, this particular player has what it takes to succeed in the NFL.I liken it to small school WR prospects. Lots of players dominate at small schools and never make the NFL. If we see somebody putting up huge numbers at Appalachian State or the Colorado School of Mines, we shouldn't assume that they're a great pro prospect. If that same player passes through the scouting crucible and gets certified with a grade in the first three rounds, though, we have to stop holding his small school status against him. You seem to inherently understand this, even going so far as arguing that small school WRs are underrated still. You've never once pulled up a list of the all-time reception leaders and said "look how it's dominated by big school players!". And yet that's exactly what you're doing here with non-ideal RBs.
Short QBs are another great example. There are not many short QBs atop the NFL lists, and yet, when the scouting community sees enough in a short QB to rate him highly (Drew Brees, Russell Wilson, Doug Flutie, etc), we should understand that they've evaluated that player's height and concluded that it won't be a problem.
There's a clear qualitative difference between guys like Peterson, Portis, and Forte and guys like Charles, Johnson, and Spiller. Nobody who watches Peterson run would ever describe him as undersized or lacking power. And Portis was something like 220 pounds for the majority of his career. I don't see either guy as an indictment of what I've been preaching. Quite the opposite.
Hey look, it's scouting with **** and Jane. See goalposts. See goalposts move. Move, goalposts, move!Clinton Portis entered the league at 205 and was a workhorse for years... but because he at one point managed to edge just barely over your 215 minimum, you're counting his entire career as validation of the idea that a back needs to be 215 to be a workhorse? You're ignoring all those years where Portis WASN'T 215 but was still a workhorse because it's wildly inconvenient to your theory. You can't just throw out data because it's inconvenient. You can't ignore the fact that Portis was a workhorse with a non-ideal body type, or the fact that Mike Shanahan
was quick to remind that he dominated at 205 and opine that his ideal playing weight was sub-215. The only reason Portis doesn't undermine your theory is because your definition of "ideal" is "any back who gets a workhorse workload". If NFL goalposts were as flexible as yours are, kickers would never miss.
It's funny that you accuse me of seeing what I want to see when you're doing exactly that. The fact that teams spent high picks on guys like McFadden, Reggie, Spiller, and Johnson doesn't prove that they see these backs as workhorses. As I've said previously, the value of these players is their ability to deliver dynamic big plays that a thicker, slower back probably couldn't give you. The trade off is that very few of these backs can hold up under a full workload. This is exactly why guys like McFadden, Reggie, and Spiller haven't been workhorses.
I'm not really interested in beating this dead horse any further, as it's clear that people on both sides will see whatever they want to see, but I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for guys like Spiller and McFadden to log Turner/MJD/Ricky levels of volume. Different players. Different bodies. Different strengths and weaknesses. At the end of the day, backs who fit the mold that I'm talking about dominate the season and career leaders for RB touches. I'm perfectly content to continue my foolish and old-fashioned bias of favoring them as long as they keep dominating the landscape.
Oakland clearly drafted McFadden to be a workhorse. It's 100% obvious to anyone who watches his usage pattern. Oakland *DESPERATELY WANTS* him to be a workhorse. As for Spiller... again, Jonathan Stewart splits time with a pro bowler and it doesn't mean anything, while Spiller splits time with a pro bowler and it's proof positive that his team only viewed him as a CoP back. Small Back Double Standard (SBDS). That's fine, we'll revisit this discussion next season when CJ Spiller is putting the bow on the end of his 300 touch season and making your assertions that he'd never be a workhorse look almost as foolish as your assertions that Charles would never be a workhorse
while he was in the middle of an unequivocal workhorse season.
I'd have to look at it, but I think 1600 carries is approximately where you start to see a lot of great backs drop in effectiveness. I wouldn't assume that ADP's prime will last much longer than one more season. Could it? Sure, but he's no more freakish than LT was, and we saw what happened there. Peterson probably has 1-3 good years left. For me that's not enough to justify the price he'll command.
Emmitt Smith hit 1600 carries in 1994. He posted 4 more career top-10 finishes, three more top-24 finishes, a 25th place finish, and a 26th place finish, compiling 597 more career VBD.LaDainian Tomlinson hit 1600 carries in 2005. He posted three more top-10 finishes and five more top-20 finishes, compiling 557 more career VBD.
Marshall Faulk hit 1600 carries in 1999. He posted two more #1 overall finishes, a pair more top-20 finishes, and had 504 more career VBD.
Barry Sanders hit 1600 carries in 1994. He played four more seasons, finishing top 10 every single time (including #1 overall in his 2000 yard season), and compiling 488 more VBD before walking away at the top of his game.
Sweetness hit 1600 carries in 1979. He posted 5 more top-5 finishes and a pair of 13th place finishes after that, compiling 701 more career VBD.
To put this 500-600 VBD into perspective, here is a brief list of players along with their career VBD totals:
Joe Horn- 311
Hines Ward- 325
Andre Johnson- 364 (and counting)
Jamal Lewis- 382
Jerome Bettis- 438
Ricky Williams- 445
Chad Ochocinco- 454
Larry Fitzgerald- 464 (and counting)
Steven Jackson- 468 (and counting)
Isaac Bruce- 501
Torry Holt- 561
Terrell Davis- 595
Clinton Portis- 597
Tiki Barber- 642
Priest Holmes- 673
In other words, a post-1600-carries Sanders, Tomlinson, Sweetness, Faulk, or Smith would have provided as much or more value than a rookie Hines Ward, Andre Johnson, Ricky Williams, Chad Ochocinco, Steven Jackson, Isaac Bruce, Torry Holt, Terrell Davis, or Clinton Portis. All of these guys were legitimate first round picks in dynasty startups (and deservedly so!). These guys were long-time fantasy studs, guys with amazing careers. Doug Martin is great, but is he better than Portis or Jackson? Is he a more desirable prospect than Ricky Williams or Terrell Davis were at this point in their rookie campaigns? Is Dez Bryant better than Andre Johnson, Torry Holt, or Isaac Bruce? There is a lot of room for these guys you'd take over Peterson to wind up being huge studs who will be remembered for decades and *STILL* not have as much career value in front of them as Peterson does.