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Donald Brown's 2011 yards-per-carry average of 4.81 drops to 4.25 if you exclude one run -- Brown's 80-yard touchdown in Week 15 against the Titans.

Donald Brown's 2011 yards-per-carry average of 4.81 drops to 4.25 if you exclude one run -- Brown's 80-yard touchdown in Week 15 against the Titans.
This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
I dont think it is a concern but it would be something to monitor. I dont know why he is trying this with the season around the corner. There is an article out there of tony gonzalez switching to vegan. He lost 10 lbs and some strength because he wasnt getting enough calories and protein. Hopefully arian doesnt make the same mistake.This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
Foster is one of the more thoughtful and introspective athletes around, so we wouldn't put it past him to stick with this diet. Still, there's no reason for owners to panic as the Texans will be certain to have their $43.5 million running back in optimal condition for Week 1. Foster is our choice for the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts.
Source: Arian Foster on Twitter
Jul 9 - 8:39 AM
Why would someone going on a Vegan diet be a concern? Would you rather him say he eats at McDonald's 10 times a week?
Think Ricky Williams before and after his spiritual journey. But realistically, I think Foster will be fine. If he shows up to camp 20 lbs lighter then I'll begin to worry.This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
Foster is one of the more thoughtful and introspective athletes around, so we wouldn't put it past him to stick with this diet. Still, there's no reason for owners to panic as the Texans will be certain to have their $43.5 million running back in optimal condition for Week 1. Foster is our choice for the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts.
Source: Arian Foster on Twitter
Jul 9 - 8:39 AM
Why would someone going on a Vegan diet be a concern? Would you rather him say he eats at McDonald's 10 times a week?
I would think he would lose more weight during camp, because he would need to consume more calories than usual depending on how hard they are training in camp. If his vegan diet isnt done correctly during camp he could loose a lot of weight quickly. Im sure he will do it correctly but ya never know...Think Ricky Williams before and after his spiritual journey. But realistically, I think Foster will be fine. If he shows up to camp 20 lbs lighter then I'll begin to worry.This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
Foster is one of the more thoughtful and introspective athletes around, so we wouldn't put it past him to stick with this diet. Still, there's no reason for owners to panic as the Texans will be certain to have their $43.5 million running back in optimal condition for Week 1. Foster is our choice for the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts.
Source: Arian Foster on Twitter
Jul 9 - 8:39 AM
Why would someone going on a Vegan diet be a concern? Would you rather him say he eats at McDonald's 10 times a week?
Hey all, I'm new to the forum, and I just gotta ask- what's wrong with eating McDonald's 10 times a week?This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
Foster is one of the more thoughtful and introspective athletes around, so we wouldn't put it past him to stick with this diet. Still, there's no reason for owners to panic as the Texans will be certain to have their $43.5 million running back in optimal condition for Week 1. Foster is our choice for the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts.
Source: Arian Foster on Twitter
Jul 9 - 8:39 AM
Why would someone going on a Vegan diet be a concern? Would you rather him say he eats at McDonald's 10 times a week?
Nine burger and fry a day! /Ricky GervaisHey all, I'm new to the forum, and I just gotta ask- what's wrong with eating McDonald's 10 times a week?This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
Foster is one of the more thoughtful and introspective athletes around, so we wouldn't put it past him to stick with this diet. Still, there's no reason for owners to panic as the Texans will be certain to have their $43.5 million running back in optimal condition for Week 1. Foster is our choice for the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts.
Source: Arian Foster on Twitter
Jul 9 - 8:39 AM
Why would someone going on a Vegan diet be a concern? Would you rather him say he eats at McDonald's 10 times a week?
