He's been one of the most surprising disappointments this season. I think he's the best back from his draft class, but he sure hasn't looked like it this season. Maybe he'll pull a Kevin Jones and surprise us next year. At any rate, I can't say I'd target him in drafts/trades. Too much risk for the cost.
Actually I think Cadillac's bust of a season was not too difficult to foresee at all. He seemed to get dinged up pretty easily last year, and he had an alarmingly high number of putrid games (outings of 19, 25, 54, 20, and 27 total yards).IMO he was the clear preseason favorite for this year's "First Round Bust" award.
Hindsight is 20/20. You can just as easily say the numbers indicated that he would become the next Tomlinson. He was chosen at the same spot in the draft (1.05) and he had very similar numbers as a rookie (1178 rushing yards for Caddy vs. 1236 for LT). I am pretty stunned by his poor numbers, but now that I look at his schedule, I can see why he has struggled.
I definitely think the guy has the talent to last as a starting RB in the NFL. Unless he gets injured, his value probably won't get much lower, so he wouldn't be a bad pickup at this point.
Don't give me "hindsight is 20/20". This scenario was not at all difficult to imagine and foresee back in August. The handwriting was on the wall from the many stinker weeks he put up last year.Look, like everyone else, on draft day I was right about some guys, and wrong about other guys. I happened to be right about this particular guy. But the point is, the folks that thought he would produce numbers worthy of a first round pick were ignoring some pretty huge red flags, IMO.
Could things have gone the other, Tomlinson way? Of course. But the odds of that happening were much lower than what actually did happen, and a completely objective pre-season analysis would have told you that.
As for next year, if he's around in the 5th round, and maybe the 4th, I'd look closely at him. IMO he's a weak RB2 and a strong RB3.
At the spot he was at in the RB rankings at the start of the year, what backs ranked similarly didn't have questionmarks? Steven Jackson had put up stinkers last year as has pretty much anybody else ranked there. At that spot question marks abound.Westbrook - was always injured in previous seasons
Chester Taylor - had never been a #1 back for a season
Thomas Jones - RBBC, questionable QB assumed
Kevin Jones - had thrown up his fair share of stinkers
McGahee - ditto and throw in a dose of questionable QB
Who exactly were these "old reliable" RB's without question marks that were available there that you picked up instead? Off the top of my head I don't know of anyone without major questionmarks that was being picked after Caddy. 20/20 hindsight works in multiple ways as you are comparing him now to guys that you already know how their seasons turned out. Think about what you knew about EVERYONE at the time, not just comparing Caddy's projections then to what others did in the season.
I *am* thinking about what I knew about EVERYONE at the time.This year in redrafts in which I was picking outside of the top 4 slots, the only RBs I considered were Rudi and Stephen Jackson. If either was there for me, great. If they were both gone (which was usually the case), I'd shift to Manning or Smith/Holt/Chad, and come back with Portis, Westbrook or Parker in the second. The other late-first, early-second RBs with serious questionmarks like Brown, Jordan, Edge, Caddy, KJones, McGahee and CTaylor were not really even on my radar at all.
So I'm not applying 20/20 hindsight here. Just pointing out that the warning signs were there from the beginning with Caddy. You either spotted them, and avoided him at his ADP, or you were left surprised by an outcome that (IMO) wasn't that surprising at all.