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Reggie Bush the Next Gale Sayers - How Good? (1 Viewer)

I do think that Fantasy Football causes some people to change how they look at football.  By any definition, statistical or otherwise, Gale Sayers was a GREAT player.  Not a very good one, a GREAT one.
I am not making any judgment from a fantasy standpoint and I don't think others are either? Guys during his era were better than him and it is pretty clear. What if he did receive more carries and his YPC dropped to 4.5? I guess the word great can mean different things to people. There are at least 5 guys from his era that had better careers; I guess 5 RB's from his era can all be called great? I just think he was great for a very short period of time.
You define "better" based off of stats, and you simply can't do that with a player like Sayers. Ask any player in the league during his time, and you would be laughed at for claiming there were any more than 1 or 2 guys that might have been better.
Hi titus,I think we're on two different things there. When he played, he was awesome. As MT pointed out, he was top 5 in rushing each year for the 5 great years. But that was it. The question is how long does a guy have to be great to really be great?

Terrell Davis is the other guy that comes to mind for me. For a 3 year stretch, he was incredible. But most don't put him anywhere near a greatest ever category.

J
For three years Terrell Davis put up GREAT stats. Based on the continued excellence of the Denver running game no matter who you put at RB, it is dependent on the eye of the beholder whether Davis was great. IMO Terrell is not in Sayers league.
 
If you just base the question on on field production it might be a close call. Sawyer was very productive for a short period of time and the Texans might take that and they might not. Remeber, no pick is a sure thing.

But if you also add in the excitement of having a player as dynamic as Sawyers was to that team and that market I think the Texans would take him for sure. Having an exciting back like that for even 5 years would help the franchie greatly. Maybe Brick for example would play LT for 15 years and go to 10 pro bowls. While that pick would be great for the franchise on the field, it would never create the excitement Bush/Sawyers would for 5 years. It's the Vick/Sportscenter factor. It puts fans in the seats.

 
Terrell Davis is the other guy that comes to mind for me. For a 3 year stretch, he was incredible. But most don't put him anywhere near a greatest ever category.
I have to say I'm surprised at this post coming from Joe. I thought this was a fishing trip when I found the thread tonight, but having read it, I gather it is not. I have posted on Sayers vs. Davis before:
Every time someone makes a case for a player who had a short period of greatness, Gale Sayers is cited as a comparison. Can we please stop this? It really only highlights how little the poster knows about Sayers.

Sayers is deservedly in the HOF. Guys like Warner and Terrell Davis ARE NOT comparable to Sayers, so bringing up Sayers to justify their cases is not helpful.

From a post in which I attempted to refute someone's use of Sayers as justification for Terrell Davis to make the HOF:

I think Davis has just as strong a case as Sayers did
I must disagree.From Pro Football Hall of Fame:

Gale Eugene Sayers. . .Kansas All-America. . .Exceptional break-away runner. . .Scored rookie record 22 TDs, 132 points, 1965. . .Led NFL rushers, 1966, 1969. . .Named all-time NFL halfback, 1969. . . All-NFL five straight years. . .Player of Game in three Pro Bowls. . .Career totals: 9,435 combined net yards, 4,956 yards rushing, 336 points. . . NFL lifetime kickoff return leader. . .Born May 30, 1943, in Wichita, Kansas.

Gale Sayers burst upon the pro football scene in 1965 with the kind of an impact that the sport had not felt in many years. It is difficult to imagine a more dynamic debut than the one he enjoyed as a rookie. In his first heavy pre-season action, he raced 77 yards on a punt return, 93 yards on a kickoff return, and then startled everyone with a 25-yard scoring pass against the Los Angeles Rams.

In regular season, he scored four touchdowns, including a 96-yard game breaking kickoff return, against the Minnesota Vikings. And, in the next-to-last game, playing on a muddy field that would have stalled most runners, Gale scored a record-tying six touchdowns against the San Francisco 49ers. Included in his sensational spree were an 80-yard pass-run play, a 50-yard rush and a 65-yard punt return. For the entire season, Gale scored 22 touchdowns and 132 points, both then-rookie records.

Quiet, unassuming, and always ready to compliment a teammate for a key block, Sayers continued to sizzle in 1967 and well into the 1968 season. Then, in the ninth game, Sayers suffered a knee injury that required immediate surgery.

After a tortuous rehabilitation program, Gale came back in 1969 in a most spectacular manner, winding up with his second 1,000-yard rushing season and universal Comeback of the Year honors. But injuries continued to take their toll and, just before the 1972 season, Gale finally had to call it quits.

In his relatively short career, he compiled a record that can never be forgotten. His totals show 9,435 combined net yards, 4,956 yards rushing, and 336 points scored. At the time of his retirement he was the NFL's all-time leader in kickoff returns. He won All-NFL honors five straight years and was named Offensive Player of the Game in three of the four Pro Bowls in which he played.
Though not clearly stated above, Sayers was ROY in 1965.Sayers was Michael Vick electric. His career averages:

- 5.0 yards per rush (Davis 4.6)

- 11.7 yards per catch (Davis 7.6)

- 14.5 yards per punt return

- 30.6 yards per kickoff return

- 27.8 yards per completion (but only 6.2 yards per attempt)

Sayers had tremendous impact on special teams, as well as in both the running and passing games on offense. Davis didn't have quite the same overall impact. And, frankly, from the averages shown above, Sayers appears to have been more talented, though I realize it is difficult to compare across eras, offenses, etc.

Sayers played only 2 games in each of his last 2 seasons, unable to overcome injury. So he effectively played only 5 seasons, and he was named All Pro each time. In contrast, Davis played 3 great seasons, 1996-1998. He was All Pro in each of those seasons. But as a rookie, while very impressive for a first year RB, he was not one of the top backs in the NFL. IMO, as great as he was in the next 3 seasons, 3 great seasons makes less of a case than 5 great seasons.

Also, Sayers career was truly done after his 5 year run, as he was able to play only a total of 4 more games over the next 2 seasons. Davis may have actually hurt his case by lingering longer, playing a total of 20 more games over 3 additional seasons after his injury.

I'm not really sure what to think of Sayers being named "All Time NFL halfback" in 1969, but it sounds like an honor that transcends single season awards. I don't recall Davis ever receiving such an award.

...

I feel that Sayers deserves to be in and Davis does not. And I expect the voters will ultimately agree on Davis.
Now, as to the thread question:1. Would the Texans be happy with Sayers' career totals if they draft Bush #1? No, of course not, and they shouldn't be. But if he produced those career totals today, those numbers would be disappointing, whereas they were outstanding in Sayers' day. This is indeed apples and oranges without framing the numbers in their proper context.

2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it? Yes, and they should.

3. Would they take 5 straight top 5 rushing seasons, 5 straight All Pro seasons, etc. and be happy with it? Yes, and they should.

In considering these questions, consider how inexact a science it is to predict NFL success. Granted, NFL RBs are probably easier to predict than other positions, but there is downside. To take a given performer at the level described above would be well worth it. For 5 years, the Texans would have a guaranteed dominant player, which would mean more wins and more revenue from ticket sales, jerseys, etc. On the flip side, how many #1 picks have not lived up to expectations? This is a nobrainer.