Well, when the bulk of his damage was a fluke run and a CarolinaGame, with most of the remainder sub 4.0, I can understand the caution.I think pointing out those hidden fluke plays is useful info.PSI'd disagree with yudkin in that yhe more big plays a player makes, the more comfortable I am with leaving them in, as I feel they're more predictive.Isn't it one is a fluke, 2 is a trend, or something like that?Donald Brown's 2011 yards-per-carry average of 4.81 drops to 4.25 if you exclude one run -- Brown's 80-yard touchdown in Week 15 against the Titans.Yes, I realize that Brown is likely not going to average 4.81 YPC, but now even RW is using the "if you just take away the one big play..." logic. Yes, and Dorsett doesn't hold the record if we take away that 99.5 yarder...except we can't because he did, so he does. TIA. Have a great season.[/rant]
While I certainly think it's something to consider, it would seem that a large number of big plays could be an indicator that a player is just an explosive player and we should expect to see that continue. I mean, nobody at this point is saying that Randy Moss was a mediocre receiver that just got lucky and had a ton of big plays, right?I think another thing to consider is HOW a big play happened too. I could be wrong, but my memory is that Cruz piled up his big plays in a few different ways. Some were deep passes where he beat the secondary and some were quick passes he broke and took to the house. A guy breaking big plays in a variety of ways indicates a guy that is multidimensional, explosive, and earning his plays rather than a guy getting lucky.I hear what the OP is saying, but if you are trying to get an accurate projection for things moving forward, taking those types of plays into account is actually more advisable than not.For example, Victor Cruz had TD of 74, 68, 72, 99, and 74 yards last year (in addition to 4 other plays of 40+ yards that did not go for scores). Those 9 plays accounted for 41% of his fantasy production last year. True, we don't know what would have happened had he not had those plays and maybe he would have earned some of that production back anyway (maybe he would have had a couple other catches for 40+ yards in those drives). However, in looking ahead to this year, I suspect that he will not have as many break away scores again.To that end, even with similar targets, I can see Cruz losing 300/3 from his total last year based on the long play factor (which is both hard to replicate and tough to rely on).
You can see him losing 300/3 cause of the long play factor? Doesn't the long play factor mean he's good at making long plays...so shouldn't he get around as many or more long plays? If the guy is getting one long play a year I can see how that shows that he's not that good at it...but 5 ridiculously long ones like Cruz's should mean he's the one creating these plays, right?People are saying the same things about Jordy Nelson and I don't get it. It's like they don't expect either WR to have one long play this year because they had too many last year. And then the reasoning is always some cop out like "regression to the mean." So in other words, just cause a a lot of mediocre WRs can't make long plays, WRs that can make long plays won't because they have to be average cause you know...peer pressure to fit in with the other WRs and stuff?'David Yudkin said:I hear what the OP is saying, but if you are trying to get an accurate projection for things moving forward, taking those types of plays into account is actually more advisable than not.For example, Victor Cruz had TD of 74, 68, 72, 99, and 74 yards last year (in addition to 4 other plays of 40+ yards that did not go for scores). Those 9 plays accounted for 41% of his fantasy production last year. True, we don't know what would have happened had he not had those plays and maybe he would have earned some of that production back anyway (maybe he would have had a couple other catches for 40+ yards in those drives). However, in looking ahead to this year, I suspect that he will not have as many break away scores again.To that end, even with similar targets, I can see Cruz losing 300/3 from his total last year based on the long play factor (which is both hard to replicate and tough to rely on).
This.Seems a bit late in the game to make a switch like that. Vegan is more strict than vegetarian. Can a highly trained athlete get enough protein eating vegan? Sure. But at the same time I imagine they need quite of protein and calories not only to maintain muscle mass, but also to rebuild the tissue they tear up every week during the season. Running a calorie and protein deficit during the season would seem like a horrible idea. And with a vegan diet mated to a high caloric demand there's some risk of doing that even if you don't intend to.'lexdizzle said:I dont think it is a concern but it would be something to monitor. I dont know why he is trying this with the season around the corner. There is an article out there of tony gonzalez switching to vegan. He lost 10 lbs and some strength because he wasnt getting enough calories and protein. Hopefully arian doesnt make the same mistake.'Sweet Love said:This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.'Frankbot said:Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
Foster is one of the more thoughtful and introspective athletes around, so we wouldn't put it past him to stick with this diet. Still, there's no reason for owners to panic as the Texans will be certain to have their $43.5 million running back in optimal condition for Week 1. Foster is our choice for the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts.
Source: Arian Foster on Twitter
Jul 9 - 8:39 AM
Why would someone going on a Vegan diet be a concern? Would you rather him say he eats at McDonald's 10 times a week?
