Early I posted Portis's preason runs and they were almost identical to Griffins carry by carry. Good running backs get stuffed for losses. All the time. Great ones do it less, but watch every potential #2 running back in the league with the same critical eye and you'll see the same thing. Running backs get stuffed.
I just had to verify this, so I went back through last year's preseason games and then this year's. Portis had no carries in week 4 last preseason, so here are the links:
PreS 2003 Week 1
PreS 2003 Week 2
PreS 2003 Week 3
PreS 2003 Week 4
PreS 2004 HoF
PreS 2004 Week 1
PreS 2004 Week 2
Portis
Week 1
3,3,3,9,3,2
week 2
3,9,5,0,3,2,2,4
week 3
9,5,10,-7,0,6,3,5,5,5,3,2,3
Griffin
HoF
-1,0,27,16,0,3,1
week 1
4,0,8,12,3,-4,7,2,12
week 2
2,10,1,5,0,3,3,1,1,3,10,1,18,1,-1
Comparison
Portis
27 carries, 100 yds
2 or less yds: 7 -
26%
3-5 yds: 15 -
56%
6-9 yds: 4 -
15%
10+ yds: 1 -
4%
Griffin
31 carries, 137 yds
2 or less yds: 14 -
45%
3-5 yds: 7 -
23%
6-9 yds: 2 -
6%
10+ yds: 5 -
16%
***************************************************
Now, this is
exactly what I have been saying. Portis (and good backs) find a way to turn 1 yd carries into 3 yd carries. Portis' highest percentage of carries by a wide margin were of the 3-5 yd variety. Griffin's highest percentage of carries by a wide percentage are for 2 yds or less.
DEN 2003 preseason 1st team
9 series, 2 TD, 3 FGs, 1 blocked FG, 1 TO
DEN 2004 preseason 1st team
11 series, 0 TDs, 4 FGs, 0 blocked FGs, 3 TOs
Big difference in placing the offense in an advantageous situation on 2nd & 3rd down. And a big difference in increasing the odds of keeping drives going. Please don't say that Griffin's production is very similar to Portis'. It isn't. It's more prolific, but it is less condusive to the operation of a scoring offense.