Two quick-hit points.First off, teams most certainly limit a player's returns based on how integral he is to the offensive (or defensive) gameplan. See Wes Welker, Eddie Royal, Darrent Williams, Devin Hester, Steve Smith, Rod Smith, etc. I've seen guys who are a very important offensive weapon who will still handle punt returns (Welker, DJax, Hester, sometimes Royal), but very few who still handle kickoff returns (pretty much Harvin and Felix are the only two I can think of off hand, and neither of them are as involved in the offense as a Welker or DJax). I can't think of *ANY* who are a decent part of the offensive gameplan who handle both punts *AND* kickoffs. The closest anyone has come to that would be a Josh Cribbs or Dante Hall, and they've both topped out at about 500 yards from scrimmage on offense. If Spiller is getting 250 offensive touches, I sincerely doubt he'll be handling all the returns. If Spiller is handling all the returns, I sincerely doubt that he'll be getting 250 offensive touches.That's interesting that you factor in returns into how often he'll rush and catch the ball. I honestly can't imagine a team doing that--setting a number for him to touch the ball in all aspects and then going by that. Who knows, maybe they do![]()
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While I won't get into how we view Spiller's talent because there's not much else to discuss there that we haven't already, I just don't agree that their OL is "lousy". Recent #'s just don't bear that out. Football Outsiders attempts to give a numerical ranking on a variety of factors and Buffalo was 12th last year and 13th the year before here. Even if it's not perfect, I have a hard time believing they are so off that it ranks a "lousy" O-line so high. By that ranking, they are most definitely lousy at pass protection, but definitely not for run blocking. Factor in what Fred Jackson was able to do behind that same line last year and we just view his situation differently. I also didn't realize that being the focus of the offense makes you more injury prone.
Second off, the Football Outsiders offensive line rankings aren't a composite of a lot of factors. The rankings are strictly based on the "Line Yards" stat... which is handy, but which is heavily influenced by the RBs and the playcalling. The only offensive line stat that they have that measures a line's ability to just line up and move a defense 1-on-1 without any trickeration or without relying on the RB to make something happen is the "power" ranking (i.e. how often the team is successful on 3rd or 4th down with 2 or fewer yards to go- obvious running situations). Buffalo ranks 31st in that metric. Obviously that doesn't paint the whole picture, either, but it does give a different perspective. I wouldn't say that Buffalo is bottom-5 in terms of run blocking, but I do think they're bottom-10.
Also factoring into the mess that is Buffalo is Chan Gailey (in someone's sig they have a quote that most offenses are either run-heavy or pass-heavy, but Chan's offenses are punt-heavy), the "too many mouths to feed" syndrome (Jackson + Lynch), and the fact that right now Edwards, Fitzpatrick, and Brohm are working hard because one of them is actually going to wind up being a starting QB in the NFL next year.
Good find above.