Last year he changed his diet and loaded up on a lot of carbs...then he got injured...then he said it was cause of his change in diet and loading up on carbs so he changed back..he didn't elaborate more on it. Ugh...I hope vegan doesn't do the same thing to him.This.Seems a bit late in the game to make a switch like that. Vegan is more strict than vegetarian. Can a highly trained athlete get enough protein eating vegan? Sure. But at the same time I imagine they need quite of protein and calories not only to maintain muscle mass, but also to rebuild the tissue they tear up every week during the season. Running a calorie and protein deficit during the season would seem like a horrible idea. And with a vegan diet mated to a high caloric demand there's some risk of doing that even if you don't intend to.'lexdizzle said:I dont think it is a concern but it would be something to monitor. I dont know why he is trying this with the season around the corner. There is an article out there of tony gonzalez switching to vegan. He lost 10 lbs and some strength because he wasnt getting enough calories and protein. Hopefully arian doesnt make the same mistake.'Sweet Love said:This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.'Frankbot said:Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
Foster is one of the more thoughtful and introspective athletes around, so we wouldn't put it past him to stick with this diet. Still, there's no reason for owners to panic as the Texans will be certain to have their $43.5 million running back in optimal condition for Week 1. Foster is our choice for the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts.
Source: Arian Foster on Twitter
Jul 9 - 8:39 AM
Why would someone going on a Vegan diet be a concern? Would you rather him say he eats at McDonald's 10 times a week?
I think the OP's point, which is valid, is that when it comes to some players we don't make this kind of "correction," but for others, maybe guys who don't have the same appreciation from the pundits, we do. It is inconsistent.As for myself, I will repeat what I said in the Donald Brown thread. If he went untouched on that play and it was a "freebie," then I could see this. Or, if he were a guy who only had 50 touches or so. But he had 134 carries last year, so I think it is harder to throw one run out as an outlier. And if you look at the play, it was ALL Brown. He had to break a couple of tackles in the backfield and another as he ran further downfield. I think you have to take into account what actually happened in the play.'David Yudkin said:I hear what the OP is saying, but if you are trying to get an accurate projection for things moving forward, taking those types of plays into account is actually more advisable than not.For example, Victor Cruz had TD of 74, 68, 72, 99, and 74 yards last year (in addition to 4 other plays of 40+ yards that did not go for scores). Those 9 plays accounted for 41% of his fantasy production last year. True, we don't know what would have happened had he not had those plays and maybe he would have earned some of that production back anyway (maybe he would have had a couple other catches for 40+ yards in those drives). However, in looking ahead to this year, I suspect that he will not have as many break away scores again.To that end, even with similar targets, I can see Cruz losing 300/3 from his total last year based on the long play factor (which is both hard to replicate and tough to rely on).
Becoming vegan usually means MORE carbs, not less... I'm actually VERY concerned about this if it's true because a vegan diet lacks many of the important fat soluble vitamins a person needs for optimal health that's only present in animal products, (not to mention superior athletic performance). I might need to send him a tweet and direct him to some smarter sources of dietary advices.Last year he changed his diet and loaded up on a lot of carbs...then he got injured...then he said it was cause of his change in diet and loading up on carbs so he changed back..he didn't elaborate more on it. Ugh...I hope vegan doesn't do the same thing to him.This.Seems a bit late in the game to make a switch like that. Vegan is more strict than vegetarian. Can a highly trained athlete get enough protein eating vegan? Sure. But at the same time I imagine they need quite of protein and calories not only to maintain muscle mass, but also to rebuild the tissue they tear up every week during the season. Running a calorie and protein deficit during the season would seem like a horrible idea. And with a vegan diet mated to a high caloric demand there's some risk of doing that even if you don't intend to.'lexdizzle said:I dont think it is a concern but it would be something to monitor. I dont know why he is trying this with the season around the corner. There is an article out there of tony gonzalez switching to vegan. He lost 10 lbs and some strength because he wasnt getting enough calories and protein. Hopefully arian doesnt make the same mistake.'Sweet Love said:This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.'Frankbot said:Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
Foster is one of the more thoughtful and introspective athletes around, so we wouldn't put it past him to stick with this diet. Still, there's no reason for owners to panic as the Texans will be certain to have their $43.5 million running back in optimal condition for Week 1. Foster is our choice for the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts.
Source: Arian Foster on Twitter
Jul 9 - 8:39 AM
Why would someone going on a Vegan diet be a concern? Would you rather him say he eats at McDonald's 10 times a week?
I bought donald brown low in this years salary cap league like i did reggie bush last year. Being productive is all tht matters when it comes to #4/5 RBs, im not trading brown away like i did bush. The ##### on rotoworld wouldnt have gaoned 4 yds on that "fluke" play so ill leave his 2011 ypc just as it is w Elias sports bureau.Some of you may not remember the sheer torment of owning Barry Sanders and watching his stats during a game. He would have something like 19 carries for 20 yards and then break one for 85 yards. You would end up with 20 for 105 and a TD and you would go away mentally drained and swear that you would get a more reliable RB next year. But then you would buy him again the next year. Some guys are just big play players. The trick is to decide who are the ones with non-repeatable flukes and who are the ones in the Sanders category.
