Same situation.I pretty much have to start him in case Mixon doesn't play. YOLO I guess?
Same boat. Hoping he gets a TD to save the day because I don’t expect any yards or catches.I pretty much have to start him in case Mixon doesn't play. YOLO I guess?
Ended up moving him before the game. Couldn't take it anymore. Looks good tonight but again not enough volume.The Colts like to keep us guessing.
Sounds like no one believes in Taylor right now so maybe they use him a lot now just to surprise us.
Put your socks on backwards or something and hope?
Back in for the 4th down run as I ironically just ate some crescent roles.He is in on a 3rd & 13. It's like the rolls have been reversed.
Given his stellar 7-12-0, 2-25-0 performance so far tonight, dude is bordering on droppable anyway.While Thielen has had a couple quiet weeks after the bye and is two years older than Allen is the way I see this deal is you basically gave up Taylor for free.
There is no doubt Hines looks better. But next week Hines will be 5 for 15 yards, Taylor will have 7 for 27 yards and Wilkins will have 18 for 60 and 2 TD's,And now Hines punches one in.....depressing.
Jonathan Taylor rushed seven times for 12 yards in the Colts' Week 10 win over the Titans.
Taylor seems to be setting new lows weekly at this point. After fumble-sixing against the Ravens last week, his seven carries were third on the Colts in a game they won convincingly by 17 points, and his 12 yards were a new season worst. Taylor was stuffed on a third-and-goal from the one-yard line in this one. He just runs too high at times, and that was particularly the case on that specific carry. Jordan Wilkins (8-28) wasn't much better in this one, but both were behind Nyheim Hines, who totaled 115 yards and recorded a season-best 12-70-1 rushing line. Taylor looks like the third man in this backfield committee. Frustrating as ever, Taylor is approaching drop status in 10- and 12-team leagues ahead of a Week 11 date with the Packers.
- Rotoworld
Yes those that took him high in Dyno have to be concerned. You even wonder if Indy will try to resign Mack to a friendly deal coming off injury to further muddy the future. Mack looked great for the few moments he was on the field this year.Wow my first instincts on this guy were right but I fell hard for the hype. Glad it's only redraft and not dynasty. Woof is he bad.
His poor production has turned him into bench fodderCould have been a league winner, instead the coach has turned him into bench fodder.
His poor production is at least in part due to his poor usage.His poor production has turned him into bench fodder
I don’t see Taylor succeeding. That o line is pushing people around and is the main reason has had any success. He looks like the worst of the 3 backs in the committee and the other two backs are average. On most other teams, Taylor would not be doing anything.Sitting here these last couple weeks thinking about trying to move him, even though I really don't feel like putting work into that right now. I'd rather hold and see what happens in the offseason. Maybe he'll get better. I've got him benched everywhere and was starting to lean towards moving him, and then I wake up to a pretty reasonable offer in my box. Edmonds and Mims for Taylor straight. I like it don't love it. Then I look back at Taylor and think, I have to take this. But, FFPC and this is a 1 for 2. Roster spots are at a premium. Not sure those two move the needle enough for me.
I wonder if there are other owners that would also like to buy low on Taylor, in their minds. Ok I'm gonna put him on the block. See what happens. Usually nothing.
He certainly has flaws, but how is he supposed to improve on them without reps? Even if they want to go with the ridiculous "hot hand after 3 touches" approach, at least let him get the meaningless carries at the end of the game like last night, see how it goes.Taylor's flaws are noticeable: runs too high at times, not great vision when picking a hole and even if he does pick the right one he's among the worst in the league at not only evading tackles, but also breaking them. That's a bad combo to have for a RB regardless of usage.
See above. Again, people seem to forget that he had almost no training camp/pre-season, so he's been thrown into the NFL fire unprepared. Way too soon to say "he can't" do those things, and while he may not be AP, he's a pretty amazing athlete himself.There's a difference between being a good runner and being a good running back. People that said he took advantage of Wisconsin's typical manhandling of Big 10 talent along the line were correct. When there's a lane, a good runner can flourish - which the track runner Taylor did.
But now that he needs to be a running back - exhibit patience, set up blocks, break a tackle - he can't do it.
The only runner that I've seen succeed is Adrian Peterson. He was actually not a good running back (by the above definition). But he was just such an amazing athlete it didn't matter. Jonathan Taylor is not Adrian Peterson.
This makes no sense to me. I mean logically I get it, but we have the actual numbers and they would say the complete opposite.humpback said:Nah, Montgomery is very limited as an athlete, not all that surprising that he isn't doing so well in the NFL.
I think covid completely disrupting training camp and the preseason had a pretty big impact on the rookies this year. Taylor is a great athlete, very smart, and a hard worker- I think he'll figure it out. Not as confident in his coaching staff unfortunately.
I know this isn’t the best place to have this conversation, but I strongly disagree on AP. To my eye, he had all of those positive traits in spades.There's a difference between being a good runner and being a good running back. People that said he took advantage of Wisconsin's typical manhandling of Big 10 talent along the line were correct. When there's a lane, a good runner can flourish - which the track runner Taylor did.
But now that he needs to be a running back - exhibit patience, set up blocks, break a tackle - he can't do it.