 
I do think that Fantasy Football causes some people to change how they look at football. By any definition, statistical or otherwise, Gale Sayers was a GREAT player. Not a very good one, a GREAT one.
I am not making any judgment from a fantasy standpoint and I don't think others are either? Guys during his era were better than him and it is pretty clear. What if he did receive more carries and his YPC dropped to 4.5? I guess the word great can mean different things to people. There are at least 5 guys from his era that had better careers; I guess 5 RB's from his era can all be called great? I just think he was great for a very short period of time.
You define "better" based off of stats, and you simply can't do that with a player like Sayers. Ask any player in the league during his time, and you would be laughed at for claiming there were any more than 1 or 2 guys that might have been better.
Hi titus,I think we're on two different things there. When he played, he was awesome. As MT pointed out, he was top 5 in rushing each year for the 5 great years. But that was it. The question is how long does a guy have to be great to really be great?

Terrell Davis is the other guy that comes to mind for me. For a 3 year stretch, he was incredible. But most don't put him anywhere near a greatest ever category.

J
For three years Terrell Davis put up GREAT stats. Based on the continued excellence of the Denver running game no matter who you put at RB, it is dependent on the eye of the beholder whether Davis was great. IMO Terrell is not in Sayers league.
Two totally different styles between Sayers and TD and even though Sayers looked spectacular, TD got the job done and basically carried the team to two Super Bowl wins. I absolutely believe TD was great for those three years. The backs that have played for Denver get very little credit since it's supposedly the system that creates them. Does the system help? Of course, just like it helped Emmitt, Priest, Alexander and many others. However, two RB's (Portis and Droughns) have switched teams and stayed at nearly the same level, just dropping off in YPA. Terrell Davis would have been a HOF RB anywhere he played had he stayed healthy, just as Portis will if he does.

 
1. Would the Texans be happy with Sayers' career totals if they draft Bush #1? No, of course not, and they shouldn't be. But if he produced those career totals today, those numbers would be disappointing, whereas they were outstanding in Sayers' day. This is indeed apples and oranges without framing the numbers in their proper context.

2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it? Yes, and they should.

3. Would they take 5 straight top 5 rushing seasons, 5 straight All Pro seasons, etc. and be happy with it? Yes, and they should.

In considering these questions, consider how inexact a science it is to predict NFL success. Granted, NFL RBs are probably easier to predict than other positions, but there is downside. To take a given performer at the level described above would be well worth it. For 5 years, the Texans would have a guaranteed dominant player, which would mean more wins and more revenue from ticket sales, jerseys, etc. On the flip side, how many #1 picks have not lived up to expectations? This is a nobrainer.
Great post which I agree with. The Texans wouldn't be happy with Bush simply duplicating Sayers' stats (though I don't see any star RB returning 25 kicks a year these days). On the other hand they'd be getting an incredible return on every dime they pay Bush if he's All-Pro for the next 5 seasons. Between free agency and the average career length of a running back, I don't know that any team expects more than 5 years from their draft picks. It's interesting that Sayers' Bears had two of the greatest players of all time (Sayers and Butkus) but never made the postseason.

 
I don't know if this has been said but Gale Sayers has the highest YPC average in history for a RB in his first five seasons. That's pretty good. (Minimum 600 carries).

 
Ok, I crunched the numbers for seven 5 year periods (so we could get Sayers 5 golden years) compared to others from 1961 - 1967.  So you don't think I had any bias I used the 7 years Sayers was in the league.  I guess I got the tail end of Jom Brown and the beginning of OJ.

Here are the results:  If someone wants to help me with how this site is setup to make it easier to read I am all ears.  The highlight is that these "5 all time nfl years put up by Sayers was only good enough for 10th best for his era.  I have some thoughts but will hold off until some responses come in.

NAME POS YRs G RSH RSHYD YD/RSH RSHTD REC RECYD YD/REC RECTD FANT PT Total Yards

Jim Brown rb 1961--1965 70 1395 7257 5.2 57 187 1912 10.22 16 1354.9 9169

Jim Brown rb 1962--1965 56 1090 5849 5.37 49 141 1453 10.3 14 1108.2 7302

Clem Daniels rb 1962--1966 70 972 4374 4.5 24 172 2919 16.97 22 1005.3 7293

Clem Daniels rb 1963--1967 65 941 4183 4.45 21 164 2823 17.21 23 964.6 7006

Larry Brown rb 1969--1973 66 1250 5037 4.03 29 159 1774 11.16 14 939.1 6811

Jim Taylor rb 1961--1965 68 1205 5702 4.73 59 118 910 7.71 5 1045.2 6612

Leroy Kelly rb 1966--1970 68 1094 5058 4.62 57 118 1523 12.91 10 1060.1 6581

Leroy Kelly rb 1967--1971 68 1119 4782 4.27 52 111 1409 12.69 11 997.1 6191

Gale Sayers rb 1965--1969 64 955 4866 5.1 39 111 1313 11.83 9 905.9 6179

Jim Taylor rb 1962--1966 68 1166 5100 4.37 48 134 1066 7.96 6 940.6 6166

Clem Daniels rb 1961--1965 64 799 3727 4.66 19 145 2417 16.67 19 842.4 6144

O.J. Simpson rb 1969--1973 63 1108 5181 4.68 30 94 912 9.7 3 807.3 6093

Floyd Little rb 1969--1973 65 1111 4601 4.14 36 131 1424 10.87 6 854.5 6025

Bill Brown rb 1964--1968 70 1044 3809 3.65 35 179 2157 12.05 13 884.6 5966

Leroy Kelly rb 1965--1969 68 925 4541 4.91 51 103 1334 12.95 8 941.5 5875

Jim Brown rb 1963--1965 42 860 4853 5.64 36 94 936 9.96 9 848.9 5789

Timmy Brown rb 1962--1966 64 738 3151 4.27 25 186 2633 14.16 21 854.4 5784

Leroy Kelly rb 1968--1972 68 1108 4388 3.96 45 114 1331 11.68 10 901.9 5719

Floyd Little rb 1968--1972 62 1013 4206 4.15 27 109 1332 12.22 6 751.8 5538
:lmao: Kind of hard to tell but it appears that you ranked these in order of Fantasy Points so I think my point about looking at someones career through a Fantasy Football slant is valid.
:no: Nope, they are ranked by rushing + Receiving yards (the last number)
 
I do think that Fantasy Football causes some people to change how they look at football.  By any definition, statistical or otherwise, Gale Sayers was a GREAT player.  Not a very good one, a GREAT one.
I am not making any judgment from a fantasy standpoint and I don't think others are either? Guys during his era were better than him and it is pretty clear. What if he did receive more carries and his YPC dropped to 4.5? I guess the word great can mean different things to people. There are at least 5 guys from his era that had better careers; I guess 5 RB's from his era can all be called great? I just think he was great for a very short period of time.
So, what guy was better than the player that was All NFL for 5 years out of his 7?What guy was better when all of his contemporaries and most every historian of the game would put only Jim Brown at/above (and Brown is the greatest, ever) Sayers in his abilities, and even career... short as it may have been?