Oh ####...I just realized it was the opposite. He was cutting out the carbs and blamed it on that for his injury. He was trying to get leaner before his injury and cut out carbs for that purpose.Becoming vegan usually means MORE carbs, not less... I'm actually VERY concerned about this if it's true because a vegan diet lacks many of the important fat soluble vitamins a person needs for optimal health that's only present in animal products, (not to mention superior athletic performance). I might need to send him a tweet and direct him to some smarter sources of dietary advices.Last year he changed his diet and loaded up on a lot of carbs...then he got injured...then he said it was cause of his change in diet and loading up on carbs so he changed back..he didn't elaborate more on it. Ugh...I hope vegan doesn't do the same thing to him.This.Seems a bit late in the game to make a switch like that. Vegan is more strict than vegetarian. Can a highly trained athlete get enough protein eating vegan? Sure. But at the same time I imagine they need quite of protein and calories not only to maintain muscle mass, but also to rebuild the tissue they tear up every week during the season. Running a calorie and protein deficit during the season would seem like a horrible idea. And with a vegan diet mated to a high caloric demand there's some risk of doing that even if you don't intend to.'lexdizzle said:I dont think it is a concern but it would be something to monitor. I dont know why he is trying this with the season around the corner. There is an article out there of tony gonzalez switching to vegan. He lost 10 lbs and some strength because he wasnt getting enough calories and protein. Hopefully arian doesnt make the same mistake.'Sweet Love said:This one is the best though, they just posted today...Arian Foster tweeted that he is trying a vegan diet.'Frankbot said:Rotoworld updates amuse me, you have to take them with a grain of salt since all they're doing is quoting speculative crap from beat writers. Yesterday they had a post declaring Hardesty as Trent Richardson's primary backup and then 4 posts later had one saying it was Brandon Jackson now. Silly, pointless speculation more often than not.
Foster is one of the more thoughtful and introspective athletes around, so we wouldn't put it past him to stick with this diet. Still, there's no reason for owners to panic as the Texans will be certain to have their $43.5 million running back in optimal condition for Week 1. Foster is our choice for the No. 1 overall pick in fantasy drafts.
Source: Arian Foster on Twitter
Jul 9 - 8:39 AM
Why would someone going on a Vegan diet be a concern? Would you rather him say he eats at McDonald's 10 times a week?
I doubt this lasts, but good news for Tate ownerVEGAN Question:Bill Walton played for the BLAZERS '77 Championship Team. He had a lot of health issues that many speculated was due to lack of protein in his diet. Though when he got healthy they knocked DR J and 76ers out for the title. When you think Vegan...I don't think your mind associates the KILLER INSTINCT you hope your RB has. IT doesn't take away from the talent of Foster. It could however impact him physically. Race cars need fuel. It's one thing for average person to go Vegan but high performance machine like elite NFL RB is even more work and effort.
On thing about fantasy football is trying to figure out how TDs and long plays factor into the mix. It works the OPPOSITE way as well. For example, people were leary of Curtis Martin because he had a horrible year getting into the end zone in 2003. No one wanted to draft him the next year because he couldn't score, was over 30, etc. I snagged him in several leagues for a deep discount and he scored 14 times. As much as some people will want to argue and debate it, IMO predicting who scores TD, how many, and how consistently is extremely difficult (and many times comprised of a lot of luck and being in the right place at the right time).This year, as I see it, Antonio Brown is criminally under rated, as most projections have him with very few TDs again this year. Brown now has 85 career receptions and only 2 TDs. Of the 225 receivers since 2000 with at least 75 receptions, that is the second worst ratio after Jacquez Green (92 receptions ans 2 scores). I think it will take an act of Congress to keep Brown out of the end zone at the same rate, so I look at Brown as someone to go out of my way to get. Bottom line, I think far too many people over react when guys score a ton of barely score at all.I agree with David Y.I think you have to look at each of these things under their own events and consider how much data you have to work with, but overall, I think its valid to ask the question.One of the best examples I can recall is Steve slaton. He came out and was a hot topic that one year and people were extrapolating numbers and putting him way up int he rankings for the next year (reminds me of DeMarco Murray in some ways now), but when you looked at what he was doing, he had a lot of facts that were counter to what people were suggesting. You had people saying he would do THIS because he is so dynamic and breaks a lot of long runs but the numbers were actually something like all but 2 of his TDs were 10 yards or less. Just lots of things that weren't easy to see on the surface but once you took some of the outliers away, it was pretty clear. I think thats why they call it a detailed analysis. Anyone can look at a team and say "they threw for 5000 yards ..they are awesome" but what does that really mean? If 500 yards is 18th in the league, its suddenly not as "wow" when you put it into perspective.
