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Which current backup RBs will be starters in the future? (1 Viewer)

It's always a what have you done for me lately around here. 95% of people on this board can't remember back farther than 364 days. Look at the rankings every year? They are minor shifts from the way guys finished the year before when we know that half the top 10 at each position will not be there the next year.
right and chasing stats from 3 years ago seems to work out well too.it's interesting that the blount backers continue to point to 2010, yet they just gloss over the fact that blount was given an opportunity in 2011 to be the guy and floundered. that is why the bucs looked to the draft in 2012 for a complete back and found their guy. this discussion is about starters. i'm not doubting blount could be a role player like jacobs or some other bulldozer but he isn't a complete back or a starter in my eyes and i'd hazard to guess in the NFL's eyes. he had his chance. you say we're what have you done for me lately... well the NFL is too.
Using a square peg in a round hole is not my problem. The Bucs didn't use him properly in 2011. If used properly the guy can be a beast. He showed that. If paired with a great complimentary back, I think he can be a solid play. He won't do much in PPR leagues as he doesn't catch well, but if he ever learns to pass block, he could be a nice yard gainer and nobody is going to spell him at the goal line.
 
It's always a what have you done for me lately around here. 95% of people on this board can't remember back farther than 364 days. Look at the rankings every year? They are minor shifts from the way guys finished the year before when we know that half the top 10 at each position will not be there the next year.
right and chasing stats from 3 years ago seems to work out well too.it's interesting that the blount backers continue to point to 2010, yet they just gloss over the fact that blount was given an opportunity in 2011 to be the guy and floundered. that is why the bucs looked to the draft in 2012 for a complete back and found their guy. this discussion is about starters. i'm not doubting blount could be a role player like jacobs or some other bulldozer but he isn't a complete back or a starter in my eyes and i'd hazard to guess in the NFL's eyes. he had his chance. you say we're what have you done for me lately... well the NFL is too.
Using a square peg in a round hole is not my problem. The Bucs didn't use him properly in 2011. If used properly the guy can be a beast. He showed that. If paired with a great complimentary back, I think he can be a solid play. He won't do much in PPR leagues as he doesn't catch well, but if he ever learns to pass block, he could be a nice yard gainer and nobody is going to spell him at the goal line.
i can agree with that. he does need a complimentary back, starter he is not.
 
stashing a guy like blount is though imo if you're looking for a starter.
Nobody is grabbing Blount and thinking they have a starter. A LOT of things have to fall into place. He needs to be traded/cut. He needs to go to a team that will not try to move hin to FB or needs a banger to go with a nice COP back, or goes to a team with an established starter or stays in TB and in either case the starter suffers a major injury. That's a lot of ifs, which is why he can be grabbed for cheap.
why waste space with a role player when you could add people like brown, hunter, turbin or pierce?
In the league I own Blount, all of those players are on rosters. I don't have the luxury of grabbing backups like I'm walking through the produce aisle trying to find a good apple that only needs a little shining.
 
stashing a guy like blount is though imo if you're looking for a starter.
Nobody is grabbing Blount and thinking they have a starter. A LOT of things have to fall into place. He needs to be traded/cut. He needs to go to a team that will not try to move hin to FB or needs a banger to go with a nice COP back, or goes to a team with an established starter or stays in TB and in either case the starter suffers a major injury. That's a lot of ifs, which is why he can be grabbed for cheap.
why waste space with a role player when you could add people like brown, hunter, turbin or pierce?
In the league I own Blount, all of those players are on rosters. I don't have the luxury of grabbing backups like I'm walking through the produce aisle trying to find a good apple that only needs a little shining.
this thread is about starters. thanks for making my point!
 
stashing a guy like blount is though imo if you're looking for a starter.
Nobody is grabbing Blount and thinking they have a starter. A LOT of things have to fall into place. He needs to be traded/cut. He needs to go to a team that will not try to move hin to FB or needs a banger to go with a nice COP back, or goes to a team with an established starter or stays in TB and in either case the starter suffers a major injury. That's a lot of ifs, which is why he can be grabbed for cheap.
why waste space with a role player when you could add people like brown, hunter, turbin or pierce?
In the league I own Blount, all of those players are on rosters. I don't have the luxury of grabbing backups like I'm walking through the produce aisle trying to find a good apple that only needs a little shining.
this thread is about starters. thanks for making my point!
And all of the guys mentioned here have to have something happen for them to become starters, (trade, cut, injury, combo of these, etc). Not a single one of them is being penciled in as a fantasy starter in 2013 or even 2014. All of us are betting some things fall into place and we win with our end of the bench lottery ticket. I in no way proved your point except for maybe in that head of yours.
 
And all of the guys mentioned here have to have something happen for them to become starters, (trade, cut, injury, combo of these, etc). Not a single one of them is being penciled in as a fantasy starter in 2013 or even 2014. All of us are betting some things fall into place and we win with our end of the bench lottery ticket. I in no way proved your point except for maybe in that head of yours.
oh ok. if martin goes down i don't think blount is the starter, he'll need help on 3rd downs and passing plays. if i wanted a backup role player on the bucs roster it's michael smith, not blount.
 