You are pointing to stats that are worthless without context - and the context is that those who saw Sayers play or know of his career, and those of his contemporaries would not say "guys during his era were better than him and it is pretty clear"

Why do you think say others were better than Sayers, contrary to all the opinion of others. Including those who inducted him into the HoF, short career and all, unanimously saying "there was/is simply no one to even compare him to, it's that simple" (paraphrased)
Fair questions - Although you are choosing the context which isn't fair and also I would strongly disagree that historians would say Sayers career was better than anyone other than Jim Brown....For lack of a better way to put it, I don't think people understand the value of players real well, most especially the people who vote on the HOF. This is true in other sports as well. I do not know who voted people in back then, but writers used to have a huge say and no offense to any writers, but they usually don't get it. For crying out loud talk show hosts that are extremely popular don't get what it takes to win in some pro sports.In terms of not understanding value the best way I can relate is to compare what happens in fantasy football when someone says that it s critical I get a QB because they score 25 points a game and I am less worried about a RB because he only scores 20 a game. My analogy would be that the HOF writers would vote the QB in (for fantasy) rather than the RB who has a much higher differential and is harder to come by, etc...

Getting back to Sayers, I would imagine people were amazed at his grace on the field, probably like no other. But, and this is my opinion, if you were given a choice between a guy who could carry the rock as the go to guy, pound and wear the other team down, have a goal line and short yardage back who was more durable, and in general get more production from, coaches would rather have the careers of guys like Larry Brown, Jim Taylor, Leroy Kelly and even Clem Daniels (Jim Brown goes without saying) OJ Simpson would be on the list as well as he just started in Sayers era.

Now it is easy to pick a few of these guys out and say "no way." But allow me to take them one at a time:

Leroy Kelly - Compared to Sayers best 5 years, LK had two 5 year stretches that each outperformed Sayers. Both of these stretches had more rushing yards, more receiving yards and more TD's than Sayers. I don't see how Sayers was more valuable than Kelly and Kelly's longevity of excellence was far greater. Getting back to a point I made above, people may say that Sayers was better in the open field and Sayers looked prettier and graceful, but Kelly was simply more productive and more durable.

Jim Taylor - Longevity is in his corner. JT had one 5 year stretch that had 433 more yards from scrimmage than Sayres and one that was 13 yards less. During the stretch JT had 64 TD's to 48 by Sayers. Jim Taylor actually caught more passes than Sayers but Sayers had a much higher YPcatch.

Larry Brown's 5 years stretch was 632 yards from scrimmage better than Sayers. However, Sayers had 5 more TD's during the time. Sayers YPC were about a point higher which is significant. LB had 50 more receptions and was more of a workhorse.

Clem Daniels - Was far more productive than Sayers over 2 different 5 year stretches. CD had 1,114 more yards and 827 more yards over two 5 year stretches. CD must have been a great receiver as he had enormous receiving numbers. CD had 2 less TD's than Sayers during the time period so that was close.

Let's now look at who's career you would rather have. This was really the point when you say that Sayers even shortened career was better than anyone other than Jim Brown. I think these players from his own era had better careers and as shown above were even more productive than Sayers during his 5 golden years. To be fair Larry Brown averaging a yard less a carry is enough for me to give the 5 year stretch to Sayers.

Jim Brown - The man

....................Rushing....YPC........Rec.. YPR.. Total TD's.. Rushing + Receiving

Simpson... 69-79 11236.. 4.7 ..2142 ..10.6 ...75 ........13,378

J. Taylor.. ..58-67 8597.. 4.4 ..1756 ..7.8 .....93 ........10,353

L. Kelly..... 65-73 7274.. 4.2 ..2281 ..12 .......87 ........9,555

C. Daniels 61-68 5138.. 4.5 ..3314 ..16.3 .....54 ........8,452

L. Brown.. 69-76 5875.. 3.8 ..2485 ..10.4 .....55 ........8,360

G. Sayers .65-71 4956.. 5 ....1307 ..11.7 .....48 ...........6,263

I think it is reasonable for people to take the career of all of these guys except Larry Brown over Sayers. One interesting note is that I noticed that guys like Leroy Kelly lost a lot off of his YPC because he had barely over a 3 YPC his last 2 years. I wonder if ending Sayers career prematurely lifted his status because people didn't see the last 2 years similar to what we saw from Leroy Kelly?

Thoughts?

 
Im certain that Houston could live with Gale Sayers' HOF career...the #s, the excitement, the notoriety, the hype and highlights and all the glamour that would come with having a human highlight film player on the squad. Sayers scored 22TDs his ROOKIE season, though. Does anyone honestly think Bush will score even half that many TDs next season? This is kindof a moot point on some levels. Anything is possible, but Id rather look at this realistically. If Reggie Bush scores 10TDs next year and brings with it a world of flair and excitement, then he'll have been successful. He may improve over his next 4 years, or like Sayers he may statistically regress once the league adjusts to his skills and gameplans more effectively. Would I want 5 years of production from a player Im choosing #1 overall? If I didnt win a Superbowl in those 5 years, than "No". The guy may as well be learning to play the game, put up some nice #s, then like Marshall Faulk, become a contract problem, get traded or become a FA and help SOMEONE ELSE win a Superbowl. Id rather have an Olineman or Dlineman, in this case either Ferguson or Williams, who will dominate one side of the line, make about 6 or 7 Pro Bowls, and help me win some games. jmho...oc.

 
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I'd take Sayers. If you know that every game for 5 or 6 years you will almost certainly have the best player on the field running the ball for you, then you got to take that.

Sayers career is very similar to Koufax's. Koufax really had only a 3 or 4 year run, but was so dominant during those years you would have to take him over a guy with a solid 15 year career.
Funny you should use that analogy as I was thinking of using it. I didn't because Sayers, from the stats, was not dominating, in fact other guys outperformed him. Koufax was not outperformed. SK was #1 in ERA, wins, strikeouts and IP. Leading ERA and IP is the dominant.
 
I don't know if this has been said but Gale Sayers has the highest YPC average in history for a RB in his first five seasons. That's pretty good. (Minimum 600 carries).
Chase you are reaching again. All of a sudden you raise the bar above 600 so Bo Jackson doesn't get in? Not good Chase, not good at all :thumbdown:
 
I don't know if this has been said but Gale Sayers has the highest YPC average in history for a RB in his first five seasons. That's pretty good. (Minimum 600 carries).
Chase you are reaching again. All of a sudden you raise the bar above 600 so Bo Jackson doesn't get in? Not good Chase, not good at all :thumbdown:
Bo still wouldn't be included in Chase's stat because Bo didn't play five seasons.
 
2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it? Yes, and they should.
Hi jw,How are you defining total yards there?

J

 
Now, as to the thread question:

1. Would the Texans be happy with Sayers' career totals if they draft Bush #1? No, of course not, and they shouldn't be. But if he produced those career totals today, those numbers would be disappointing, whereas they were outstanding in Sayers' day. This is indeed apples and oranges without framing the numbers in their proper context.

2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it? Yes, and they should.

3. Would they take 5 straight top 5 rushing seasons, 5 straight All Pro seasons, etc. and be happy with it? Yes, and they should.

In considering these questions, consider how inexact a science it is to predict NFL success. Granted, NFL RBs are probably easier to predict than other positions, but there is downside. To take a given performer at the level described above would be well worth it. For 5 years, the Texans would have a guaranteed dominant player, which would mean more wins and more revenue from ticket sales, jerseys, etc. On the flip side, how many #1 picks have not lived up to expectations? This is a nobrainer.
Hi jw,Follow up question.

So where is the line for you? Obviously, you're fine with 5 great seasons and nothing more. But not fine with three great seasons. Is four good enough?

J

 
2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.
Hi jw,How are you defining total yards there?

J
Rushing + receiving + passing + kickoff returns + punt returns
 
2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.
Hi jw,How are you defining total yards there?

