Missed out on Ingram, huh?
The opposite, in fact.One of my leagues does a slow draft on the forums so we started early, back before all the Ingram hype really started to pick up. I employed the "Julius Jones draft" or sorts, only with Ingram. I drafted him as my RB1 in round 5.I *think* that Payton will use Ingram as a bellcow this year. But that doesn't mean that I'm going to be unrealistic about it like so many here. It is FAR from a guarantee, and is more of a toss-up. All of the theories that point to it are just that, theories, based on nothing more than speculation and stuff that makes logical sense in our heads (which as any worthwhile FF player knows, leads to the exact opposite just as often as it leads to what it's pointing to).Ingram is worth the risk of a 50/50 shot of him being the bellcow because if he is, then you've just gotten yourself a top 5 RB at a bargain price, and if he's not then you still got an adequate producer. But it's still a 50/50 shot. New Orleans' defense is unlikely to be as good as they were in their Super Bowl year and unlikely to be nursing many big 4th quarter leads. Payton has had stud running backs before and not used them as bell cows. Even last season, while Chris Ivory is no stud he averaged 5.2ypc while Julius Jones averaged 3.7ypc and Jones still ate into Ivory's carries.
It's not just a guess that Ingram will be heavily involved in this offense. You don't move up to draft a player just to have him in some RBBC. If Payton thought RBBC was a great philosphy, they would have used that pick elsewhere and signed someone like McGahee, Bradshaw, Ronnie Brown, etc.
Sure they do, it happens plenty nowadays.Carolina drafted Jonathan Stewart with the 13th overall pick and stuck him straight into a RBBC. The Texans traded up for Ben Tate and he wouldn't have been the workhorse even had he not gotten hurt. Beanie Wells, Felix Jones, CJ Spiller, Donald Brown, and plenty of others were 1st round selections that didn't even come close to being "workhorses" right out of the gates. Even Ryan Matthews, who people like to throw out because he got hurt, still only got 62% of the carries when he was healthy (which ironically, is the most Payton has ever given a running back), and that was with supposedly the biggest supporter of workhorse backs in the league as his coach. DeAngelo Williams just signed a huge contract to be a RBBC back. While Bradshaw's wasn't nearly as huge, it was still a lot of money as well...to be in a RBBC.This discussion isn't about Ingram being "involved" in the offense. It's about him being the workhorse, the bellcow. Just because a team drafts a RB early or trades up to get him doesn't mean they intend to make him a 350 carry guy in year 1. In fact, it rarely means that, and the numbers back that up."Arizona didn't draft Beanie Wells in the 1st round to share carries with Tim Hightower this year"."Dallas didn't draft Felix Jones in the 1st round to be a CoP back this year".Heck, Sean Payton HIMSELF has had two 1st round running backs before and stuck both of them straight into a RBBC. Sure, Bush doesn't really count because of the type of player he is, but Ron Dayne was selected 11th overall in 2000, presumably to be the workhorse, and Payton gave him 228 and 180 carries his first two years.The bottom line is that people here are going way overboard by acting like anyone that doesn't think Ingram will be a sure-fire, workhorse, 350 carry back this year are just too guppy to see the writing on the wall. The reality is that they're just as big of guppies for believing it's a sure thing because they're not paying attention to the fact that we, not Sean Payton, are the ones writing it.