And all of the guys mentioned here have to have something happen for them to become starters, (trade, cut, injury, combo of these, etc). Not a single one of them is being penciled in as a fantasy starter in 2013 or even 2014. All of us are betting some things fall into place and we win with our end of the bench lottery ticket. I in no way proved your point except for maybe in that head of yours.
oh ok. if martin goes down i don't think blount is the starter, he'll need help on 3rd downs and passing plays. if i wanted a backup role player on the bucs roster it's michael smith, not blount.
Most of the players in this list would need some type of help in either early downs or 3rd downs; in addition to a trade or injury. The people that are holding onto Blount are doing so in the hopes he gets moved to a different team, like STL.
 
'werdnoynek said:
'TheFanatic said:
And all of the guys mentioned here have to have something happen for them to become starters, (trade, cut, injury, combo of these, etc). Not a single one of them is being penciled in as a fantasy starter in 2013 or even 2014. All of us are betting some things fall into place and we win with our end of the bench lottery ticket. I in no way proved your point except for maybe in that head of yours.
oh ok. if martin goes down i don't think blount is the starter, he'll need help on 3rd downs and passing plays. if i wanted a backup role player on the bucs roster it's michael smith, not blount.
I agree Blount is worthy of mention on this thread, and has proven the most out of the names I see here.
 
'jonboltz said:
'werdnoynek said:
'TheFanatic said:
And all of the guys mentioned here have to have something happen for them to become starters, (trade, cut, injury, combo of these, etc). Not a single one of them is being penciled in as a fantasy starter in 2013 or even 2014. All of us are betting some things fall into place and we win with our end of the bench lottery ticket. I in no way proved your point except for maybe in that head of yours.
oh ok. if martin goes down i don't think blount is the starter, he'll need help on 3rd downs and passing plays. if i wanted a backup role player on the bucs roster it's michael smith, not blount.
Most of the players in this list would need some type of help in either early downs or 3rd downs; in addition to a trade or injury. The people that are holding onto Blount are doing so in the hopes he gets moved to a different team, like STL.
i disagree. brown, hunter, pierce or turbin are all around backs in my eyes. if the starter goes down in front of them they take over a full load.ETA: blount goes to STL, he's the same roleplayer he would be in TB if martin goes down.
 
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'jonboltz said:
'werdnoynek said:
'TheFanatic said:
And all of the guys mentioned here have to have something happen for them to become starters, (trade, cut, injury, combo of these, etc). Not a single one of them is being penciled in as a fantasy starter in 2013 or even 2014. All of us are betting some things fall into place and we win with our end of the bench lottery ticket. I in no way proved your point except for maybe in that head of yours.
oh ok. if martin goes down i don't think blount is the starter, he'll need help on 3rd downs and passing plays. if i wanted a backup role player on the bucs roster it's michael smith, not blount.
Most of the players in this list would need some type of help in either early downs or 3rd downs; in addition to a trade or injury. The people that are holding onto Blount are doing so in the hopes he gets moved to a different team, like STL.
i disagree. brown, hunter, pierce or turbin are all around backs in my eyes. if the starter goes down in front of them they take over a full load.ETA: blount goes to STL, he's the same roleplayer he would be in TB if martin goes down.
The only one of them that is even remotely similarly valued as Blount is Hunter, and I disagree that he would carry the full load, and think he would absolutely be spelled a ton by LMJ.If Blount went to STL (or PGH, as another outside example), I can envision him getting 200 carries there. Whether you want to nit-pick about whether this would be a 'starter' or not, the carries would still be enough for fantasy value.
 
The stupid arguing over semantics re: starter vs not is adding zero to the thread, as is the personal axe grinding over predictions last year. I personally don't get bonus points for having the guy who plays the first play in a particular game in my lineup, so seriously, who cares?

Even in PPR, from week 7 (when he started getting serious carries) through week 16 in 2010, Blount was RB18. He didn't run for over 5 YPC by accident. He clearly has the ability to be a fantasy starter in the right situation. There are plenty of guys who have had great fantasy production with the exact same type of strengths and weaknesses. Michael Turner, Jerome Bettis, Cedric Benson, etc. 200+ carries and goalline / short yardage in a decent offense = fantasy value period.

There's a huge reasonable range of value for Blount in between "couldn't beat out a Pro Bowl rookie RB" and "not worth a roster spot" -- in a league where Cedric Benson has had a starting spot for years, and guys like Bilal Powell and Jonathan Dwyer look like possible lead RBs Blount has a place.

It's also pretty ridiculous to say "why don't you just grab Bernard Pierce or Bryce Brown?" -- those guys are MUCH more expensive than LeGarrette Blount, who is pretty much a throw in at this point. Blount has plenty of warts (character, one-dimensional, zero chance at significant work barring injury in 2013) but he is a great lottery ticket at the right price. He's essentially Ben Tate minus the "brand recognition" and at a fraction of the price.

 
The stupid arguing over semantics re: starter vs not is adding zero to the thread, as is the personal axe grinding over predictions last year. I personally don't get bonus points for having the guy who plays the first play in a particular game in my lineup, so seriously, who cares?

Even in PPR, from week 7 (when he started getting serious carries) through week 16 in 2010, Blount was RB18. He didn't run for over 5 YPC by accident. He clearly has the ability to be a fantasy starter in the right situation. There are plenty of guys who have had great fantasy production with the exact same type of strengths and weaknesses. Michael Turner, Jerome Bettis, Cedric Benson, etc. 200+ carries and goalline / short yardage in a decent offense = fantasy value period.

There's a huge reasonable range of value for Blount in between "couldn't beat out a Pro Bowl rookie RB" and "not worth a roster spot" -- in a league where Cedric Benson has had a starting spot for years, and guys like Bilal Powell and Jonathan Dwyer look like possible lead RBs Blount has a place.