J
Rushing + receiving + passing + kickoff returns + punt returns
Thanks jw,That's what I thought.

He obviously should be credited with those return yards of course but that's more of an apples and oranges number than the era when comparing him to other RBs. How many yards would other RBs rack up if they returned punts and kicks but don't because coaches are afraid to risk injury there?

His rushing numbers were 72.9 yards per game. For all the hype, some might be surprised to know his receiving numbers were 19.22 per game.

J

 
Now, as to the thread question:

1. Would the Texans be happy with Sayers' career totals if they draft Bush #1?  No, of course not, and they shouldn't be.  But if he produced those career totals today, those numbers would be disappointing, whereas they were outstanding in Sayers' day.  This is indeed apples and oranges without framing the numbers in their proper context.

2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

3. Would they take 5 straight top 5 rushing seasons, 5 straight All Pro seasons, etc. and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

In considering these questions, consider how inexact a science it is to predict NFL success.  Granted, NFL RBs are probably easier to predict than other positions, but there is downside.  To take a given performer at the level described above would be well worth it.  For 5 years, the Texans would have a guaranteed dominant player, which would mean more wins and more revenue from ticket sales, jerseys, etc.  On the flip side, how many #1 picks have not lived up to expectations?  This is a nobrainer.
Hi jw,Follow up question.

So where is the line for you? Obviously, you're fine with 5 great seasons and nothing more. But not fine with three great seasons. Is four good enough?

J
I think all this focus on numbers and number of seasons is losing the proper perspective for Sayers.We are not talking about 5 great seasons.

We are talking about 5 utterly amazing, groundbreaking, never been seen before never been seen again (in many respects) seasons. We are talking ab out a ballplayer who's skill level i surpassed by maybe ONE player at his position of all time.

Again, Sayers wasnt good. He wasnt very good. He wasnt even great. He was immortal. Utterly amazing. Again, perhaps the most dangerous offensive weapon ever, who could be deployed in a number of ways long before the league was ready for such a range of talent and skill in terms of offensive schemes.

This talk of numbers means so little. It was a different game back then. Different schemes, different approach, shorter season, the whole lot. Sayers was beyond revolutionary. He was a god in cleats, the Jimi Hendrix of running backs... beyond gifted and (sadly, as is demonstrated in this thread) terribly underappreciated.

 
To add some perspective for those who have neither seen significant footage of Sayers (I wish there were an easy source for this) nor ready a ton from his contemporaries who did, let's try this perspective:

Imagine Sandy Koufax's career, without those first 7 or so seasons where he struggled. Just take the 5-6 years at the end of his career where the guy put up perhaps the greatest half decade of pitching we have ever seen.

THAT, was Gale Sayers.

 
Now, as to the thread question:

1. Would the Texans be happy with Sayers' career totals if they draft Bush #1?  No, of course not, and they shouldn't be.  But if he produced those career totals today, those numbers would be disappointing, whereas they were outstanding in Sayers' day.  This is indeed apples and oranges without framing the numbers in their proper context.

2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

3. Would they take 5 straight top 5 rushing seasons, 5 straight All Pro seasons, etc. and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

In considering these questions, consider how inexact a science it is to predict NFL success.  Granted, NFL RBs are probably easier to predict than other positions, but there is downside.  To take a given performer at the level described above would be well worth it.  For 5 years, the Texans would have a guaranteed dominant player, which would mean more wins and more revenue from ticket sales, jerseys, etc.  On the flip side, how many #1 picks have not lived up to expectations?  This is a nobrainer.
Hi jw,Follow up question.

So where is the line for you? Obviously, you're fine with 5 great seasons and nothing more. But not fine with three great seasons. Is four good enough?

J
Well, when you say I'm not fine with three great seasons, I assume you are referring to my statements about Davis. I don't think Davis should be in the HOF, and I do think Sayers should be. For HOF consideration, I think 3 great years is not enough, but if they are great enough, I think 5 can be enough (very rare, Sayers qualifies).In terms of this question, I think 5 All Pro seasons is a nobrainer. I also think 4 All Pro seasons is a nobrainer. This is largely because I believe it is less likely than most believe, especially at this time of year, for a highly graded prospect to do all of the following:

1. Fulfill his potential/live up to his grade.

2. Stay healthy and avoid off field issues that detract from performance.

3. Stay with the team that drafted him. (EDIT: longer than 4-5 years.)

On top of that, in this 4-5 elite season, then done scenario, the team faces no risk of signing the player to an expensive second contract that the player fails to live up to.

If you get down to 3 elite seasons, then it becomes a tougher call. At that point, I think it depends on the team situation. That is, if I'm a contender who does not have an elite RB and I can add Gale Sayers for the next 3 seasons, I do it, since that may put me over the top in winning a Super Bowl over that span. If I'm Houston, I probably don't do it, since adding Sayers isn't likely to be enough to lead to substantial postseason success, and thus I'd rather gamble on the potential for longer sustained (albeit likely not many consecutive All Pro seasons) success.

 
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Now, as to the thread question:

1. Would the Texans be happy with Sayers' career totals if they draft Bush #1?  No, of course not, and they shouldn't be.  But if he produced those career totals today, those numbers would be disappointing, whereas they were outstanding in Sayers' day.  This is indeed apples and oranges without framing the numbers in their proper context.

2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

3. Would they take 5 straight top 5 rushing seasons, 5 straight All Pro seasons, etc. and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

In considering these questions, consider how inexact a science it is to predict NFL success.  Granted, NFL RBs are probably easier to predict than other positions, but there is downside.  To take a given performer at the level described above would be well worth it.  For 5 years, the Texans would have a guaranteed dominant player, which would mean more wins and more revenue from ticket sales, jerseys, etc.  On the flip side, how many #1 picks have not lived up to expectations?  This is a nobrainer.
Hi jw,Follow up question.

So where is the line for you? Obviously, you're fine with 5 great seasons and nothing more. But not fine with three great seasons. Is four good enough?

J
I think all this focus on numbers and number of seasons is losing the proper perspective for Sayers.We are not talking about 5 great seasons.

We are talking about 5 utterly amazing, groundbreaking, never been seen before never been seen again (in many respects) seasons. We are talking ab out a ballplayer who's skill level i surpassed by maybe ONE player at his position of all time.

Again, Sayers wasnt good. He wasnt very good. He wasnt even great. He was immortal. Utterly amazing. Again, perhaps the most dangerous offensive weapon ever, who could be deployed in a number of ways long before the league was ready for such a range of talent and skill in terms of offensive schemes.

This talk of numbers means so little. It was a different game back then. Different schemes, different approach, shorter season, the whole lot. Sayers was beyond revolutionary. He was a god in cleats, the Jimi Hendrix of running backs... beyond gifted and (sadly, as is demonstrated in this thread) terribly underappreciated.
:goodposting:
 
2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.
Hi jw,How are you defining total yards there?

J
Rushing + receiving + passing + kickoff returns + punt returns
Thanks jw,That's what I thought.

He obviously should be credited with those return yards of course but that's more of an apples and oranges number than the era when comparing him to other RBs. How many yards would other RBs rack up if they returned punts and kicks but don't because coaches are afraid to risk injury there?

His rushing numbers were 72.9 yards per game. For all the hype, some might be surprised to know his receiving numbers were 19.22 per game.

J
OK. I should not have brought up numbers, because, as Koya said, they don't do Sayers justice.That said, I think it is probably reasonable to focus on his first 5 season, in which he played a total of 64 games, and ignore his last 2 seasons, in which he played a total of 4 games and was clearly not the same player.