'GroveDiesel said:While I certainly think it's something to consider, it would seem that a large number of big plays could be an indicator that a player is just an explosive player and we should expect to see that continue. I mean, nobody at this point is saying that Randy Moss was a mediocre receiver that just got lucky and had a ton of big plays, right?I think another thing to consider is HOW a big play happened too. I could be wrong, but my memory is that Cruz piled up his big plays in a few different ways. Some were deep passes where he beat the secondary and some were quick passes he broke and took to the house. A guy breaking big plays in a variety of ways indicates a guy that is multidimensional, explosive, and earning his plays rather than a guy getting lucky.'David Yudkin said:I hear what the OP is saying, but if you are trying to get an accurate projection for things moving forward, taking those types of plays into account is actually more advisable than not.For example, Victor Cruz had TD of 74, 68, 72, 99, and 74 yards last year (in addition to 4 other plays of 40+ yards that did not go for scores). Those 9 plays accounted for 41% of his fantasy production last year. True, we don't know what would have happened had he not had those plays and maybe he would have earned some of that production back anyway (maybe he would have had a couple other catches for 40+ yards in those drives). However, in looking ahead to this year, I suspect that he will not have as many break away scores again.To that end, even with similar targets, I can see Cruz losing 300/3 from his total last year based on the long play factor (which is both hard to replicate and tough to rely on).
Donald Brown's 2011 yards-per-carry average of 4.81 drops to 4.25 if you exclude one run -- Brown's 80-yard touchdown in Week 15 against the Titans.Yes, I realize that Brown is likely not going to average 4.81 YPC, but now even RW is using the "if you just take away the one big play..." logic. Yes, and Dorsett doesn't hold the record if we take away that 99.5 yarder...except we can't because he did, so he does. TIA. Have a great season.[/rant]
I would actually believe that the way they've been drafting them...I love all the "such and such player is turning heads" or the "such and such player looks the part". WTF?! I swear if you buy all that stuff then the Dallas Cowboys and Green Bay Packers have a glut of all pro rookie WR's and RB's before they have even played a live snap.
Just silliness.
I love RW too, but this time of year is agonizing. But it is fun to watch all the guppies run out and pick up every player RW heaps praise on during the off season.
So, if you throw out a long play as an outlier, how many of the plays where he lost yards do you throw out? Don't forget, he was hit in the backfield on the play that he went for 80s yards and that could easily have been a loss. In statistics, you don't just throw out one data point--you throw out a number from both sides. And you do it for every data line--not just one, or one player in this case. It isn't right to take away Brown's best run and then not do the same for every other RB if you want to compare their ypc. The other thing Rotoworld didn't consider: offensive scheme. In 2011, once Manning went down, they finally started running more I formation. So, including Brown's previous ypc and saying "that is more indicative of his ability," is misleading. I have argued before that the shotgun draw plays that IND ran almost exclusively with Manning was not beneficial to Brown's running style. A big reason he did better in 2011 was Manning going down and a more run friendly offense being used. To be fair, we don't know how Brown will run in yet another new offense in 2012, but I am pretty sure it will be better than the shotgun draw of the past. I don't expect him to gain 4.8 ypc this year, especially if his carries goes up, but I wouldn't be at all surprised to see 4.5 ypc. Another variable? The offensive line. In Brown's early years the IND line was built to pass block, not run block. And they didn't open many good holes. The OL was revamped this year with bigger OL. I think that could bode well for Brown as well.'GridironMenace said:The OP severely took Rotoworld's blurb out of context. The actual post was:
"Donald Brown's 2011 yards-per-carry average of 4.81 drops to 4.25 if you exclude one run -- Brown's 80-yard touchdown in Week 15 against the Titans.