It's also pretty ridiculous to say "why don't you just grab Bernard Pierce or Bryce Brown?" -- those guys are MUCH more expensive than LeGarrette Blount, who is pretty much a throw in at this point. Blount has plenty of warts (character, one-dimensional, zero chance at significant work barring injury in 2013) but he is a great lottery ticket at the right price. He's essentially Ben Tate minus the "brand recognition" and at a fraction of the price.
Very :goodposting:
 
Even in PPR, from week 7 (when he started getting serious carries) through week 16 in 2010, Blount was RB18. He didn't run for over 5 YPC by accident. He clearly has the ability to be a fantasy starter in the right situation.
If we extrapolate Blout's numbers over the entire season he would've had 277 carries and 1416 yards. That's the pace he was on. Someone will give the guy a chance, but just like in FFB, nobody in the NFL is going to pay too much for him with all the other issues he has. I should say someone will give the guy a chance, all except for TB. They have their guy and it seems Blount burned a bridge there. But his production in 2010 will earn him playing time somewhere, unless he stays in TB and Martin stays healthy...

 
Even in PPR, from week 7 (when he started getting serious carries) through week 16 in 2010, Blount was RB18. He didn't run for over 5 YPC by accident. He clearly has the ability to be a fantasy starter in the right situation.
If we extrapolate Blout's numbers over the entire season he would've had 277 carries and 1416 yards. That's the pace he was on. Someone will give the guy a chance, but just like in FFB, nobody in the NFL is going to pay too much for him with all the other issues he has. I should say someone will give the guy a chance, all except for TB. They have their guy and it seems Blount burned a bridge there. But his production in 2010 will earn him playing time somewhere, unless he stays in TB and Martin stays healthy...
that's impressive for blount, i admit. bryce brown, who is younger and much more talented than blount, had a nice little run with andy reid at the helm just one year ago (that's as far back as i can remember). his stats extrapolated from his 4 game stint (2 of which he was largely ignored) would come to 284 carries 1548 yards. now he also carries a risk since it would also include about 14 fumbles but i'd rather take a risk on an all around back with a much higher ceiling than a 1 dimensional back whose bad attitude and inability to learn is keeping him out of good graces with the teams he plays for.

 
Even in PPR, from week 7 (when he started getting serious carries) through week 16 in 2010, Blount was RB18. He didn't run for over 5 YPC by accident. He clearly has the ability to be a fantasy starter in the right situation.
If we extrapolate Blout's numbers over the entire season he would've had 277 carries and 1416 yards. That's the pace he was on. Someone will give the guy a chance, but just like in FFB, nobody in the NFL is going to pay too much for him with all the other issues he has. I should say someone will give the guy a chance, all except for TB. They have their guy and it seems Blount burned a bridge there. But his production in 2010 will earn him playing time somewhere, unless he stays in TB and Martin stays healthy...
that's impressive for blount, i admit. bryce brown, who is younger and much more talented than blount, had a nice little run with andy reid at the helm just one year ago (that's as far back as i can remember). his stats extrapolated from his 4 game stint (2 of which he was largely ignored) would come to 284 carries 1548 yards. now he also carries a risk since it would also include about 14 fumbles but i'd rather take a risk on an all around back with a much higher ceiling than a 1 dimensional back whose bad attitude and inability to learn is keeping him out of good graces with the teams he plays for.
If I was able to trade Blount for Bryce, I would have done so about a quarter-of-a-second after it was proposed. I don't think anyone would rather have Blount over Bryce.
 
Even in PPR, from week 7 (when he started getting serious carries) through week 16 in 2010, Blount was RB18. He didn't run for over 5 YPC by accident. He clearly has the ability to be a fantasy starter in the right situation.
If we extrapolate Blout's numbers over the entire season he would've had 277 carries and 1416 yards. That's the pace he was on. Someone will give the guy a chance, but just like in FFB, nobody in the NFL is going to pay too much for him with all the other issues he has. I should say someone will give the guy a chance, all except for TB. They have their guy and it seems Blount burned a bridge there. But his production in 2010 will earn him playing time somewhere, unless he stays in TB and Martin stays healthy...
that's impressive for blount, i admit. bryce brown, who is younger and much more talented than blount, had a nice little run with andy reid at the helm just one year ago (that's as far back as i can remember). his stats extrapolated from his 4 game stint (2 of which he was largely ignored) would come to 284 carries 1548 yards. now he also carries a risk since it would also include about 14 fumbles but i'd rather take a risk on an all around back with a much higher ceiling than a 1 dimensional back whose bad attitude and inability to learn is keeping him out of good graces with the teams he plays for.
If I was able to trade Blount for Bryce, I would have done so about a quarter-of-a-second after it was proposed. I don't think anyone would rather have Blount over Bryce.
i agree, though not really the point i'm trying to make here. we're talking about starting running backs in the future... people continue to say that blount could be a starter, but the bucs had a "starter" in blount with no one in front of him, gave him a shot and he didn't take it and run with it. if the eagles didn't have mccoy on the roster it would be browns job right now and i don't think we'd be seeing them taking an RB in the first round of the draft.ETA: i can understand holding out hope for a guy who had his shot and failed, but if i can get someone who has the opportunity and hasn't failed yet i'd much rather have them.

