There are a lot of myths surrounding Slaton’s performance last season and why he had the workload he received in 2008, so we’ll dispel them one at a time.
Myth #1:
Slaton will be the full time starter in 2009, so his workload will increase.
Fact:
Slaton started every game except for Week 1. In fact, he was designated the starter after week 3 (remember that week 2 was a bye week for Houston due to game cancellation):
Texans Notes: Slaton earns starting running back job
By JOHN McCLAIN
Copyright 2008 Houston Chronicle
Sept. 23, 2008, 1:27PM
Coach Gary Kubiak said rookie running back Steve Slaton earned the full-time starting job with his 116-yard, one-touchdown performance against the Titans that included a 50-yard run Sunday.
Myth # 2Slaton is in a situation where he is the primary RB
Fact:
Slaton was the primary RB only when the Texans had nobody else to share the load.
For 2008, Slaton had 71% of all RB touches in Houston.
Look at the final numbers on the year:
382 HOU RB rushes
268 Slaton rushes
70% opps for Slaton
78 HOU RB targets
59 Slaton targets
76% opps to Slaton
64 HOU RB Receptions
50 Slaton recepts
78% opps to Slaton
14 HOU RB TD's
10 Slaton TD's
71% TD's to Slaton
When we take a closer look at the distribution of touches just between Ahman Green and Slaton in games when both played, it paints a more accurate picture:
Carries
Slaton carries 115
Green carries 74
61% for Slaton
Targets
13 Targets for Slaton
14 Targets for Green
48% for Slaton
Receptions
12 Recepts for Slaton
11 Recepts for Green
52% for Slaton
TD’s
5 TD's for Slaton
3 TD's for Green
63% for Slaton
When Ahman Green played, Slaton had 58% of RB touches in those games.
When Green did not play, Slaton had 85% of all RB touches.
When Ahman Green played Slaton averaged 12.9 PPG in PPR
When Ahman Green did not play, Slaton averaged 21.9 in PPR
Just like they attempted to do last season, Houston will use at least two backs next year, the only reason Slaton got as much work this season was circumstances and not coaches decision. For those expecting a similar workload, understand that the RB corps is significantly better in Houston than it was last year and in 2008 Green, Brown, and Taylor all were out of the picture due to injury. Even WW addition Moats was hurt last year. With two very nice rookie additions of Foster and Johnson, the Texans have very nicely upgraded the RB position. Simply put, the workload Slaton had in 2008 will not repeat in 2009.
Myth #3
Slaton will maintain or improve his TD production
Fact:
Part of Slaton’s reduced load in 2009 will come from lost GL carries. From the FBG Blogger:
March 12, 2009, 10:57
Texans :: RB
RB C.Brown Short Yardage Man, Assuming Health
Nick Scurfield, HoustonTexans.com
The Texans signed RB Chris Brown to a two-year deal last season, but Brown missed the '08 campaign with a back injury. Doctors have cleared him to resume all physical activities this offseason and Brown says he'll be able to participate in OTAs this spring. HC Gary Kubiak hopes to use him as the short yardage threat behind starter Steve Slaton. "He can provide a big back for us," Kubiak said. "Steve's a smaller guy. We need somebody who can do a little more pounding, red zone, short yardage, those types of things. That's easier said than done, but we have that guy here with him if he's healthy. So the key is whether or not he can stay healthy."
In conclusion, Slaton is a prime candidate for being over-valued in 2009. Assuming he stays healthy for 16 games:176 carries
736 yards
27 recepts
189 yards
5 total TD’s