In his first 5 seasons, he averaged 76 rushing yards per game and 20.5 receiving yards per game. That projects to 1544 total yards in a 16 game season.

While you seem willing to discount his other yards, I think that any team would be idiotic not to take a given 5 years of a player who will put up the following:

1544 rushing & receiving yards every season

821 additional all purpose yards every season

13-14 TDs every season

Joe, are you saying that if you KNEW you would get the above production for 5 consecutive seasons, then the player would be done, you wouldn't take that guaranteed production with the #1 pick? Now, especially since it is Houston with that pick, consider that Dominack Davis is there to augment the rushing & receiving. Again--nobrainer.

 
2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.
Hi jw,How are you defining total yards there?

J
Rushing + receiving + passing + kickoff returns + punt returns
Thanks jw,That's what I thought.

He obviously should be credited with those return yards of course but that's more of an apples and oranges number than the era when comparing him to other RBs. How many yards would other RBs rack up if they returned punts and kicks but don't because coaches are afraid to risk injury there?

His rushing numbers were 72.9 yards per game. For all the hype, some might be surprised to know his receiving numbers were 19.22 per game.

J
One more point. I can just as easily turn around your bolded statement above and say that Sayers would have accumulated more rushing & receiving production if he wasn't used on kickoff & punt returns. You can't speculate one way without speculating the other way.
 
Again, Sayers wasnt good.  He wasnt very good.  He wasnt even great.  He was immortal.  Utterly amazing. 
Hi koya,With all due respect, I'd expect an "immortal" RB to average better than 73 yards a game rushing for an extremely short career.

That's no knock on him given the era he played in. No doubt, he as fantastic. As said, for the five good years, he was a top 5 guy each year. I just think some get a little carried away with the "immortal" angle.

J

 
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Now, as to the thread question:

1. Would the Texans be happy with Sayers' career totals if they draft Bush #1?  No, of course not, and they shouldn't be.  But if he produced those career totals today, those numbers would be disappointing, whereas they were outstanding in Sayers' day.  This is indeed apples and oranges without framing the numbers in their proper context.

2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

3. Would they take 5 straight top 5 rushing seasons, 5 straight All Pro seasons, etc. and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

In considering these questions, consider how inexact a science it is to predict NFL success.  Granted, NFL RBs are probably easier to predict than other positions, but there is downside.  To take a given performer at the level described above would be well worth it.  For 5 years, the Texans would have a guaranteed dominant player, which would mean more wins and more revenue from ticket sales, jerseys, etc.  On the flip side, how many #1 picks have not lived up to expectations?  This is a nobrainer.
Hi jw,Follow up question.

So where is the line for you? Obviously, you're fine with 5 great seasons and nothing more. But not fine with three great seasons. Is four good enough?

J
Well, when you say I'm not fine with three great seasons, I assume you are referring to my statements about Davis. I don't think Davis should be in the HOF, and I do think Sayers should be. For HOF consideration, I think 3 great years is not enough, but if they are great enough, I think 5 can be enough (very rare, Sayers qualifies).In terms of this question, I think 5 All Pro seasons is a nobrainer. I also think 4 All Pro seasons is a nobrainer. This is largely because I believe it is less likely than most believe, especially at this time of year, for a highly graded prospect to do all of the following:

1. Fulfill his potential/live up to his grade.

2. Stay healthy and avoid off field issues that detract from performance.

3. Stay with the team that drafted him. (EDIT: longer than 4-5 years.)

On top of that, in this 4-5 elite season, then done scenario, the team faces no risk of signing the player to an expensive second contract that the player fails to live up to.

If you get down to 3 elite seasons, then it becomes a tougher call.
Thanks jw,That's sort of what I was looking for as to where you put your line on how many seasons. Thanks.

J

 
With all due respect, I'd expect an "immortal" RB to average better than 73 yards a game rushing for an extremely short career.
It wasn't just 73 yards (which was a lot back then -- tops in the league a couple times); it was 73 yards on 14-15 carries, which is a lot more valuable than 73 yards on 20 carries.
 
2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.
Hi jw,How are you defining total yards there?

J
Rushing + receiving + passing + kickoff returns + punt returns
Thanks jw,That's what I thought.

He obviously should be credited with those return yards of course but that's more of an apples and oranges number than the era when comparing him to other RBs. How many yards would other RBs rack up if they returned punts and kicks but don't because coaches are afraid to risk injury there?

His rushing numbers were 72.9 yards per game. For all the hype, some might be surprised to know his receiving numbers were 19.22 per game.

J
One more point. I can just as easily turn around your bolded statement above and say that Sayers would have accumulated more rushing & receiving production if he wasn't used on kickoff & punt returns. You can't speculate one way without speculating the other way.
One might make a case that way but it's pretty weak. You're saying returning punts and kickoffs actually hurt his rushing numbers? Because he was tired or couldn't handle the mental work of adding return duties? I guess you could argue that but I don't think it's anywhere like even on both sides.J

 
2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it? Yes, and they should.
Hi jw,How are you defining total yards there?

J
Rushing + receiving + passing + kickoff returns + punt returns
Thanks jw,That's what I thought.

He obviously should be credited with those return yards of course but that's more of an apples and oranges number than the era when comparing him to other RBs. How many yards would other RBs rack up if they returned punts and kicks but don't because coaches are afraid to risk injury there?

His rushing numbers were 72.9 yards per game. For all the hype, some might be surprised to know his receiving numbers were 19.22 per game.

J
One more point. I can just as easily turn around your bolded statement above and say that Sayers would have accumulated more rushing & receiving production if he wasn't used on kickoff & punt returns. You can't speculate one way without speculating the other way.
One might make a case that way but it's pretty weak. You're saying returning punts and kickoffs actually hurt his rushing numbers? Because he was tired or couldn't handle the mental work of adding return duties? I guess you could argue that but I don't think it's anywhere like even on both sides.J
I agree, this seems to be a very weak argument to try and make. I don't see how any player could possibly be hurt, stat wise, by getting the ball in the open field several times a game. :loco:
 
With all due respect, I'd expect an "immortal" RB to average better than 73 yards a game rushing for an extremely short career.
It wasn't just 73 yards (which was a lot back then -- tops in the league a couple times); it was 73 yards on 14-15 carries, which is a lot more valuable than 73 yards on 20 carries.
For sure, MT. But that's what I'm saying. Maybe I reserve "immortal" for too rare a situation but tops in the league a couple of times isn't one.J

 
With all due respect, I'd expect an "immortal" RB to average better than 73 yards a game rushing for an extremely short career.
It wasn't just 73 yards (which was a lot back then -- tops in the league a couple times); it was 73 yards on 14-15 carries, which is a lot more valuable than 73 yards on 20 carries.
For sure, MT. But that's what I'm saying. Maybe I reserve "immortal" for too rare a situation but tops in the league a couple of times isn't one.J
Yeah, he wasn't immortal. He was just really good -- a lot better than a glance at his stats would indiciate, but obviously mortal.
 
This question is easily summed up with, yes, the Texans would be happy if Bush turned out to be a HOF RB and member of the 75th (or 100th) anniversary team.

 
Here's another question: What kind of yearly numbers could Bush put up today if he really had Sayers' skills?

