blind leading the blind.Things continue to fall into place for Jackson - this game went very well for THE FANTASY KING EXCLUSIVE subscribers.
Obviously, Jackson did not things light up statistically, but legitimate fantasy experts know that statistics are a product, not a cause. I did not expect Jackson to have a big game this week, but I could have ended up being wrong had the Packers not been playing from behind for most of the game.
The main take-aways this week are:
- Jackson dominated the carries.
- Kuhn was turned to on the one yard line and given two opportunities to score, but failed.
- There are only 3 days left before the NFL trade deadline.
The clock is still ticking for anyone who is not on board yet. For those people, you are welcome in advance!
Regards,
THE FANTASY KING
Dang, yeah I read the wrong column when looking at Jones rookie stats. Mistakes happen. So Jones is your example. I'll give you that. One example... one.Hahahahahaha!Thomas Jones didn't have 373 carries as a rookie, he had 373 YARDS. YARDS!!!! He was drafted 7th overall, played 14 games, and only totaled 373 rushing yards. He was a former high draft pick... who had been cut by his original franchise in 2002, cut by his second franchise in 2003, and had played so well in 2004 that his third franchise spent a top-5 draft pick on an RB to replace him. Not only does he not meet your stated requirement unless you use the most transparent definitional gymnastics, but he's himself the perfect example of a guy who was drafted high (top 10), failed to beat out a lower draft pick (Pittman was a 4th rounder) who was not an established starter (Pittman had 2 starts the year before the Cards drafted Jones), and later went on to "explode" (6 straight seasons of 1300+ yards from scrimmage).None of them were high draft picks beat out by late draft picks that weren't already established as starters.
Jones had 373 carries his rookie year, he was a high draft pick.
Benson was a high draft pick, but Jones was already established as the starter there.
Barber was a second round pick like Jacksin, but he was drafted as a COP and KR, not to be the starting RB. The "starter" Wheatley was a higher draft pick.
Benson came in behind Jones who the team signed as an FA the year previous and Jones WAS the starter, so no, my use of him is NOT garbage.Barber was not expected to be the starter, and whether Wheatley had 1 or 300 carries, the Giants had him slotted as the starter, not Barber. I'm not so sure what's so difficult about that to grasp. Unless you're trying to argue with me... which is par for the course for you.Your dismissal of both Barber and Benson are equally garbage. For instance... Tyrone Wheatley was an "established starter" in New York when Barber was drafted? That's absolute garbage and if you don't know it, you should do some more research before making such definitive claims. Tyrone Wheatley had 1 (ONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!) career start when the Giants drafted Barber. Established starter my hindquarters. Complete and utter garbage, man.
So now, you want to argue semantics. If TFK is saying buy Jackson low, but only thinks "he could finish as RB20" then why pick him up? I'm starting to think you are TFK in disguise, or I should say the other way around. I love your personal attacks BTW, it's funny how you get so frustrated by someone on a FF message board. I also love how you accuse me of doing the exact same things you do.You started off by creating a red herring, asking for a group of RBs that "exploded" despite the fact that nobody, not even Fantasy King, is projecting Jackson will "explode". Nobody used the word explode until... you did. All TFK said was that Brandon Jackson was undervalued- he could finish as RB20 and still prove undervalued today. Then you started by asking for someone to provide you one example of a back that met an extremely arbitrary set of circumstances and then "exploded" (despite the fact, again, that no one is predicting an explosion). Then, after you are provided with three such examples, you dismiss them all based on rhetoric and flat out factually incorrect assertions. You went into this argument with your mind made up, and you're ignoring every shred of evidence that disagrees with your preconceived notions. You're guilty of several blatant and abundantly obvious cognitive biases, and logical and argumentative fallacies in this thread, and every time you're called on it, you just dig your heels in deeper.