The run was the best of Brown's career and no one can take it away from him, but it single-handedly skews a stat we like to think of as predictive for NFL running backs. Even when you include the run, Brown's career yards-per-carry average is 4.17. And that's a lot more indicative of the kind of player he's been. Rotoworld's Evan Silva broke down 2011 game footage of Brown, Isaac Redman, and Evan Royster at the Draft Guide link below. Jul 8 - 2:48 PM"
Leaving out the bolded parts above is wrong, as it points out that Rotoworld recognizes the issue with taking away a single play, but their general point is still valid. Yudkin brings up Victor Cruz. The difference is that Victor Cruz had 9 plays of 40+ yards and Brown had 1. Maybe Cruz got lucky on 1 or 2 or 3 or even 4 of those plays, but to do it 9 times takes a lot of skill. No he, probably won't replicate that this year, but it took a lot of skill to do it in 2011. The difference is that with Brown there was just 1 run. And taking away that 1 run puts Brown's ypc at his career average, which is middling. Keeping that 1 play in alters his ypc well above his career ypc by almost 3/4 of a yard. So it certainly stands to reason that Brown's one 80 yard run was a complete fluke and will never happen again and therefore, Brown is much closer to a 4.2 ypc guy than 4.8 ypc guy.
"median gain" is what we need, cross out a top for every bottom.If the back carried it 201 times, number 101 is the median number.Bottom line: if you want to throw data out you need to do it more consistently (all players) and systematically.
Yes! And do it for all players and then compare."median gain" is what we need, cross out a top for every bottom.If the back carried it 201 times, number 101 is the median number.Bottom line: if you want to throw data out you need to do it more consistently (all players) and systematically.
What makes you think his rushes for negative plays are outliers? He had 12 of them last year, (all between -1 and -5 yards) accounting for almost 10% of his rushes.So, if you throw out a long play as an outlier, how many of the plays where he lost yards do you throw out? Don't forget, he was hit in the backfield on the play that he went for 80s yards and that could easily have been a loss. In statistics, you don't just throw out one data point--you throw out a number from both sides. And you do it for every data line--not just one, or one player in this case. It isn't right to take away Brown's best run and then not do the same for every other RB if you want to compare their ypc.
The other thing Rotoworld didn't consider: offensive scheme. In 2011, once Manning went down, they finally started running more I formation. So, including Brown's previous ypc and saying "that is more indicative of his ability," is misleading. I have argued before that the shotgun draw plays that IND ran almost exclusively with Manning was not beneficial to Brown's running style. A big reason he did better in 2011 was Manning going down and a more run friendly offense being used. To be fair, we don't know how Brown will run in yet another new offense in 2012, but I am pretty sure it will be better than the shotgun draw of the past. I don't expect him to gain 4.8 ypc this year, especially if his carries goes up, but I wouldn't be at all surprised to see 4.5 ypc. Another variable? The offensive line. In Brown's early years the IND line was built to pass block, not run block. And they didn't open many good holes. The OL was revamped this year with bigger OL. I think that could bode well for Brown as well.
Bottom line: if you want to throw data out you need to do it more consistently (all players) and systematically. This web site offers a basic approach: http://www.ehow.com/how_5201412_calculate-outliers.html
The problem with this is that the would be very little difference between players....take for exampleDonald Brown had a median rush of 3.Arian Foster had a median rush of 3.Cedric Benson had a median rush of 3."median gain" is what we need, cross out a top for every bottom.If the back carried it 201 times, number 101 is the median number.Bottom line: if you want to throw data out you need to do it more consistently (all players) and systematically.
What if you figure in attempts?The problem with this is that the would be very little difference between players....take for exampleDonald Brown had a median rush of 3.Arian Foster had a median rush of 3.Cedric Benson had a median rush of 3."median gain" is what we need, cross out a top for every bottom.If the back carried it 201 times, number 101 is the median number.Bottom line: if you want to throw data out you need to do it more consistently (all players) and systematically.
Not sure what you mean.What if you figure in attempts?The problem with this is that the would be very little difference between players....take for exampleDonald Brown had a median rush of 3.Arian Foster had a median rush of 3.Cedric Benson had a median rush of 3."median gain" is what we need, cross out a top for every bottom.If the back carried it 201 times, number 101 is the median number.Bottom line: if you want to throw data out you need to do it more consistently (all players) and systematically.