The only runner that I've seen succeed is Adrian Peterson. He was actually not a good running back (by the above definition). But he was just such an amazing athlete it didn't matter. Jonathan Taylor is not Adrian Peterson.
I think you can get a better offer than that for him. I think people that don't own him anywhere and haven't watched him closely will still be looking to buy low. I would shop him around or at least throw him on the trade block before taking that offer.Sitting here these last couple weeks thinking about trying to move him, even though I really don't feel like putting work into that right now. I'd rather hold and see what happens in the offseason. Maybe he'll get better. I've got him benched everywhere and was starting to lean towards moving him, and then I wake up to a pretty reasonable offer in my box. Edmonds and Mims for Taylor straight. I like it don't love it. Then I look back at Taylor and think, I have to take this. But, FFPC and this is a 1 for 2. Roster spots are at a premium. Not sure those two move the needle enough for me.
I wonder if there are other owners that would also like to buy low on Taylor, in their minds. Ok I'm gonna put him on the block. See what happens. Usually nothing.
Yea just needed a little coffee first. He is on the block and now I have 4 offers to parse through. My guess is he will be sold by lunch.I think you can get a better offer than that for him. I think people that don't own him anywhere and haven't watched him closely will still be looking to buy low. I would shop him around or at least throw him on the trade block before taking that offer.
He's still a RB with upside and that has value in FFPC. Guys have bounced back from dismal rookie years before.
Like @FreeBaGeL said, there are plenty of rookies who are doing just fine without having a camp. I don't think that excuse holds any water.He certainly has flaws, but how is he supposed to improve on them without reps? Even if they want to go with the ridiculous "hot hand after 3 touches" approach, at least let him get the meaningless carries at the end of the game like last night, see how it goes.
See above. Again, people seem to forget that he had almost no training camp/pre-season, so he's been thrown into the NFL fire unprepared. Way too soon to say "he can't" do those things, and while he may not be AP, he's a pretty amazing athlete himself.
As a Vikings fan, I spent the better part of a decade watching AP slam into the backs of his blockers. He has ZERO patience.I know this isn’t the best place to have this conversation, but I strongly disagree on AP. To my eye, he had all of those positive traits in spades.
I disagree that the actual numbers would say the complete opposite. The expectation was that this was a phenomenal draft class, there were 4 QBs, 6 WRs, and 1 RB taken in the 1st round and another 1 QB, 7 WRs, and 5 RBs taken in the 2nd. How many of them are doing better than expectations vs. worse? Sure, Robinson and Gibson are doing just fine, but their O-lines are ranked much higher at run blocking as well. Overall I don't think the rookie class has been crushing expectations so far this year, but opinions may vary.This makes no sense to me. I mean logically I get it, but we have the actual numbers and they would say the complete opposite.
Burrow/Herbert are putting up 2 of the best 5 rookie QB seasons of all time. We have like 6 WRs that will probably end up with top 25 all-time rookie WR seasons. And these are positions that are much more dependent on training camp and preseason than running back.
That's not even to mention that other running backs, like James Robinson and Antonio Gibson, are doing just fine.
I'm not writing Taylor off, but blaming it on the lack of offseason during a year that will likely go down collectively as one of the best performing rookie classes in NFL history, is major excuse making imo.
The "patience" debate is arguable, but his vision, decisiveness, explosiveness, and tackle breaking ability were all plus traits to the point where him utilizing more patience probably didn't play as well to those strengths. Anyways, it's a moot point because Peterson was a top 5 RB of all time (IMO) so it's mostly meaningless to debate a perceived negative trait of his compared to a rookie RB that's completely flopped thus far.As a Vikings fan, I spent the better part of a decade watching AP slam into the backs of his blockers. He has ZERO patience.
Yeah pretty much. Say, how did Peterson do in his rookie year? Alright well I have no more shares of JT so I guess I'll just leave quietly now.The "patience" debate is arguable, but his vision, decisiveness, explosiveness, and tackle breaking ability were all plus traits to the point where him utilizing more patience probably didn't play as well to those strengths. Anyways, it's a moot point because Peterson was a top 5 RB of all time (IMO) so it's mostly meaningless to debate a perceived negative trait of his compared to a rookie RB that's completely flopped thus far.
Logically? Yes. Do we know for sure? No. As I stated earlier, this committee should be 65 Hines and 35 Wilkins. This is coming from a Taylor owner until next weeks waivers. I’m not picking up Hines either for the record.Hines has to be the 50/25/25 head of the 3 head monster moving forward, no ????
Is this schtick? That O-line has been pushed around, they are ranked as one of the worst in the NFL in run blocking so far.I don’t see Taylor succeeding. That o line is pushing people around and is the main reason has had any success. He looks like the worst of the 3 backs in the committee and the other two backs are average. On most other teams, Taylor would not be doing anything.
Okay, has to be schtick. He's been so awful that he doesn't deserve any touches behind the great Hines and Wilkins.Logically? Yes. Do we know for sure? No. As I stated earlier, this committee should be 65 Hines and 35 Wilkins. This is coming from a Taylor owner until next weeks waivers. I’m not picking up Hines either for the record.