Yeah, I already stated all of those. Why are you arguing with me if you agree with my opinion of Jackson. Seriously? You follow me from thread to thread commenting on my posts. Do you need friends? Do you need help?I get that you don't think Brandon Jackson will prove undervalued. Personally, I don't, either. The fact that you're dismissing the possibility entirely (and, moreover, the manner in which you're dismissing it- based on clearly flawed logical structures), however, is textbook "bad process". Instead of inventing reasons why Jackson can't or won't succeed, just stick to the reasons that work- his ypc is based on a statistically suspect sample size, his coaching staff remains reluctant to use him in the manner they promised they would before the season, and, at the end of the day, he's just not that talented.
Meanwhile, with the NFL trade deadline on Tuesday, the Packers still could acquire running back help if general manager Ted Thompson decided to make a move.
An NFL source said the Packers have had talks with the Dallas Cowboys about “one of” their running backs. The 1-4 Cowboys rotate Felix Jones, Tashard Choice and Marion Barber, and ESPN’s Chris Mortensen reported Sunday morning that it’s Barber that the Packers and Cowboys have discussed.
It’s unclear what the Cowboys’ asking price is for Barber, who had 10 carries for 31 yards in Sunday’s loss to Minnesota and has carried 52 times for 175 yards this season. He has been very good on short-yardage plays, going 5-for-5 on third- or fourth-and-1 plays Sunday and 9-for-9 in those situations on the season.
Listen to Jason Wilde every weekday from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. on “Green & Gold Today,” and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/jasonjwilde.
He is. And, it's pretty unanimous. Next thing you know, he'll be saying that Troy Aikman never really had a very good arm and that Felix Jones is the best RB since Jim Brown or that Thomas Jones had 373 carries his rookie year.Oh wait...Oh well. Mistakes happen.None of them were Hugh draft picks beat out by late draft picks that weren't already established as starters.Thomas Jones, Tiki Barber? Cedric Benson?They all took a few years to develop.. Do they count?switz said:Why do you keep referring to WRs when they take longer to make the transition? Can you find a highly drafted RB that had the job handed to him, couldn't beat out late round pick competition, then after a few years exploded? I'll hang up and listen ...Do you need me to compile a list of players that Brandon Lloyd has been beaten out by over the years? How about Sidney Rice?You're such a joke.
If you come back after a couple of weeks, please be much cooler.JNone of them were Hugh draft picks beat out by late draft picks that weren't already established as starters.Thomas Jones, Tiki Barber? Cedric Benson?They all took a few years to develop.. Do they count?switz said:Why do you keep referring to WRs when they take longer to make the transition? Can you find a highly drafted RB that had the job handed to him, couldn't beat out late round pick competition, then after a few years exploded? I'll hang up and listen ...Do you need me to compile a list of players that Brandon Lloyd has been beaten out by over the years? How about Sidney Rice?You're such a joke.
One was all you asked for.Dang, yeah I read the wrong column when looking at Jones rookie stats. Mistakes happen. So Jones is your example. I'll give you that. One example... one.
Chicago drafted Benson in the top 5 to be the starter. The fact that Jones wound up winning the job despite being a guy who played for 3 different teams in the 3 previous seasons just demonstrates why Benson qualifies as a highly-drafted RB who got beaten out by an "inferior" talent early in his career and went on to have success later. Saying that Thomas Jones was the established starter that season is revisionist history. Also, Benson was drafted substantially higher than Jackson (the 4th pick of the first round compared to the SECOND TO LAST pick of the 2nd round).Benson came in behind Jones who the team signed as an FA the year previous and Jones WAS the starter, so no, my use of him is NOT garbage.
Barber was not expected to be the starter, and whether Wheatley had 1 or 300 carries, the Giants had him slotted as the starter, not Barber. I'm not so sure what's so difficult about that to grasp. Unless you're trying to argue with me... which is par for the course for you.
