If you had to lean one way or the other, which would it be?
A) Harrison and Wayne make Manning a great QB.
B) Manning makes Harrison and Wayne great receivers.
I think if multiple receivers in an offense are putting up ABSURD numbers (including a season with THREE 1000 yard, 10 TD guys), the lion's share of the credit goes to the QB.Anyway, here are some numbers-
Harrison from 1999 to 2002 averaged 117 catches for 1580 yards and 13 scores.
Harrison from 2003 to 2006 averaged 89 catches for 1224 yards and 12 scores.
Harrison's WORST reception total from 1999-2002 was 102. Harrison's BEST reception total from 2003-2006 was 95.
Harrison's WORST yardage total from 1999-2002 was 1413. Harrison's BEST yardage total from 2003-2006 was 1366.
In other words, out of the past 8 seasons, each and every one of his first four seasons was better than each and every one of his last four seasons. There was a sharp and precipitous drop that occurred between the 2002 and 2003 seasons- before that, he produced at a very high but relatively stable level, and after that he has produced at a not-quite-as-high but still relatively stable level. That drop coincides EXACTLY with the emergence of Reggie Wayne- Reggie Wayne never had 50 catches from 1999-2002, and he hasn't had fewer than 68 since.
Basically, we've seen what a WR can do in this offense when he's the only weapon, and we've seen what he can do when he's part of a balanced attack. The balanced attack numbers are really, really good... but the only weapon numbers are MIND-BOGGLING. Harrison had 169, 164, and 205 targets from 2000 to 2002, but has only had 142, 139, 132, and 148 in the 4 years since. During that same 4-year span, Wayne has had 107, 115, 122, and 137- note the slow but steady increase. When Harrison finally falls to the clear #2, expect Reggie Wayne to see a 20-25% jump in targets, which should result in a corresponding jump in production. In other words, when Harrison is out of the picture, Reggie Wayne's value is going to go THROUGH THE ROOF. Mark it down.