 
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I personally don't think Brown over Blount is a slam dunk. Brown is stuck behind McCoy for three more years; Blount is stuck behind Martin for 2013 only as of now. Both showed flashes when given a chance, but Blount looked good for a longer window (more than 1/2 season vs 2 good games). Both have big time character questions and major flaws (Blount's crappy receiving skills vs Brown's fumbling) to go along with serious upside as runners.

As mentioned above, the relative perceived value makes this comparison moot, though. Brown is expensive as hell because he looked great a few months ago. Blount is cheap as hell because his best play came a few years ago. I also think it's pretty reasonable to give Blount a partial pass for 2011 as the entire TB team literally stopped showing up for games for most of the year. And in 2012 he was behind one of the best RBs in the NFL -- I don't downgrade a guy like Toby Gerhardt for not beating out Peterson, either.

 
'jonboltz said:
'werdnoynek said:
'TheFanatic said:
And all of the guys mentioned here have to have something happen for them to become starters, (trade, cut, injury, combo of these, etc). Not a single one of them is being penciled in as a fantasy starter in 2013 or even 2014. All of us are betting some things fall into place and we win with our end of the bench lottery ticket. I in no way proved your point except for maybe in that head of yours.
oh ok. if martin goes down i don't think blount is the starter, he'll need help on 3rd downs and passing plays. if i wanted a backup role player on the bucs roster it's michael smith, not blount.
Most of the players in this list would need some type of help in either early downs or 3rd downs; in addition to a trade or injury. The people that are holding onto Blount are doing so in the hopes he gets moved to a different team, like STL.
Don't try to reason with him. The guy is a dunce. He thinks Michael Turner was never a starter since he wasn't a three down back.
 
'jonboltz said:
'werdnoynek said:
'TheFanatic said:
And all of the guys mentioned here have to have something happen for them to become starters, (trade, cut, injury, combo of these, etc). Not a single one of them is being penciled in as a fantasy starter in 2013 or even 2014. All of us are betting some things fall into place and we win with our end of the bench lottery ticket. I in no way proved your point except for maybe in that head of yours.
oh ok. if martin goes down i don't think blount is the starter, he'll need help on 3rd downs and passing plays. if i wanted a backup role player on the bucs roster it's michael smith, not blount.
Most of the players in this list would need some type of help in either early downs or 3rd downs; in addition to a trade or injury. The people that are holding onto Blount are doing so in the hopes he gets moved to a different team, like STL.
Don't try to reason with him. The guy is a dunce. He thinks Michael Turner was never a starter since he wasn't a three down back.
:lmao: show me where i've said that. michael turner was successful when given an opportunity to be a starter - old age and loss of speed cost him his job. turner may not have caught many passes but he wasn't pulled on third down for being a liability like blount is.
 
'jonboltz said:
'squistion said:
'Dr. Octopus said:
'jonboltz said:
'EBF said:
I don't think Blount is devoid of talent, but IMO his big year was pretty flukish. There's a reason why he wasn't drafted and why the Titans cut him in training camp, and it's not all to do with his character problems. He's just not a complete back. Not elusive. Not much of a threat as a pass catcher. Those are two areas where Martin has him beaten by a wide margin.

I wouldn't rule out the possibility of him getting some PT on a new team. I'd be surprised if he ever became a starter again barring injury though.
I'll give you his lack of ability in the 3rd down game -- both in terms of pass catching and, more importantly, pass protection. I'm not willing to give you that Blount lacks elusiveness. https://www.profootballfocus.com/blog/2011/03/24/elusive-rating-2010/
PFF's elusiveness rankings have always looked a little wonky to me.
Depends what you mean by wonky. Too esoteric? Well, perhaps, but to me more like when the word means some blend of wacky and bonkers. I have never quite completely bought the correlation of forced missed tackles and elusiveness.And on a side note (contrary to the above) his character issues were the primary reason he wasn't drafted - he had the reputation as a loose cannon and teams didn't want to deal with that. And, IRRC, he was cut by the Titans because they didn't have the roster space more than anything else. He is though, a non-factor in the passing game and that tends to make him one-dimensional.
His biggest limiting factor will continue to be his passing game/blocking duties. He barely played last year, and I didn't hear a single complaint from him in the media. I doubt his reputation will cost him anything in the eyes of other GMs.
His biggest limiting factor is his attitude. Pass protection is about willingness more than anything else. We can go find lots of links, but living here his story is old and tired. He's constantly late to practice ($15K+ in fines), even to the point the team hired a car service to get him there. He's lazy and is wasting what has shown to be NFL caliber talent. When he's motivated and puts in the work, he sees the field and does what he's good at - run with the football, over and around people.His attitude is the one constant in everything you read about him - if he gets his head on straight, I think he has a chance to be a solid contributor. He started to say the right things last year instead of complaining, so maybe it took a hard-liner like Schiano to get him sorted out. Here's a quote from October:

"At the end of the day, if they tell me to go in, I'm going to be ready," Blount told Stephen Holder from the Tampa Bay Times. "I might not play as much, but I stand there and listen and do everything that everybody else does. My time will come. And I'll be ready."
 
holding out hope for a guy like blount to end up on another team with a chance to start is fine and dandy. i don't see him being more than a role player the rest of his career though. i would rather trade him for whatever i can get and take my chances with someone else who hasn't stumbled when given a chance to start or has yet to have the opportunity.