Ummm... if Brandon Jackson carries an RB50 price tag but will net RB20 production, that's a *HUGE* buy low. You're essentially saying "why bother even buying him if you only think he'll produce as a starter-caliber fantasy RB the rest of the way?". If I'm guilty of the same things you are (cognitive biases and logical fallacies), then I deserve to be called out on it just as much as you do. If you see any examples of either of those things in my posts, please post a response highlighting the offending passage. I'm not saying that I'm immune to the occasional bias or fallacy, I'm just saying that posting "you're guilty of the same things!" without posting a single concrete example of me being guilty of the same things is not only garbage, it's yet another example of an argumentative fallacy on your part.So now, you want to argue semantics. If TFK is saying buy Jackson low, but only thinks "he could finish as RB20" then why pick him up? I'm starting to think you are TFK in disguise, or I should say the other way around. I love your personal attacks BTW, it's funny how you get so frustrated by someone on a FF message board. I also love how you accuse me of doing the exact same things you do.
That's a personal attack. It has nothing to do with the merit of my arguments, it's a series of statements designed solely to discredit me by painting me as a lonely guy making outlandish claims in a desperate cry for attention.I don't "follow you" anywhere. I read most of the threads on here, and if I spend a disproportionate amount of my time discrediting your posts, it's simply because a disproportionate number of your posts warrant discrediting.You follow me from thread to thread commenting on my posts. Do you need friends? Do you need help?
It wasn't a personal attack. It was a very true statement, with some simple follow up questions to help me understand why you act the way you do. I'm much more interested in trying to understand people than judge them.The fact you spend a disproportionate amount of time replying to my posts, out of the thousands of posts posted each day, would indicate there is something more than just my posts "warranting" discrediting. Most people on here just ignore people who they think are worthy of ignoring, instead of replying to their posts, post after post. So there's something more there than you just happening upon my posts.SSOG said:That's a personal attack. It has nothing to do with the merit of my arguments, it's a series of statements designed solely to discredit me by painting me as a lonely guy making outlandish claims in a desperate cry for attention.I don't "follow you" anywhere. I read most of the threads on here, and if I spend a disproportionate amount of my time discrediting your posts, it's simply because a disproportionate number of your posts warrant discrediting.You follow me from thread to thread commenting on my posts. Do you need friends? Do you need help?
Was Thomas Jones acquired the year before Benson was drafted? Was Jones the starter in Chicago the year before Benson was drafted? There are plenty of examples of first round RBs who sat behind established starters (Shaun Alexander #19 behind Watters, Larry Johnson #27 behind Holmes, Felix Jones behind Barber) for various reasons. But more to the point, by the time Benson was even ready to play his rookie season after his long holdout, Jones was established as the starter for that season.And quite frankly, there's still a question as to how talented Benson really is... yes he's had a few 100 yard games, but his career YPC is 3.9. He's only had one season as a starter where he's averaged over 4 YPC. He's only had one 1,000 yard season, though he is on pace for around 1,200 yards this year if he continues to get a good amount of carries.Chicago drafted Benson in the top 5 to be the starter. The fact that Jones wound up winning the job despite being a guy who played for 3 different teams in the 3 previous seasons just demonstrates why Benson qualifies as a highly-drafted RB who got beaten out by an "inferior" talent early in his career and went on to have success later. Saying that Thomas Jones was the established starter that season is revisionist history.
He was originally intended to be a third-down running back until Rodney Hampton had disappointing years in 1996 and 1997.
Wheatley was drafted by the New York Giants in the first round of the 1995 NFL Draft with the seventeenth overall selection. The Giants viewed Wheatley as their running back of the future, since Rodney Hampton was in the final year of his contract.
I think this is where your flaw is... you think people "deserve" to be called out for having different opinions based on reasons you disagree with the validity or basis for... who makes you the judge of what is adequate reason for someone to form an opinion? For instance you wrote: "You *DID* ask for RBs that met a ludicrously specific and arbitrary set of criteria."If I'm guilty of the same things you are (cognitive biases and logical fallacies), then I deserve to be called out on it just as much as you do.
Actually, I've already discussed the actual issues. 1. As a rookie, Jackson did not show enough talent to beat out 3 other players on the team, despite being the highest drafted of the bunch.This entire discussion of "can you name a player that was X, then Y, then became Z" is a pretty good example of a huge waste of time that many fantasy owners engage in when they do not have enough knowledge to discuss the actual issues.
