For those who say Ben Tate's value is situation and not talent...
The "experts" like Sigmund and Bloom didn't watch every snap of his career like some of us did. They might pull up his highlight reels and see a guy that doesn't have exceptional quickness and acceleration... then they look at his stats and only see one good season (2009) and conclude that he is nothing special and proceed to call him fools gold.
When you watch highlight reels, its true that you do not see special quickness and acceleration from Tate. The thing is, Ben Tate is a big back. In fact, looking back at his combine scores where he placed 2nd in the shuffle drill (quickness?) and 3rd in the 40 (top end speed alone will not get you a 4.4 in the 40), it is obvious that his acceleration and quickness are either deceptive or underutilized. NFL caliber scouts and coaches take note of things like this.
Now back to his game stats. After watching highlight reels and being critical of his quickness and speed, you look at his stats and think, "hmmm, only one great season". That might trick you into concluding that if he was truly a great running back, he would have posted more than one season of good stats. The fact is that his stat lines do not tell the whole story. No he wasn't injured most of his career, but rather he was cursed with a dysfunctional coaching/coordinator situation.
As a freshman he was given 54 carries and averaged 7.2 yard per carry. Playing in the SEC as a freshman, I don't think you can ask for a much better sign that you have a stud back on your hands. As a sophomore (2007) he was given a bigger role and carried about 200 times. Unfortunately the Auburn team as a whole was beginning to fall apart that year. He still managed 4.5 YPC playing a full season as a sophomore in the SEC, which isn't too shabby. But that year we had absolutely no passing game to speak of and he faced 8-man SEC fronts every single down.
Enter 2008. This should have been the year Ben Tate broke out, right? Unfortunately, Tubberville was now feeling pressure after a dismal 2007 campaign and he went way out on a limb and hired Tony Franklin and revamped the entire offense (some sort of 10 cent high school spread passing attack). It was an insane last-minute project that was doomed to failure. The season started off an utter disaster, Franklin was fired mid season and some ugly hybrid spread offense was employed on the fly and it was horrible. Ben Tate, of course, suffered in the stat column - as did the entire team. He only had 162 carries in 2008, which was a product of Franklin not wanting to use him in his specialty offense and the fact that we never had a sustained lead where we could actually establish a ball control game plan. Still, his 4.2 YPC wasn't that bad under the circumstances. Hell, I think he faced 9 man fronts part of that season... it was a joke.
In 2009 we had a new coach and a real offensive coordinator. We stuck with the spread offense, but now it was one that implemented the running game by design. Though he was starting from scratch again, this time Tate had a chance to be the premiere back in a well designed system with an average QB and average receivers. He didn't always face 8 man fronts and he took advantage of this all season long. 1362 yards at 5.2 yard per carry was the result. Not too shabby for an SEC schedule. The only team that truly shut him down was Alabama. And to be honest, you have to give him a free pass on that one. They literally blew up our offensive line on every snap. He had no chance that game.
Anyway, I hope this helps shed some light on Ben Tate. I'm not suggesting that he will be the next Bo Jackson, but his situation warranted some elaboration. Also, it doesn't hurt to take a look back at Auburn running backs. Just about every single back drafted in the past 10 years or so have panned out in the NFL. That's because it takes something special to produce in the SEC, especially with a team like Auburn who doesn't typically recruit top QBs and receivers to take pressure off the running backs. Ronnie Brown, Caddilac, Rudi Johnson, Steven Davis, Brandon Jacobs, Heath Evans, Kenny Irons (blew out his knee as a rookie). I'm trying to think of at least one back that was drafted from Auburn in the recent past that was a complete bust??
Oh, and if you want a glimpse of his so called "poor quickness" check out the move at 1:51 in this clip:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6dlRzu_mBc
Here's a whole highlight reel of Ben Tate. If you want to see how tough/strong he is, check out the run at 2:25
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NfBkonPBFGY