David Yudkin
Footballguy
Using the "Top 5 years" theory to evaluate peak performance, here were the top players that played at some point over the past 10 years. To some, this would reflect a player being dominant or elite in their prime seasons. While they may not be great peers or contemporaties for Ward, they are at least close to guys that played in his era. To clarify once again, I added up the best 5 seasons in each category to get to the total listed. No rushing or passing totals are included.
Player, Rec, Rec Yds, Rec TD, Fantasy points in PPR scoring
Bottom line, Ward at present ranks 17th on that list but will be passed by several current players very shortly to fall farther down the list once they play another season or two.
I realize, the HOF and fantasy are world's apart, but there are a number of players that statistically had better peaks than Ward did. It's not the hall of stats, but there certainly is a measure or component of that to a candidate's candidacy. As already spelled out, Ward has other things on his resume that may make up for his lake of statistical dominance. That's why they vote for the HOF, and we'll have to see what the voters thing when his time comes . . .
Player, Rec, Rec Yds, Rec TD, Fantasy points in PPR scoring
Code:
Jerry Rice 540 7922 84 1836.2
Marvin Harrison 564 7688 68 1740.8
Randy Moss 480 7322 85 1722.2
Terrell Owens 456 6718 72 1559.8
Cris Carter 526 6305 66 1552.5
Torry Holt 499 7397 48 1526.7
L Fitzgerald 486 6478 53 1451.8
Isaac Bruce 458 7047 48 1450.7
Reggie Wayne 484 6649 48 1436.9
Chad Johnson 462 6870 45 1419
Herman Moore 487 6431 48 1418.1
Tim Brown 464 6583 48 1410.3
Jimmy Smith 484 6790 38 1391
Rod Smith 473 6491 44 1386.1
Andre Johnson 484 6649 39 1382.9
Joe Horn 437 6289 45 1335.9
Hines Ward 477 5706 47 1329.6
Anquan Boldin 459 6044 42 1315.4
Steve Smith 439 6262 41 1311.2
Derrick Mason 460 5759 38 1263.9
Eric Moulds 430 6023 36 1248.3
Muhsin Muhammad 424 5705 41 1240.5
K McCardell 441 5784 35 1229.4
Key Johnson 425 5636 40 1228.6
Donald Driver 418 5849 37 1224.9
Antonio Freeman 357 5586 50 1215.6
Terance Mathis 401 5335 44 1198.5
Santana Moss 400 5649 37 1186.9
TJ Housh 451 5069 36 1173.9
Joey Galloway 349 5479 46 1172.9
Plaxico Burress 353 5560 42 1161
Wes Welker 499 5223 23 1159.3
Roddy White 401 5362 37 1159.2
Tony Martin 371 5517 39 1156.7
Lav Coles 425 5384 32 1155.4
Amani Toomer 374 5731 33 1145.1
Marques Colston 369 5097 40 1118.7
Darrell Jackson 350 5250 40 1115
Terry Glenn 370 5425 30 1092.5
BMarshall 413 5033 28 1084.3
Greg Jennings 322 5222 40 1084.2
Jake Reed 341 5443 30 1065.3
Johnnie Morton 367 5163 29 1057.3
D Alexander 313 5323 35 1055.3
I realize, the HOF and fantasy are world's apart, but there are a number of players that statistically had better peaks than Ward did. It's not the hall of stats, but there certainly is a measure or component of that to a candidate's candidacy. As already spelled out, Ward has other things on his resume that may make up for his lake of statistical dominance. That's why they vote for the HOF, and we'll have to see what the voters thing when his time comes . . .
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atsselfonback:Says he will play out the last two years of his contract too, which even at minimal production will likely land him on about 1050-12700-90. This is the first year he really didn't put up solid stats, and a lot of that has to do more with the fact that the Steelers have younger, more dynamic options at WR rather than the fact that he can't play. They really only use him on short routes where they need to pick up a first down or kill clock these days, but he's still a fairly effective option.
And P.S. - I love Rod Smith and wouldn't cry if he was inducted either. Guy was great for a long time, but he's just a (slightly) lesser version of Ward, career-wise. 3 Pro Bowls to Ward's 4, 1 2nd team All-Pro to Ward's 2, no SB MVP. Had a better peak, but didn't contribute for quite as long.
Sorry, but I find it pretty ridiculous to consider things like "blocking, toughness, playing on the Steelers, etc." any less real/actual/substantial/definite (i.e. tangible) simply because you can't put them in a nicely formatted table on a message board.
This, we can agree on.
right up until the part about Rod Smith. As posted previously in this thread, Ward has surpassed Smith as a HOF candidate. Of course, Smith was never a realistic HOF candidate, so that doesn't say anything about Ward's chances.