I don't believe anything I've posted is irrational. But I do wonder how my asking a couple questions is considered by you as a personal attack (esp. worthy of being reported) when you go on to imply a) i do not have enough knowledge (i.e. am stupid), b) am irrational, and c) need to be educated (i.e. again saying I'm stupid)I am sorry but I am forced to report you. I do not know if the moderators will give you a temporary ban, but if they do, I hope you spend some time of that ban reading up about Brandon Jackson or football in general and maybe taking a mental timeout as you appear to get irrational when other posters make it obvious that you are wrong on a certain issue. It is okay to be wrong on things – I am myself sometimes wrong about things. But that is not a reason to get personal with other posters, especially when they are trying to educate you.
Mr Switz – when you ask someone if they need friends or need help, that is a personal attack. I am sorry but I am forced to report you. I do not know if the moderators will give you a temporary ban, but if they do, I hope you spend some time of that ban reading up about Brandon Jackson or football in general and maybe taking a mental timeout as you appear to get irrational when other posters make it obvious that you are wrong on a certain issue. It is okay to be wrong on things – I am myself sometimes wrong about things. But that is not a reason to get personal with other posters, especially when they are trying to educate you.

Please quit ending all your posts with Regards....... It's very irritatingThis entire discussion of "can you name a player that was X, then Y, then became Z" is a pretty good example of a huge waste of time that many fantasy owners engage in when they do not have enough knowledge to discuss the actual issues.Thomas Jones has nothing to do with what Brandon Jackson will do. He has nothing to do with Jackson's physical talent, mental capacity, instincts, work ethic, or personality. He has not had the same experiences Jackson had with the same players around him - he has not played on the same team or in the same situation as Jackson. He has not had the same coaching as Jackson.SSOG is correct that Mr Switz is asking for completely asinine and arbitrary comparison that add nothing to the discussion about Brandon Jackson's role with the Green Bay Packers and his ability to perform well in that role. My only wish is that SSOG, who seems to be very knowledgeable, could just recognize a discussion that is not worth having when he sees one and ignore these kinds of pointless obstacles put forth by Mr Switz. That way this thread would stay focused on quality discussion about Brandon Jackson, which impacts fantasy teams owned and operated by FBG community members, which at the end of the day is what we are in this community for.Mr Switz – when you ask someone if they need friends or need help, that is a personal attack. I am sorry but I am forced to report you. I do not know if the moderators will give you a temporary ban, but if they do, I hope you spend some time of that ban reading up about Brandon Jackson or football in general and maybe taking a mental timeout as you appear to get irrational when other posters make it obvious that you are wrong on a certain issue. It is okay to be wrong on things – I am myself sometimes wrong about things. But that is not a reason to get personal with other posters, especially when they are trying to educate you.It is unfortunate I have to give an update to this thread without it being much related to Brandon Jackson – at the very least I would like to point out that the trade deadline has now past, and any chance of the Packers trading for another player to take touches away from Jackson is now gone.Hopefully we can get back to discussing football in a productive and quality way now.Regards,THE FANTASY KING
Of course you already know this, thus the reason why you do it.I just want to point out SSOG, why it would SEEM to me that you have an issue with me personally.SSOG said:Ummm... if Brandon Jackson carries an RB50 price tag but will net RB20 production, that's a *HUGE* buy low. You're essentially saying "why bother even buying him if you only think he'll produce as a starter-caliber fantasy RB the rest of the way?".So now, you want to argue semantics. If TFK is saying buy Jackson low, but only thinks "he could finish as RB20" then why pick him up? I'm starting to think you are TFK in disguise, or I should say the other way around. I love your personal attacks BTW, it's funny how you get so frustrated by someone on a FF message board. I also love how you accuse me of doing the exact same things you do.
