toxic
Footballguy
One of the things that surprised me the most this weekend was the extent to which many teams used true RBBC. In some cases, players still produced despite the divided workload (the Bells and McAllister/Bush), but the relatively even spread of carries across so many teams was still surprising. I did a quick count of distribution of carries across primary RBs for each team. To do this, I eliminated carries by FBs, WRs, QBs, or by spot duty RBs, as those types of carries will happen with every team, even those with workhorse backs. I then identified teams that had their feature back handle less than 70% of the RB load (again, runs by FBs, QBs, WRs, and spot duty guys are not included in the "RB load"). Following this, 6 teams had some serious RBBC going on:
NE: 52% Maroney/48% Dillon
DEN: 60% T Bell/40% M Bell
NO: 61% McAllister/39% Bush
TEN: 64% Brown/36% Henry
CHI: 65% Jones/35% Benson
IND: 69% Rhodes/31% Addai
As almost all of these players were drafted in the early/mid rounds, I think we are going to see some serious underperformance on many of these guys (relative to their draft position). Of course, many of these picks were made with a "swing for the fences" mentality with the hope that the pick would emerge as the workhorse back (or that the competition will injure himself somewhere along the line).
My question is this, who do we think might break fee of these respective RBBC situations? Those players would obviously be great trade targets at this point.
My guesses (and that's really all they are at this point): Maroney (I'm thinking the Dillon slide will continue) and T. Bell (given the potential lingering effects of M. Bell's injury). Other thoughts?
NE: 52% Maroney/48% Dillon
DEN: 60% T Bell/40% M Bell
NO: 61% McAllister/39% Bush
TEN: 64% Brown/36% Henry
CHI: 65% Jones/35% Benson
IND: 69% Rhodes/31% Addai
As almost all of these players were drafted in the early/mid rounds, I think we are going to see some serious underperformance on many of these guys (relative to their draft position). Of course, many of these picks were made with a "swing for the fences" mentality with the hope that the pick would emerge as the workhorse back (or that the competition will injure himself somewhere along the line).
My question is this, who do we think might break fee of these respective RBBC situations? Those players would obviously be great trade targets at this point.
My guesses (and that's really all they are at this point): Maroney (I'm thinking the Dillon slide will continue) and T. Bell (given the potential lingering effects of M. Bell's injury). Other thoughts?