There is no median for attempts. You multiply attempts x median rush.Not sure what you mean.What if you figure in attempts?The problem with this is that the would be very little difference between players....take for exampleDonald Brown had a median rush of 3.Arian Foster had a median rush of 3.Cedric Benson had a median rush of 3."median gain" is what we need, cross out a top for every bottom.If the back carried it 201 times, number 101 is the median number.Bottom line: if you want to throw data out you need to do it more consistently (all players) and systematically.
Is that really going to tell you much other than who had the most attempts. Those 3 happened to be the first 3 I checked for median, but I'd imagine most players (with a reasonable amount of carries) will have a median of 3. So your most likely going to end up a list ranked in order of rushing attempts.There is no median for attempts. You multiply attempts x median rush.Not sure what you mean.What if you figure in attempts?The problem with this is that the would be very little difference between players....take for exampleDonald Brown had a median rush of 3.Arian Foster had a median rush of 3.Cedric Benson had a median rush of 3."median gain" is what we need, cross out a top for every bottom.If the back carried it 201 times, number 101 is the median number.Bottom line: if you want to throw data out you need to do it more consistently (all players) and systematically.
Really?BenJarvus Green-Ellis rushed 18 times for 69 yards in the Bengals' Week 7 loss to the Steelers.
Another plodding effort. The Bengals actually opened the game with a surprising run-first approach, and Law Firm picked up 44 yards on his initial eight carries. Easy to defend, he managed 25 yards on his next 10. With Shonn Greene showing signs of life of late, perhaps Green-Ellis has unseated him as the worst starting running back in the league. The Bengals go on a bye in Week 8. 10-team leaguers can consider dropping Green-Ellis. He's just an RB3 in 12- and 14-teamers.
Yeah and Shonn Greene was droppable two weeks ago too but now he is showing signs of life. I try not to take to base my rankings on rotoworlds synopsis as they tend to become biased against certain players. Green-Ellis is a fulltime starter and was the best thing about the Bengals offense tonight even if that isn't saying much. Remember according to them LaRod Stephens-Howling isn't everydown back material and Vick Ballard can't get it done. Even when those guys had good weeks according to rotoworld it wasn't because of them. They just got lucky.Back to Green-Ellis though, he is easily a RB2 in 12 to 14 league teams.Really?BenJarvus Green-Ellis rushed 18 times for 69 yards in the Bengals' Week 7 loss to the Steelers.
Another plodding effort. The Bengals actually opened the game with a surprising run-first approach, and Law Firm picked up 44 yards on his initial eight carries. Easy to defend, he managed 25 yards on his next 10. With Shonn Greene showing signs of life of late, perhaps Green-Ellis has unseated him as the worst starting running back in the league. The Bengals go on a bye in Week 8. 10-team leaguers can consider dropping Green-Ellis. He's just an RB3 in 12- and 14-teamers.
You probably actually want to look at variance. Assuming high variance is bad, value players based on total yards minus some penalty for high variance. You could calculate variance by carry (home run hitters probably have high variance, plodders low variance) and by game (a high game variance player is unreliable against stronger defenses ... a boom or bust type player). You could also look at the variance in the number of carries per game. You might want to stay away from players that only see the ball a lot in games when the running game is working well (gameplan type RBs). Ideally you'd want the guy with the most consistent production, which means consistent touches game to game, consistent ypc and touchdowns spread out throughout the season. But these guys all get drafted really early (Foster, Rice, Peterson, MJD).I do think its instructive to look at big games for mid tier / bench guys, because one huge game can make a huge difference to a guy on the edge of not being relevant. This seems to be more true at WR than RB, since there's so many touches to go around and there are so many WRs in the "barely rosterable" range. Last year 17 WRs had over 1000 yards and 67 had over 500. So that's about 50 WRs in the "should be rostered but don't feel great starting them" range (obviously this is very crude and doesn't take into account injuries, changes in who's starting, etc). If one of those guys got 50% of his fantasy points in 2 games I'd feel less good about them for next season.Targets and snap percentages should also be looked at. Once again, you want guys that get consistent looks. Andre Johnson and Steve Smith are having bad seasons but get consistent opportunities, and that bodes well for them going forward. Compare this to someone like Hartline. A single game this year accounts for nearly half his yards and his only touchdown, and his targets are highly variable (8, 12, 9, 18, 5, 0!!).Is that really going to tell you much other than who had the most attempts. Those 3 happened to be the first 3 I checked for median, but I'd imagine most players (with a reasonable amount of carries) will have a median of 3. So your most likely going to end up a list ranked in order of rushing attempts.