You seem to look for things to disagree with me about, even if earlier you agree. I don't think he'll prove to be undervalued, and previously you said the same. But when I highlight the fact that I don't think he's going to produce at a value worthy of picking him up, you then have to post something to disagree with me.Even when I argued earlier (by implication) that he's not that talented, you had to argue with my statement, saying it's invalid. Then you went on to post some "clearly flawed logical structures" to try to argue that my logic was unsound.I get that you don't think Brandon Jackson will prove undervalued. Personally, I don't, either. The fact that you're dismissing the possibility entirely (and, moreover, the manner in which you're dismissing it- based on clearly flawed logical structures), however, is textbook "bad process". Instead of inventing reasons why Jackson can't or won't succeed, just stick to the reasons that work- his ypc is based on a statistically suspect sample size, his coaching staff remains reluctant to use him in the manner they promised they would before the season, and, at the end of the day, he's just not that talented.
It was a personal attack. Even if it was a true statement (and for the record, it's not a true statement- I don't "follow you around", and suggesting otherwise is a pretty Switz-centric model of the universe), the fact is that it is entirely irrelevant to the arguments that I was making. Instead of discussing the arguments, you were discussing the source of the arguments.It wasn't a personal attack. It was a very true statement, with some simple follow up questions to help me understand why you act the way you do. I'm much more interested in trying to understand people than judge them.
I don't spend a disproportionate amount of my time replying to your posts. You might think so, but that's selective memory. You forget all of my posts that have nothing to do with you, and remember all of my posts that do have something to do with you, so your selective memory filter makes you believe that I'm just "following you around" and "spending a disproportionate amount of my time arguing with you". You have 10,494 posts on FBGs. I have 11,452. Two people who devote so much time to posting around here are obviously going to cross paths, but the reality is that we've crossed paths far less than you think. According to FBGs search, I've mentioned your name or quoted one of your posts in 48 threads (not counting those that have been purged), while you've mentioned my name or quoted one of my posts in 40 threads (not counting those that have been purged). That's a tiny, tiny fraction of the total number of threads we've each participated in.Also, why on earth should I ignore you? When did I imply that you were "worthy of ignoring"? Just because I think some of the arguments you're making in this thread are irreparably flawed doesn't mean I think you bring nothing to the table. That's crazy talk, and you should know better. We've probably wound up agreeing on players as frequently as we've disagreed. We've exchanged complimentary PMs as frequently as we've exchanged critical PMs.The fact you spend a disproportionate amount of time replying to my posts, out of the thousands of posts posted each day, would indicate there is something more than just my posts "warranting" discrediting. Most people on here just ignore people who they think are worthy of ignoring, instead of replying to their posts, post after post. So there's something more there than you just happening upon my posts.
I'm a very process-driven poster. In this case, I agree with your suggested outcome (that Brandon Jackson won't be a good buy-low), but strongly disagree with your stated processes (that the reason he won't be a good buy-low is because Thomas Jones was an "established starter" in 2005, etc). I think that Arian Foster is a top-10 dynasty RB. If you started a thread titled "I think Foster is a top 10 dynasty RB" and the reasons you gave were because you called Ms. Cleo and she told you so, and then you had a dream where magical space aliens showed you the future and Arian Foster was a hall of famer, and because RBs with 5 letters in their first name have historically had longer-than-average careers, I would post in that thread and I would rip your post to shreds. Even though I agreed with the conclusion you drew, the logic and arguments supporting that conclusion were absurd and needed to be refuted. Just because I agree with your assertion doesn't mean I have to agree with your reasons for making that assertion.You seem to look for things to disagree with me about, even if earlier you agree. I don't think he'll prove to be undervalued, and previously you said the same. But when I highlight the fact that I don't think he's going to produce at a value worthy of picking him up, you then have to post something to disagree with me.
Even when I argued earlier (by implication) that he's not that talented, you had to argue with my statement, saying it's invalid. Then you went on to post some "clearly flawed logical structures" to try to argue that my logic was unsound.
So yeah, maybe this whole forum would just be a better place if you put me on ignore, and I put you on ignore. I don't really have an issue with your posts, except when you seem to go out of your way to attack my posts, even when you agree with the conclusions I draw.
But wait, starks is the answer and the reason tt didn't trade for a rb.James Starks is staying on the PUP list for now! Which means he still can't practice with the club. They have 3 weeks to decide whether to let him begin practicing. Considering he doesn't appear to be injured at this point it would seem he would only be activated if Jackson went down.