 
Here's another question: What kind of yearly numbers could Bush put up today if he really had Sayers' skills?
That's an interesting question 3.I like to look at stuff like this. And on the other side of the coin, what would a with Bush's skill do against a defense from the mid 60's?

J

 
Some food for thought, not as a commentary on these players' abilities, far from it...but more of a thought about where a rb should be taken in the draft.

Sayers & Sanders combined win-loss records = 119-136-3.

Playoff victories = 1.

...and I believe someone on here did an analysis of how many first round rbs had won super bowls with the team that drafted them. It was either very, very few or zero. I can't remember right off the top of my head.

 
Some food for thought, not as a commentary on these players' abilities, far from it...but more of a thought about where a rb should be taken in the draft.

Sayers & Sanders combined win-loss records = 119-136-3.

Playoff victories = 1.

...and I believe someone on here did an analysis of how many first round rbs had won super bowls with the team that drafted them. It was either very, very few or zero. I can't remember right off the top of my head.
Emmitt, Payton, Allen, Harris and Lewis off the top of my head.
 
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Some food for thought, not as a commentary on these players' abilities, far from it...but more of a thought about where a rb should be taken in the draft.

Sayers & Sanders combined win-loss records = 119-136-3.

Playoff victories = 1.

...and I believe someone on here did an analysis of how many first round rbs had won super bowls with the team that drafted them. It was either very, very few or zero. I can't remember right off the top of my head.
Emmitt, Payton, Allen, Harris and Lewis off the top of my head.
So I guess we can rule out "zero". :D
 
Now, as to the thread question:

1. Would the Texans be happy with Sayers' career totals if they draft Bush #1?  No, of course not, and they shouldn't be.  But if he produced those career totals today, those numbers would be disappointing, whereas they were outstanding in Sayers' day.  This is indeed apples and oranges without framing the numbers in their proper context.

2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

3. Would they take 5 straight top 5 rushing seasons, 5 straight All Pro seasons, etc. and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.

In considering these questions, consider how inexact a science it is to predict NFL success.  Granted, NFL RBs are probably easier to predict than other positions, but there is downside.  To take a given performer at the level described above would be well worth it.  For 5 years, the Texans would have a guaranteed dominant player, which would mean more wins and more revenue from ticket sales, jerseys, etc.  On the flip side, how many #1 picks have not lived up to expectations?  This is a nobrainer.
Hi jw,Follow up question.

So where is the line for you? Obviously, you're fine with 5 great seasons and nothing more. But not fine with three great seasons. Is four good enough?

J
That is the point I made before. If you are OK with a short career then where do you draw the line?
 
I think all this focus on numbers and number of seasons is losing the proper perspective for Sayers.We are not talking about 5 great seasons.We are talking about 5 utterly amazing, groundbreaking, never been seen before never been seen again (in many respects) seasons. We are talking ab out a ballplayer who's skill level i surpassed by maybe ONE player at his position of all time. Again, Sayers wasnt good. He wasnt very good. He wasnt even great. He was immortal. Utterly amazing. Again, perhaps the most dangerous offensive weapon ever, who could be deployed in a number of ways long before the league was ready for such a range of talent and skill in terms of offensive schemes.
:wall: Pure hyperbole. I just took seasons from his era and showed you better or at least comparable seasons from 4 guys not named Brown. 200 carries in a year is NOT "utterly amazing, groundbreaking, never been seen before never been seen again" seasons, unless you are averaging 7 yards a carry for those 200.Everyone I have talked to said that Sayers ran smoother than they had ever seen (that time) and he seemed to be able to toy with guys when running. However, they ALL said that he was not used that much to keep him fresh. When his carries went up his injuries mounted. On a much higher level it is the backup RB having such a high YPC until he becomes the man getting carries one after another including when he is tired. I don't know, maybe Sayers was fragile, maybe he had poor endurance, or maybe his coaches felt he couldn't stand the punishment or be as effective with more carries, but for whatever reason his carries/touches were lower compared to many of the other elite RB's of his era. Because of this you simply can't say he had once in a lifetime seasons...the proof is in the pudding. He was out gained by guys of his era, in terms of rushing receiving and TD's scored.
 
To add some perspective for those who have neither seen significant footage of Sayers (I wish there were an easy source for this) nor ready a ton from his contemporaries who did, let's try this perspective:

Imagine Sandy Koufax's career, without those first 7 or so seasons where he struggled. Just take the 5-6 years at the end of his career where the guy put up perhaps the greatest half decade of pitching we have ever seen.

THAT, was Gale Sayers.
We went through this already and the comparison falls flat. Koufax was # 1 in ERA and IP for 3 straight years. Wins as well, but in baseball run support is a big part of that. There was nobody close to Koufax during those years. If you took all the pitchers from the Koufax era and lined them up the way I did for Sayers, Koufax would be in 1st and Sayers came out 5th (would have been 6th if I put OJ in there.
 
With all due respect, I'd expect an "immortal" RB to average better than 73 yards a game rushing for an extremely short career.
It wasn't just 73 yards (which was a lot back then -- tops in the league a couple times); it was 73 yards on 14-15 carries, which is a lot more valuable than 73 yards on 20 carries.
Yeah, but is it better than 20 carries for 90 yards with a higher TD rate? This is what 4-5 other guys did (again Jim Brown is not even in this). Sayers special team playing really gives him a boost, but he simply does not stand out against the other players on a rushing and receiving line as he just didn't get involved enough.
 
2. Would they take 140 total yards and 0.84 TDs per game (2240 total yards and 13.4 TDs per 16 game season) right now and be happy with it?  Yes, and they should.
Hi jw,How are you defining total yards there?

J
Rushing + receiving + passing + kickoff returns + punt returns
Thanks jw,That's what I thought.

He obviously should be credited with those return yards of course but that's more of an apples and oranges number than the era when comparing him to other RBs. How many yards would other RBs rack up if they returned punts and kicks but don't because coaches are afraid to risk injury there?

His rushing numbers were 72.9 yards per game. For all the hype, some might be surprised to know his receiving numbers were 19.22 per game.

J
One more point. I can just as easily turn around your bolded statement above and say that Sayers would have accumulated more rushing & receiving production if he wasn't used on kickoff & punt returns. You can't speculate one way without speculating the other way.
One might make a case that way but it's pretty weak. You're saying returning punts and kickoffs actually hurt his rushing numbers? Because he was tired or couldn't handle the mental work of adding return duties? I guess you could argue that but I don't think it's anywhere like even on both sides.J
I agree, this seems to be a very weak argument to try and make. I don't see how any player could possibly be hurt, stat wise, by getting the ball in the open field several times a game. :loco:
Actually, I agree that playing on special teams would wear you out some. It has to tire you out a little. However, because Sayers didn't carry a significant load (14-15 times a game) it isn't a factor. If he were carrying the rock 20 times a game (a 33% increase), it probabaly would.
 
Interesting RB comparison who were dominant for the first 60 or so games of their careers...

Player 1

62 Games

6463 Rushing Yards

5.1 Avg

57 Rushing Touchdowns

63 Total Touchdowns (Rush-Rec)

Player 2

62 Games

6457 Rushing Yards

4.6 Avg

55 Rushing Touchdowns

55 Total Touchdowns

Player 3

64 Games

4866 Rushing Yards

5.0 Avg

39 Rushing Touchdowns

48 Total Touchdowns

Player 1 is Jim Brown...

Players 2 & 3 both fizzled out fairly early in their NFL careers due to injuries and wear and tear. Player 2 was Earl Campbell...Player 3 was Gale Sayers.