 
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His biggest limiting factor is his attitude. Pass protection is about willingness more than anything else. We can go find lots of links, but living here his story is old and tired. He's constantly late to practice ($15K+ in fines), even to the point the team hired a car service to get him there. He's lazy and is wasting what has shown to be NFL caliber talent. When he's motivated and puts in the work, he sees the field and does what he's good at - run with the football, over and around people.

His attitude is the one constant in everything you read about him - if he gets his head on straight, I think he has a chance to be a solid contributor. He started to say the right things last year instead of complaining, so maybe it took a hard-liner like Schiano to get him sorted out. Here's a quote from October:

"At the end of the day, if they tell me to go in, I'm going to be ready," Blount told Stephen Holder from the Tampa Bay Times. "I might not play as much, but I stand there and listen and do everything that everybody else does. My time will come. And I'll be ready."
He did that with the previous regime and then some guy wrote a fluff piece at the beginning of last year chronicaling that behavior but had nothing showing he did it under Schiano who did not have a car service picking him up and I never saw anything all year where he was fined. He had issues and the previous regime coddled him but Schiano has not and I have yet to see a single piece from his time under the new coaching staff where he was fined for being late or some other nonsense that knuckleheads do.The team owes him little. Cutting him costs them next to nothing yet they don't. Pretty telling if he indeed is lazy and constantly late.

 
I personally don't think Brown over Blount is a slam dunk. Brown is stuck behind McCoy for three more years; Blount is stuck behind Martin for 2013 only as of now. Both showed flashes when given a chance, but Blount looked good for a longer window (more than 1/2 season vs 2 good games). Both have big time character questions and major flaws (Blount's crappy receiving skills vs Brown's fumbling) to go along with serious upside as runners.As mentioned above, the relative perceived value makes this comparison moot, though. Brown is expensive as hell because he looked great a few months ago. Blount is cheap as hell because his best play came a few years ago. I also think it's pretty reasonable to give Blount a partial pass for 2011 as the entire TB team literally stopped showing up for games for most of the year. And in 2012 he was behind one of the best RBs in the NFL -- I don't downgrade a guy like Toby Gerhardt for not beating out Peterson, either.
Why do you keep using logic and reason? This guy can't discuss anything with any sanity. No RB's ever get a second chance in the league. Particularly one dimensional ones like Cedric Benson, er, I mean Blount.
 
I personally don't think Brown over Blount is a slam dunk. Brown is stuck behind McCoy for three more years; Blount is stuck behind Martin for 2013 only as of now. Both showed flashes when given a chance, but Blount looked good for a longer window (more than 1/2 season vs 2 good games). Both have big time character questions and major flaws (Blount's crappy receiving skills vs Brown's fumbling) to go along with serious upside as runners.As mentioned above, the relative perceived value makes this comparison moot, though. Brown is expensive as hell because he looked great a few months ago. Blount is cheap as hell because his best play came a few years ago. I also think it's pretty reasonable to give Blount a partial pass for 2011 as the entire TB team literally stopped showing up for games for most of the year. And in 2012 he was behind one of the best RBs in the NFL -- I don't downgrade a guy like Toby Gerhardt for not beating out Peterson, either.
Why do you keep using logic and reason? This guy can't discuss anything with any sanity. No RB's ever get a second chance in the league. Particularly one dimensional ones like Cedric Benson, er, I mean Blount.
great comparison. :rolleyes:
 
I personally don't think Brown over Blount is a slam dunk. Brown is stuck behind McCoy for three more years; Blount is stuck behind Martin for 2013 only as of now. Both showed flashes when given a chance, but Blount looked good for a longer window (more than 1/2 season vs 2 good games). Both have big time character questions and major flaws (Blount's crappy receiving skills vs Brown's fumbling) to go along with serious upside as runners.As mentioned above, the relative perceived value makes this comparison moot, though. Brown is expensive as hell because he looked great a few months ago. Blount is cheap as hell because his best play came a few years ago. I also think it's pretty reasonable to give Blount a partial pass for 2011 as the entire TB team literally stopped showing up for games for most of the year. And in 2012 he was behind one of the best RBs in the NFL -- I don't downgrade a guy like Toby Gerhardt for not beating out Peterson, either.
Why do you keep using logic and reason? This guy can't discuss anything with any sanity. No RB's ever get a second chance in the league. Particularly one dimensional ones like Cedric Benson, er, I mean Blount.
great comparison. :rolleyes:
Hmmmm. Rookie season, 67 carries for 272 yards and a 4.1 YPC. 1 catch 3 yardsSoph season 157 carries (15 games, no starts) 647 yards for a 4.1 YPC and 8 catches for 54 yardsthird season 196 carries (in 11 starts) for 674 yards and a 3.4 YPC and 17 catches for 123 yardsIn Blount's rookie season he had 201 carries in basically 11 games and rushed for 1007 yards and a 5.0 YPC. It took Benson three years just to get close to 200 carries and when he did, he did less with it than Blount. Yet he signed a deal with the Bengals after being cut and in his fifth season he busted off his first of three straight 1,000 seasons.So, yeah, I guess you're right. They aren't really comparable. Of these two one dimensional backs one was clearly better to start their careers. And that's Blount.
 
Blount also went undrafted, was cut by his first NFL team in training camp, and impressed the new Tampa staff so much that they spent a first round pick on his replacement.

Sometimes a mediocre player is in the right place at the right time. Steve Slaton. Peyton Hillis. Justin Fargas. LeGarrette Blount. Julius Jones. Ryan Grant. If you isolate their best season you can convince yourself that they're pretty good. And they are, in a sense. You have to be pretty good to make an NFL roster. But with the constant battle for places in the NFL, pretty good generally isn't good enough. Subjectively, I've not been impressed enough with Blount to think he has a good chance to re-emerge as anything more than a complementary power back.