No trades. No Starks. Love him or hate him Jackson is the guy in GB.
http://www.jsonline.com/sports/packers/105315683.html

The origination of my argument was that Brandon Jackson is not very talented. To support that statement I listed the players that beat him out as a rookie.Since you say you are process-driven poster, and one of your arguments is that he's not very talent, I am wondering what evidence you use to support your argument.I'm a very process-driven poster. In this case, I agree with your suggested outcome (that Brandon Jackson won't be a good buy-low), but strongly disagree with your stated processes (that the reason he won't be a good buy-low is because Thomas Jones was an "established starter" in 2005, etc). Same thing here. I agree that Brandon Jackson is not a good buy-low right now, but I strongly disagree with the reasons you're listing supporting that belief. You might personally view that as semantics, but I've posted plenty of times and even written articles on my website about the importance of separating "good outcome" from "good process" and judging predictions by the processes behind them rather than by the outcomes they produce.
Right, and I think that using a list of players who beat Jackson out years ago and who have since been cut by the franchise as a means of denigrating his talent is "bad process". Miles Austin got beaten out by Sam Huard. Michael Jordan got beaten out by a bunch of no-names in high school. Some players take longer to develop than others. Sure, RBs generally have a shorter learning curve, but "generally" by definition means "not always".As for why I think he's not that talented... that's my opinion based on watching him play. I'd feel that way even if he beat out Deshawn Wynn 2 years ago.The origination of my argument was that Brandon Jackson is not very talented. To support that statement I listed the players that beat him out as a rookie.
Since you say you are process-driven poster, and one of your arguments is that he's not very talent, I am wondering what evidence you use to support your argument.
You're pretty ballsy to start a guy averaging 3 yds a carry and 30 yds a game the first week of the playoffs...Jackson's best games are ahead of him, weeks 12-14, when the Packers play Atl,Sf, Detroit..there will be a decent amount of carries for Jackson in these games , esp vs. Detroit...other than that, there's really no point in using the guy since GB doesn't call enough running plays to begin with..at this point you're holding Jackson for one reason: week 14 vs. Detroit..In most fantasy leagues, week 14 is the beginning of the playoffs...
And that is somehow a better process than my reasoning? I don't think you have much grounds to argue against my line of reasoning when yours is completely subjective, and mine - while you argue could be made moot because a player is slow to develop - at least has verifiable substance.I'm done with this thread. I think my opinion about Jackson is clear.Right, and I think that using a list of players who beat Jackson out years ago and who have since been cut by the franchise as a means of denigrating his talent is "bad process". Miles Austin got beaten out by Sam Huard. Michael Jordan got beaten out by a bunch of no-names in high school. Some players take longer to develop than others. Sure, RBs generally have a shorter learning curve, but "generally" by definition means "not always".As for why I think he's not that talented... that's my opinion based on watching him play. I'd feel that way even if he beat out Deshawn Wynn 2 years ago.The origination of my argument was that Brandon Jackson is not very talented. To support that statement I listed the players that beat him out as a rookie.
Since you say you are process-driven poster, and one of your arguments is that he's not very talent, I am wondering what evidence you use to support your argument.
Unless they are going to give James Starks a chance by then.Jackson's best games are ahead of him, weeks 12-14, when the Packers play Atl,Sf, Detroit..there will be a decent amount of carries for Jackson in these games , esp vs. Detroit...other than that, there's really no point in using the guy since GB doesn't call enough running plays to begin with..at this point you're holding Jackson for one reason: week 14 vs. Detroit..In most fantasy leagues, week 14 is the beginning of the playoffs...
Considering how awful he was in the first game against the Lions I'd strongly recommend you have another option ready besides Jackson.at this point you're holding Jackson for one reason: week 14 vs. Detroit..
