I'd like to hear you or anyone else explain the mechanism by which these RBs are unaffected by having only 6 days rest in between 25-30 carry weeks in season 1, but for some reason, the 6 month recovery between years isn't quite enough and has a detrimental affect on year 2. In other words, if 6 days is enough recovery time throughout season 1, and they week after week produce at a high level, why does a 6 month recoveryperiod somehow plunge them into mediocrity?Not worth trying to change your mind, but it's not just injuries we're talking about- Eddie George played every game the season after his 450+ touch year, but his production dropped like a stone. The same thing happened to almost all of the RBs who didn't get hurt the following year.The pattern is simply that people that carry the ball a lot have more opportunity to get injured.Out of context, perhaps yes. But it's ironic you mention Offensive Player of the Year, because within context, many of the "good" seasons you mention didn't measure up to expectations. Of the 29 entries, only 9 surpasses 1300 yards and only 13 even got 1200. But these weren't JAG's putting up solid seasons. These were epic, HOF players failing to meet expectations. Emmitt, Eric Dickerson, Earl Campbell. "Good" season don't cut it for those guys, and "good" won't cut it for where Murray's ADP is likely to be in redrafts. And that's only 1/3 of the entries. 2/3 weren't "good", failing to reach 1200 yards and 14/29 failing to get even 1000 yards. Not exactly a lesser roster either in the lower tier - Eddie George, Curtis Martin, Shaun Alexander, Bettis, Edgerrin James - guys that were top 5 fantasy picks on a yearly basis. If you're bound and determined to see what you want to then sure, go with that, but for the rest of us that read what's written, this is significant.Plenty of good seasons on that list. How many changed teams as Offensive Player of the Year?Bob Magaw said:Perhaps Murray can be one of the outliers, but the pattern is as clear as day.
The number of carries doesn't cause the issue. Other than just being available for more injuries, there is correlation, but no causation.
Perhaps Murray can be one of the outliers, but the pattern is as clear as day.