One other thing to remember when thoughts of moving today's RBs back to yesteryear...I am sure those FF players remember the groin shot Ladainian Tomlinson took versus Oakland while under the pile this past year. That "cheap shot" was a common occurrence back in the day. An NFL RB who showed up a NFL Defense back in the day by scoring or making big plays repeatedly...definitely paid for it, no doubt. For this reason I don't believe you can just plug in any RB from today, and expect him to be as successfull under the very different cirumstances and playing conditions of yesteryear...
Good stats (campbell was a beast) but your comment about it being tougher to play "back in the day" I just don't buy. All the players are so much better now. I don't know for sure, but I would be money that Reggie Bush is faster than Gayle Sayers and stronger and could do what Sayers did back then. Remember that the quality and depth of players was not nearly as high as today. However, that isn't relevant because almost any athlete now is more finely honed and this should not be a knock on Sayers.
 
To add some perspective for those who have neither seen significant footage of Sayers (I wish there were an easy source for this) nor ready a ton from his contemporaries who did, let's try this perspective:

Imagine Sandy Koufax's career, without those first 7 or so seasons where he struggled.  Just take the 5-6 years at the end of his career where the guy put up perhaps the greatest half decade of pitching we have ever seen.

THAT, was Gale Sayers.
We went through this already and the comparison falls flat. Koufax was # 1 in ERA and IP for 3 straight years. Wins as well, but in baseball run support is a big part of that. There was nobody close to Koufax during those years. If you took all the pitchers from the Koufax era and lined them up the way I did for Sayers, Koufax would be in 1st and Sayers came out 5th (would have been 6th if I put OJ in there.
Once again, you are looking to stats to tell you something that stats can not shed light upon.Gale Sayers was to HB as Koufax was to pitching for their short respective peaks. If you don't wish to accept this, I implore you to read more about Sayers, find some gamefilm - something so that you can see what all those who voted for him for All NFL and for the HoF saw with their own eyes.

He WAS that good. If the stats dont "make it so" for you, sorry that you are looking at such a limited piece of the pie to miss perhaps the most gifted runner to ever grace the game.

 
I think all this focus on numbers and number of seasons is losing the proper perspective for Sayers.

We are not talking about 5 great seasons.

We are talking about 5 utterly amazing, groundbreaking, never been seen before never been seen again (in many respects) seasons.  We are talking ab out a ballplayer who's skill level i surpassed by maybe ONE player at his position of all time. 

Again, Sayers wasnt good.  He wasnt very good.  He wasnt even great.  He was immortal.  Utterly amazing.  Again, perhaps the most dangerous offensive weapon ever,  who could be deployed in a number of ways long before the league was ready for such a range of talent and skill in terms of offensive schemes.
:wall: Pure hyperbole. I just took seasons from his era and showed you better or at least comparable seasons from 4 guys not named Brown. 200 carries in a year is NOT "utterly amazing, groundbreaking, never been seen before never been seen again" seasons, unless you are averaging 7 yards a carry for those 200.Everyone I have talked to said that Sayers ran smoother than they had ever seen (that time) and he seemed to be able to toy with guys when running. However, they ALL said that he was not used that much to keep him fresh. When his carries went up his injuries mounted. On a much higher level it is the backup RB having such a high YPC until he becomes the man getting carries one after another including when he is tired. I don't know, maybe Sayers was fragile, maybe he had poor endurance, or maybe his coaches felt he couldn't stand the punishment or be as effective with more carries, but for whatever reason his carries/touches were lower compared to many of the other elite RB's of his era. Because of this you simply can't say he had once in a lifetime seasons...the proof is in the pudding. He was out gained by guys of his era, in terms of rushing receiving and TD's scored.
The proof is in what pudding? Stats that are without context and lack a great deal of meaning? I guess we will have to disagree. I will be on the side of those who UNANIMOUSLY voted him in for the HoF, in spite of too short a career. You can look at stats and say all those people who actually lived through it, saw the career, witnessed first hand are all wrong.

To the question at hand - 5 All Pro seasons as one of the best weapons in the history of the game? I think the Texans would take that.

 
Thanks jw,

That's what I thought.

He obviously should be credited with those return yards of course but that's more of an apples and oranges number than the era when comparing him to other RBs. How many yards would other RBs rack up if they returned punts and kicks but don't because coaches are afraid to risk injury there?

His rushing numbers were 72.9 yards per game. For all the hype, some might be surprised to know his receiving numbers were 19.22 per game.

J
OK. I should not have brought up numbers, because, as Koya said, they don't do Sayers justice.That said, I think it is probably reasonable to focus on his first 5 season, in which he played a total of 64 games, and ignore his last 2 seasons, in which he played a total of 4 games and was clearly not the same player.

In his first 5 seasons, he averaged 76 rushing yards per game and 20.5 receiving yards per game. That projects to 1544 total yards in a 16 game season.

While you seem willing to discount his other yards, I think that any team would be idiotic not to take a given 5 years of a player who will put up the following:

1544 rushing & receiving yards every season

821 additional all purpose yards every season

13-14 TDs every season

Joe, are you saying that if you KNEW you would get the above production for 5 consecutive seasons, then the player would be done, you wouldn't take that guaranteed production with the #1 pick? Now, especially since it is Houston with that pick, consider that Dominack Davis is there to augment the rushing & receiving. Again--nobrainer.
Joe, do you care to answer this? Suppose in addition to Reggie Bush, another RB is available in this draft that is guaranteed to give you this performance for 5 years and then retire:1544 rushing & receiving yards every season

821 additional all purpose yards every season

13-14 TDs every season

Two questions:

1. In a general sense, should a team be willing to use the #1 pick on this RB, instead of Bush and all other choices?

2. Specifically, given their current personnel, level of competitiveness, etc., should the Texans be willing to use the #1 pick on this RB, instead of Bush and all other choices?

 
I think all this focus on numbers and number of seasons is losing the proper perspective for Sayers.

We are not talking about 5 great seasons.

We are talking about 5 utterly amazing, groundbreaking, never been seen before never been seen again (in many respects) seasons.  We are talking ab out a ballplayer who's skill level i surpassed by maybe ONE player at his position of all time. 

Again, Sayers wasnt good.  He wasnt very good.  He wasnt even great.  He was immortal.  Utterly amazing.  Again, perhaps the most dangerous offensive weapon ever,  who could be deployed in a number of ways long before the league was ready for such a range of talent and skill in terms of offensive schemes.
:wall: Pure hyperbole. I just took seasons from his era and showed you better or at least comparable seasons from 4 guys not named Brown. 200 carries in a year is NOT "utterly amazing, groundbreaking, never been seen before never been seen again" seasons, unless you are averaging 7 yards a carry for those 200.Everyone I have talked to said that Sayers ran smoother than they had ever seen (that time) and he seemed to be able to toy with guys when running. However, they ALL said that he was not used that much to keep him fresh. When his carries went up his injuries mounted. On a much higher level it is the backup RB having such a high YPC until he becomes the man getting carries one after another including when he is tired. I don't know, maybe Sayers was fragile, maybe he had poor endurance, or maybe his coaches felt he couldn't stand the punishment or be as effective with more carries, but for whatever reason his carries/touches were lower compared to many of the other elite RB's of his era. Because of this you simply can't say he had once in a lifetime seasons...the proof is in the pudding. He was out gained by guys of his era, in terms of rushing receiving and TD's scored.
The proof is in what pudding? Stats that are without context and lack a great deal of meaning? I guess we will have to disagree. I will be on the side of those who UNANIMOUSLY voted him in for the HoF, in spite of too short a career. You can look at stats and say all those people who actually lived through it, saw the career, witnessed first hand are all wrong.