Yes, that is much better process than your reasoning. Watching players play and drawing what conclusions you can about how talented they are is good process. NFL franchises pay millions of dollars to their scouting departments to do just that. Why? Because it works. Teams that scout well draft well. Teams that draft well win. Bill Polian has presided over 6 SB teams simply because he is very good at watching players play and drawing conclusions about how talented they are. Scouting works- it's why 1st round picks as a whole do better than 2nd round picks, who as a whole do better than 3rd round picks, and so on down the line. Is my line of reasoning subjective? Yes, absolutely, you bet your butt it is. Why on earth does subjective suddenly equal "bad process" and objective suddenly equal "good process"? Where is that written? I can't think of a single "good process" in fantasy football that doesn't have the slightest bit of subjectivity to it.And that is somehow a better process than my reasoning? I don't think you have much grounds to argue against my line of reasoning when yours is completely subjective, and mine - while you argue could be made moot because a player is slow to develop - at least has verifiable substance.
I'm done with this thread. I think my opinion about Jackson is clear.
Jackson's best games are ahead of him, weeks 12-14, when the Packers play Atl,Sf, Detroit..there will be a decent amount of carries for Jackson in these games , esp vs. Detroit...other than that, there's really no point in using the guy since GB doesn't call enough running plays to begin with..at this point you're holding Jackson for one reason: week 14 vs. Detroit..In most fantasy leagues, week 14 is the beginning of the playoffs...
I said I was done, but I have to reply to this.You could say you don't think a player is talented, but that is meaningless without some substantiation. You cite Bill Polian, and his substantiation is his track record. But you don't have his track record, so your opinion is meaningless and has no substance.Yes, that is much better process than your reasoning. Watching players play and drawing what conclusions you can about how talented they are is good process. NFL franchises pay millions of dollars to their scouting departments to do just that. Why? Because it works. Teams that scout well draft well. Teams that draft well win. Bill Polian has presided over 6 SB teams simply because he is very good at watching players play and drawing conclusions about how talented they are. Scouting works- it's why 1st round picks as a whole do better than 2nd round picks, who as a whole do better than 3rd round picks, and so on down the line. Is my line of reasoning subjective? Yes, absolutely, you bet your butt it is. Why on earth does subjective suddenly equal "bad process" and objective suddenly equal "good process"? Where is that written? I can't think of a single "good process" in fantasy football that doesn't have the slightest bit of subjectivity to it.And that is somehow a better process than my reasoning? I don't think you have much grounds to argue against my line of reasoning when yours is completely subjective, and mine - while you argue could be made moot because a player is slow to develop - at least has verifiable substance.
I'm done with this thread. I think my opinion about Jackson is clear.
Just because a line of reasoning has verifiable substance does not make it good process. I could say that I don't want to draft Brandon Jackson because he was 4 feet tall in the 3rd grade, and that claim might be verifiable, but it would be a terrible reason not to draft him. I could say that I don't want to draft him because he voted independent- once again, that would be verifiable, but still bad process. I could say that I don't want to draft him because he got beaten out two years ago by a player that he has since turned around and decisively beaten out in return... and, obviously, it'd be verifiable. That still doesn't make it good process.
First, it's not meaningless without substantiation. It might be meaningless to you, but it's not meaningless to me. I wouldn't expect you to just take me at my word, but I'm actually quite content to take myself at my word. If some random guy on the internet said "Player X is a great talent", absolutely I'd want to know who he was and why I should listen to him. A track record would go a long way towards convincing me. I don't need to convince myself of who I am and why I should listen to myself, though. You asked why I don't think Jackson has a lot of value going forward, and my answer is that I don't think he's that talented. That's why *I* don't think he has a lot of value. I don't expect TFK to suddenly think Jackson doesn't have much value going forward just because I don't think he's that talented, though- trusting anonymous strangers is Bad Process.Second off, that's the defense you're making right now? You're playing the "there's no evidence Brandon Jackson is more talented as a 4th year pro than he was as a 1st year pro" line? Really? Would it qualify as evidence if I pointed out that 99% of NFL players are better as 4th year pros than they are as 1st year pros? How about if I pointed out that when he was a 1st year pro he was a 3rd/4th/5th/whatever string tailback that the franchise tried desperately to not use, while as a 4th year pro he was a 2nd string tailback who the coaching staff was speaking positively of in preseason? Your whole "we should assume that players don't improve between year 1 and year 4" position is nonsense. It makes no sense whatsoever. How could anyone be subjected to 3 years worth of NFL coaching and *NOT* improve? And then you further compound the issue by saying that it's likely Deshawn Wynn *GOT WORSE*, and that's why Jackson beat him out? How on earth is that more likely? Do you think Wynn's physical skills are eroding at the ripe old age of 26, or have those 64 career carries just taken too large of a toll on his body? Or, again, did 3 years worth of NFL-caliber coaching just cause such a massive regression in his skills?switz said:I said I was done, but I have to reply to this.