 
Blount also went undrafted, was cut by his first NFL team in training camp, and impressed the new Tampa staff so much that they spent a first round pick on his replacement. Sometimes a mediocre player is in the right place at the right time. Steve Slaton. Peyton Hillis. Justin Fargas. LeGarrette Blount. Julius Jones. Ryan Grant. If you isolate their best season you can convince yourself that they're pretty good. And they are, in a sense. You have to be pretty good to make an NFL roster. But with the constant battle for places in the NFL, pretty good generally isn't good enough. Subjectively, I've not been impressed enough with Blount to think he has a good chance to re-emerge as anything more than a complementary power back.
Generally agree completely here, but keep in mind what we're talking about here: a dirt cheap flyer, no more, no less. There's a small group of RBs who are elite and can produce regardless of situation (which is certainly NOT Blount), and then a big pack of guys who are decent enough to have value depending on situation. Ryan Grant is a really good comparison, IMO, and the owner who grabbed him off the wire before he emerged in GB made out like a bandit. The owners who bought him at starting RB prices not so much, obviously, but given Blount's cost that's irrelevant.You've been banging the buy Mendenhall drum all offseason, even considering his borderline RB2 / RB3 pricetag. And although we disagree on Mendy's talent, I sort of agreed with you on him as a speculative buy. If he would have landed in Denver, you would have had a huge steal, and he might yet land in a better situation in 2014. Blount is THE EXACT SAME type of speculative buy. Less versatile than Mendenhall, but also definitely more dynamic purely as a runner. He'll cost you RB5 (or lower!) prices, but I'll throw that dart all day. Likely the power half of a committee? Sure. But that has value on a decent or better team. It's all about cost here...
 
I personally don't think Brown over Blount is a slam dunk. Brown is stuck behind McCoy for three more years; Blount is stuck behind Martin for 2013 only as of now. Both showed flashes when given a chance, but Blount looked good for a longer window (more than 1/2 season vs 2 good games). Both have big time character questions and major flaws (Blount's crappy receiving skills vs Brown's fumbling) to go along with serious upside as runners.As mentioned above, the relative perceived value makes this comparison moot, though. Brown is expensive as hell because he looked great a few months ago. Blount is cheap as hell because his best play came a few years ago. I also think it's pretty reasonable to give Blount a partial pass for 2011 as the entire TB team literally stopped showing up for games for most of the year. And in 2012 he was behind one of the best RBs in the NFL -- I don't downgrade a guy like Toby Gerhardt for not beating out Peterson, either.
Why do you keep using logic and reason? This guy can't discuss anything with any sanity. No RB's ever get a second chance in the league. Particularly one dimensional ones like Cedric Benson, er, I mean Blount.
great comparison. :rolleyes:
Hmmmm. Rookie season, 67 carries for 272 yards and a 4.1 YPC. 1 catch 3 yardsSoph season 157 carries (15 games, no starts) 647 yards for a 4.1 YPC and 8 catches for 54 yardsthird season 196 carries (in 11 starts) for 674 yards and a 3.4 YPC and 17 catches for 123 yardsIn Blount's rookie season he had 201 carries in basically 11 games and rushed for 1007 yards and a 5.0 YPC. It took Benson three years just to get close to 200 carries and when he did, he did less with it than Blount. Yet he signed a deal with the Bengals after being cut and in his fifth season he busted off his first of three straight 1,000 seasons.So, yeah, I guess you're right. They aren't really comparable. Of these two one dimensional backs one was clearly better to start their careers. And that's Blount.
one of them continued to start after they became a starter... one of them started then immediately lost their job. but of course we leave that out of the cherry picked statistics above.ETA since i know that will get picked apart: benson was named the bears starter in 2007, was injured, then got 2 DUIs in the offseason and was cut. the bengals picked him up on 1 year contract in 2008 - he started out as a back up but became a starter by week 7 and started for 4 years with the bengals and then 1 with the packers.
 
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You've been banging the buy Mendenhall drum all offseason, even considering his borderline RB2 / RB3 pricetag. And although we disagree on Mendy's talent, I sort of agreed with you on him as a speculative buy. If he would have landed in Denver, you would have had a huge steal, and he might yet land in a better situation in 2014. Blount is THE EXACT SAME type of speculative buy. Less versatile than Mendenhall, but also definitely more dynamic purely as a runner. He'll cost you RB5 (or lower!) prices, but I'll throw that dart all day. Likely the power half of a committee? Sure. But that has value on a decent or better team. It's all about cost here...
Can't really argue against him if the price is low enough. Not a fan myself though. Very low expectations for him going forward. Would rather use the value/roster space elsewhere. As for Mendy, he was a first round pick and held down a starting job for 3 years. He's been a RB2 or better every season that he's been healthy. Not a great comparison for a one year wonder like Blount.
 
As for Mendy, he was a first round pick and held down a starting job for 3 years. He's been a RB2 or better every season that he's been healthy. Not a great comparison for a one year wonder like Blount.
Blount held down the starting spot for two years and was beaten out by an outstanding player in Doug Martin. TB liked him enough to offer him another contract, cheap as it was.Mendenhall was beaten out by mediocre players in Redman and Dwyer, and was jettisoned by a RB-needy team who wanted nothing to do with him.Blount has a 4.6 career YPC with a poor to average team, Mendenhall's at 4.1 with a good team. Mendenhall's success has been based on one thing only: volume. He's not dynamic at all.They're definitely in the same tier, talent-wise.
 