To the question at hand - 5 All Pro seasons as one of the best weapons in the history of the game? I think the Texans would take that.
Feel free to get in the last word because you simply can't understand that I agree that WHEN HE TOUCHED THE BALL HE WAS GREAT, but 14 carries with 73 yards rushing and less than 2 receptions for 19 yards receiving per game simply is not a large enough part of the game to be this dominant. When Koufax pitched during those years, he was without question the best pitcher AND is almost 50% of the games outcome... the comparison is not even close
 
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Thanks jw,

That's what I thought.

He obviously should be credited with those return yards of course but that's more of an apples and oranges number than the era when comparing him to other RBs.  How many yards would other RBs rack up if they returned punts and kicks but don't because coaches are afraid to risk injury there?

His rushing numbers were 72.9 yards per game. For all the hype, some might be surprised to know his receiving numbers were 19.22 per game.

J
OK. I should not have brought up numbers, because, as Koya said, they don't do Sayers justice.That said, I think it is probably reasonable to focus on his first 5 season, in which he played a total of 64 games, and ignore his last 2 seasons, in which he played a total of 4 games and was clearly not the same player.

In his first 5 seasons, he averaged 76 rushing yards per game and 20.5 receiving yards per game. That projects to 1544 total yards in a 16 game season.

While you seem willing to discount his other yards, I think that any team would be idiotic not to take a given 5 years of a player who will put up the following:

1544 rushing & receiving yards every season

821 additional all purpose yards every season

13-14 TDs every season

Joe, are you saying that if you KNEW you would get the above production for 5 consecutive seasons, then the player would be done, you wouldn't take that guaranteed production with the #1 pick? Now, especially since it is Houston with that pick, consider that Dominack Davis is there to augment the rushing & receiving. Again--nobrainer.
Joe, do you care to answer this? Suppose in addition to Reggie Bush, another RB is available in this draft that is guaranteed to give you this performance for 5 years and then retire:1544 rushing & receiving yards every season

821 additional all purpose yards every season

13-14 TDs every season

Two questions:

1. In a general sense, should a team be willing to use the #1 pick on this RB, instead of Bush and all other choices?

2. Specifically, given their current personnel, level of competitiveness, etc., should the Texans be willing to use the #1 pick on this RB, instead of Bush and all other choices?
Joe can answer for himself, but did Sayers get 3-4 TD's a year from Special teams? Were the special teams that poor and did other teams score frequently on them as well?In terms of 1544 rushing and receiving yards, this 1544 immortal total yard performance was bested by TEN guys this year alone. 3 of them had more than a 25% increase as well. 1544 rush and receiving yards is above average now. The special teams is a nice bonus and if he had 3-4 returns for TD's a year that would make for a very productive player...BUT NOT IMMORTAL.

 
Reggie Bush is not worth the #1 pick and the $ that any NFL team will have to invest for a part-time back/ returner.

Gale Sayers was a spectacular proven NFL player; it is not reasonable to speculate on an unproven player even with the quality of Bush.

Reggie Bush was indeed a spectacular collegiate playerm but he shared the USC backfield with LenDale White. They both averaged "sick" ypc, but White out-scored Bush by 7 TD's!

I might also add, that Gales Sayers played on Chicago teams which NEVER even made it to the playoffs let alone to the payoff of a Super Bowl!

If it were me, then I would be investing in the O-Line or the D-Line.

There is a reason that David Carr has spent more time on his back these past 4 years than any other QB [or Mati Hari]; it is because the O-Line stinks.

The Houston Defense was 31st last year in yards allowed. They averaged only 1 Turnover a game; dead last in the league. They were dead last in points allowed.

Taking Bush does not help the Houston team.

 
Reggie Bush is not worth the #1 pick and the $ that any NFL team will have to invest for a part-time back/ returner.

Gale Sayers was a spectacular proven NFL player; it is not reasonable to speculate on an unproven player even with the quality of Bush.

Reggie Bush was indeed a spectacular collegiate playerm but he shared the USC backfield with LenDale White.  They both averaged "sick" ypc, but White out-scored Bush by 7 TD's!

I might also add, that Gales Sayers played on Chicago teams which NEVER even made it to the playoffs let alone to the payoff of a Super Bowl!

If it were me, then I would be investing in the O-Line or the D-Line.

There is a reason that David Carr has spent more time on his back these past 4 years than any other QB [or Mati Hari]; it is because the O-Line stinks.

The Houston Defense was 31st last year in yards allowed.  They averaged only 1 Turnover a game; dead last in the league.  They were dead last in points allowed.

Taking Bush does not help the Houston team.
I posted this on another thread, but I don't see Houston finishing the draft with Bush and others in tact. they have 2 strengths, a great return guy and a solid RB. Bush doesn't help this team unless they trade him away for a lot or at least get rid of DD
 
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To claim the quality and depth of players back then is not equal to today is very misinformed. There are 32 NFL teams today, while there were only 14 NFL teams back in 1965. Roster limits today are set at 65 players, while roster limits back then were set at 40 players. The total number of roster spots available today is 1,696 (not including 256 practice squad players), while the total number of roster spots available in 1965 was just 560. So it could easily be argued that the more quality Football players resided back in Sayers playing days. While the more specialized, underutilized and more rested Football players reside today. Also today's college scholarship limits can be viewed as a cap on talented FB players who enter college...while previous day college rules of redshirting college frosh and unlimited scholarships could very easily be construed as receiving the best of the best...and maximizing the full potential of each and every possible FB prospect.
:no: You are forgetting the pool of players is 100 time greater now than back then. I have seen quotes that it is 500x greater, but that seems like a stretch. Back then kids were not "groomed from birth" to play pro football; the money was just not there for the risk of getting beat up. You are not going to get much support for the feeling that depth was better back then. Back then the dream was not to play pro football It was universally known that there were many roster spots that were filled with "you and me."
 
I look at Sayers some what like I look at Derrick Thomas, both were transcendant players whose careers were somewhat shorter than the norms for their generations, but were not unusually short for their times, yet even in slightly truncated careers they put up stats that were in the ball park for amoung the tops in their generations at their positions. Both were difference makers.

BTW Amoung Thomas' accomplishements. 126.5 sacks, 45 forced fumbles with 19 recovered and 4 returned for T.D.s

Thomas was clearly amoung the two or three best of a great generation. His stats confirm that he was not a flash in the pan. Had he been able to continue there is little doubt he would have finished among the all time leaders.

Sterling sharpe would have been in this category with a few more years, Terrell Davis, well his career was just too short by the standards of his time. I don't know precisely where I make the cut on length of career. clearly the player has to be more than a flash in the pan. I probalby make the cut somewhere around 60% of average longevity for stars at the position in that generaqtion. Why I can't clearly articulate but it does have to do with proving multiple times ones ability so that the ability is unquestioned. By my personal standard Sterling Sharpe, is close but misses, as does Terrell Davis.

That said you could have a fine team with those that miss the HOF. Sterling Sharpe and art Monk at W.R. Davis and Sims as your backs. Ken Anderson as Q.B.

 

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