You could say you don't think a player is talented, but that is meaningless without some substantiation. You cite Bill Polian, and his substantiation is his track record. But you don't have his track record, so your opinion is meaningless and has no substance.
Yes, there is some subjective component to almost every conclusion. But something that is purely subjective, like your opinion IS bad process.
You may disagree with my substantiation, but your examples to "prove" my substantiation is invalid are completely unrelated to the examples I used. Different positions, different sports, and the assumption that the reason Jackson "beat out" Wynn this season MUST be because Jackson became more talented, when it's more likely that Wynn's degraded over time. Jackson has yet to show he's any more talented than he was when he was beat out by three other RBs his rookie season, so that example is applicable.
However, there is plenty of evidence that Jackson has grown taller since third grade, so his height in third grade is meaningless. But there's no evidence he is more talented today than he was as a rookie, so examples related to his talent as a rookie are applicable. Just like he doesn't play WR or basketball, so examples of such are meaningless. He does play RB so other RBs in similar circumstances would be useful examples.
This is not meant to be an insult or a personal attack. But for someone so focused on process, etc. you seem to have difficulty grasping related components beyond superficial generalizations. Or at the very least distinguishing degrees of relation.![]()
I actually thought the exact opposite. Much more decisive with his cuts than I remember, followed blockers nicely.Doesn't seem like he has explosive speed, but he doesn't look sluggish out there either, and he has good hands.Not a superstar, but if he always runs this way, I think they'd be better off not abandoning the running game all the time.Jackson has picked up some yards tonight but in watching him I'm not very impressed.. Looks like a career backup to me. Nothing special about this guy...
Yep.I actually thought the exact opposite. Much more decisive with his cuts than I remember, followed blockers nicely.Doesn't seem like he has explosive speed, but he doesn't look sluggish out there either, and he has good hands.Not a superstar, but if he always runs this way, I think they'd be better off not abandoning the running game all the time.Jackson has picked up some yards tonight but in watching him I'm not very impressed.. Looks like a career backup to me. Nothing special about this guy...
pretty sure ive heard this about some other gb rbJackson has picked up some yards tonight but in watching him I'm not very impressed.. Looks like a career backup to me. Nothing special about this guy...
very :X not worth having on a FF team for sure. He give a little some weeks, but most weeks he cost youJackson has picked up some yards tonight but in watching him I'm not very impressed.. Looks like a career backup to me. Nothing special about this guy...
veryJackson has picked up some yards tonight but in watching him I'm not very impressed.. Looks like a career backup to me. Nothing special about this guy...not worth having on a FF team for sure. He give a little some weeks, but most weeks he cost you
He's in the top 25 fantasy rbs for the year. While he isn't a great starter he is worth being on a roster in all formats unless you're in a 6 team league or something.WTF are you talking about?veryJackson has picked up some yards tonight but in watching him I'm not very impressed.. Looks like a career backup to me. Nothing special about this guy...not worth having on a FF team for sure. He give a little some weeks, but most weeks he cost you
What he's trying to say is you put almost any RB and give them starting minutes they will have a good week here and there. But the real question is will he be consistant? BJax hasnt shown any level of consistancy and as far as the eyeball test goes, he looks mediocre, but decent behind good blocks.jesus if i make a masturbatory post advocating picking some clown up and he puts up a single good week outta 4 will i get stroked by yall as well.