As for Mendy, he was a first round pick and held down a starting job for 3 years. He's been a RB2 or better every season that he's been healthy. Not a great comparison for a one year wonder like Blount.
Blount held down the starting spot for two years and was beaten out by an outstanding player in Doug Martin. TB liked him enough to offer him another contract, cheap as it was.Mendenhall was beaten out by mediocre players in Redman and Dwyer, and was jettisoned by a RB-needy team who wanted nothing to do with him.

Blount has a 4.6 career YPC with a poor to average team, Mendenhall's at 4.1 with a good team. Mendenhall's success has been based on one thing only: volume. He's not dynamic at all.

They're definitely in the same tier, talent-wise.
and blount is?
 
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

 
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

Sounds like someone who held on to Blount for too long, and is now bitter about it. I know it's tough to trade a young RB coming off a solid season, but the shark move (as much as I hate that term)was to move him following his big year. He was an undrafted FA who was cut by his first team, and beyond that he had serious character issues.Due to his draft status, similar to Blount, people are skeptical of anointing Alfred Morris to RB1 status. And I have no poblem with that. Where a player is drafted is one of the best indicators we have to tell how good a career someone will have. Arian Foster and Wes Welker are the exceptions, not the rule.

 
'Shanahanigans said:
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

The guy offers lots of solid information, and you counter with sour grapes. Quality response there.
 
'werdnoynek said:
I personally don't think Brown over Blount is a slam dunk. Brown is stuck behind McCoy for three more years; Blount is stuck behind Martin for 2013 only as of now. Both showed flashes when given a chance, but Blount looked good for a longer window (more than 1/2 season vs 2 good games). Both have big time character questions and major flaws (Blount's crappy receiving skills vs Brown's fumbling) to go along with serious upside as runners.As mentioned above, the relative perceived value makes this comparison moot, though. Brown is expensive as hell because he looked great a few months ago. Blount is cheap as hell because his best play came a few years ago. I also think it's pretty reasonable to give Blount a partial pass for 2011 as the entire TB team literally stopped showing up for games for most of the year. And in 2012 he was behind one of the best RBs in the NFL -- I don't downgrade a guy like Toby Gerhardt for not beating out Peterson, either.
Why do you keep using logic and reason? This guy can't discuss anything with any sanity. No RB's ever get a second chance in the league. Particularly one dimensional ones like Cedric Benson, er, I mean Blount.
great comparison. :rolleyes:
Hmmmm. Rookie season, 67 carries for 272 yards and a 4.1 YPC. 1 catch 3 yardsSoph season 157 carries (15 games, no starts) 647 yards for a 4.1 YPC and 8 catches for 54 yardsthird season 196 carries (in 11 starts) for 674 yards and a 3.4 YPC and 17 catches for 123 yardsIn Blount's rookie season he had 201 carries in basically 11 games and rushed for 1007 yards and a 5.0 YPC. It took Benson three years just to get close to 200 carries and when he did, he did less with it than Blount. Yet he signed a deal with the Bengals after being cut and in his fifth season he busted off his first of three straight 1,000 seasons.So, yeah, I guess you're right. They aren't really comparable. Of these two one dimensional backs one was clearly better to start their careers. And that's Blount.
one of them continued to start after they became a starter... one of them started then immediately lost their job. but of course we leave that out of the cherry picked statistics above.ETA since i know that will get picked apart: benson was named the bears starter in 2007, was injured, then got 2 DUIs in the offseason and was cut. the bengals picked him up on 1 year contract in 2008 - he started out as a back up but became a starter by week 7 and started for 4 years with the bengals and then 1 with the packers.
Benson was trotted back out there over and over because he was drafted in the top 10 and had a massive contract. He was cut because of the DUI's? That had a little to do with it, but keep hanging your hat on that. How many times was Pacman Jones arrested before he was cut? The dude was cut because he did nothing in Chicago. Pretty sure that awful second year Blount had was still better than every year Benson had as a Bear. But hey, keep blaming the DUI's.
 
The guy offers lots of solid information, and you counter with sour grapes. Quality response there.
That was just the first sentence of my response, and I stand by that statement. His post screams of a Blount owner that held on too long, and is now trying to justify why he still made the right decision.What you claim is "solid information" is really just a bunch of fluff and speculation. His first point is that Blount overcame the Morris regime, in order to have a great year. Regardless if this is true, it is irrelevant, because we all agree that Blount did great that year. The questions about his future arose in the coming seasons.His second point is that he saw "ZERO garbage time" under Morris. Now, I didn't watch a lot of the Bucs that year, but this seems like a blanket statement that is devoid of supporting evidence. He goes on to bring up Blount throwing his coaching staff under the bus as if it's a good thing, and assures us that because he read somewhere that Blount was working on his catching he has surely improved. This point is almost all pure fluff and speculation.His third point claims that he never got a fair shot under Schiano because he called Martin a hamster. Again, this is simple speculation, not "solid information" as you perceive it. Even if it were true, him saying this brings to light his character issues and lack of intelligence. The fact is, coaches realize their job and reputation is on the line, if Schiano thought Blount gave him the best chance to win, he would be out there.His final point is that we can disregard any character issues before 2012, because that is after all an entire two years ago. I mean who remembers what happened all the way back then? He goes on to say Schiano is a d bag who doesn't like Blount, apparently at no fault of Blount's; Schiano just has it out for the poor guy. Sorry, but your Blount love has jaded you into thinking this post was full of "solid information", when in reality it was filled with speculation and logical fallacies.
 
'Coeur de Lion said:
'EBF said:
As for Mendy, he was a first round pick and held down a starting job for 3 years. He's been a RB2 or better every season that he's been healthy. Not a great comparison for a one year wonder like Blount.
Blount held down the starting spot for two years and was beaten out by an outstanding player in Doug Martin. TB liked him enough to offer him another contract, cheap as it was.Mendenhall was beaten out by mediocre players in Redman and Dwyer, and was jettisoned by a RB-needy team who wanted nothing to do with him.

Blount has a 4.6 career YPC with a poor to average team, Mendenhall's at 4.1 with a good team. Mendenhall's success has been based on one thing only: volume. He's not dynamic at all.

They're definitely in the same tier, talent-wise.
Mendenhall was only "beaten out" after shredding his knee. Even then, Tomlin was calling him the "lead dog" as soon as he came back last season. He never really got back to 100% though, which the team's GM acknowledged. So they gave the other guys a chance, Mendenhall didn't handle the benching well, and that was his ticket out of town. Blount was replaced in a much different manner. Teams don't usually spend a first round pick on a RB if they're happy with their starter. The fact that they went out and spent a first rounder on Martin when they already had Blount in the fold speaks volumes about their opinion of LeGarrette. So does the fact that he only got 41 carries last season despite no major injury issues. He's just not that good.

YPC is relevant, but hinges heavily on supporting cast and usage. Blount's 201 carries in 2010 were his career best. It's still a relatively small sample size compared to a typical starter's workload, meaning it's more prone to variance. Mendenhall had more carries than that every year from 2009-2011, including a 300+ carry season in 2010.

I'm going to have to disagree that a first round pick with 3 years as a starter is in the same tier talent wise as a scrap heap free agent with one good season under his belt. IMO Mendenhall is something like a Thomas Jones/Cedric Benson whereas Blount is more like a Peyton Hillis/Steve Slaton. If you isolate the best season for all of the those players you'd think that the latter two were the most talented, but hindsight tells us that wasn't the case. They were just decent players who happened to be in the right place at the right time. It happens (quite often) and at some point you have to stop clinging to that one magical season. I can still see why people hold out hope for Blount because it was only a couple years ago that he was thriving, but in my opinion we'll look back on that season 3-4 years from now and see that it was the high water mark.

 
'FF Ninja said:
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/7746624/tampa-bay-buccaneers-coach-greg-schiano-legarrette-blount-fumble-sithttp://www.profootballweekly.com/2012/04/27/fantasy-spin-buccaneers-rb-doug-martin

http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/bucs/content/greg-schiano-defends-decision-designate-legarrette-blount-bucs-short-yardage-back

http://tampa.cbslocal.com/2012/10/22/buccaneers-lose-in-a-heartbreaker-to-saints-35-28/

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/11/04/doug-martins-star-turn-gets-buccaneers-to-4-4/

http://tampa.cbslocal.com/2012/12/24/buccaneers-downfall-continues-with-loss-to-rams/

there's a few to start. this leaves out all the talk of blount getting traded early in the 2012 season only to find no NFL team was willing to give up a 6th round pick for him...

 
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

The poster you quoted was very clearly talking about off-the-field issues in regards to negative press. These are all on-the-field things.
 
with the blount backers pushing for him to make it to another roster, i think we could take the opportunity to look at the back that was behind him last season, though i think he could make a push for more carries this season... michael smith.

smith has the speed and explosiveness to be more than just a COP back in the NFL - with a 4.33 40 and a 40.5 inch vertical. he looked good at times in the preseason last year showing nice ability between the tackles, breaking some tackles, and showing off the speed and ability to hit the hole hard. he's a hard worker though he's had a bit of an injury history, his YPC was was around 7 in college backing up turbin. i think with a great offseason he could make a push to be the #2 behind martin this year and if martin goes down the RB to own in tampa.

 
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

a single negative thing written about him in 2012?
 
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

http://global3.memecdn.com/context_o_857936.jpg
 
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

And the first one was written in March of 2012. There wasn't even a minicamp at that point. And the second one talks about Martin and Blount being a 1-2 punch like Bradshaw and Jacobs were in NY. It mentions Blount has hands of stone, but talks about it being a one two punch with the two more than it talks about Martin being the every down back. I'm not going to bother with someone regurgitating back links from a google search of "Blount sucks" without reading the links...

 
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

:lmao: there's negative info in each of them! don't let your blount blinders get in the way.
 
Holy crap this discussion is full of misinformation and misperceptions.

First off, I'm not sure how anyone could consider Tampa while under Raheem Morris to be "the right place at the right time". If anything Tampa was precisely the wrong place at the wrong time. Sure, he got a chance to start, but that was it. Morris had no control over the team and everything fell apart. People act like Blount botched his second year, but given the absolute collapse of the offense and defense that year, his 4.2 ypc is actually respectable. It's better than Mendenhall's career average yet some people think he's a stud.

During his time under the Morris regime, Blount saw ZERO garbage time. He got pulled in every third down situation and was sent to the bench any time they got behind by more than 10 points (early and often). He said in interviews that the coaching staff never worked with him on pass catching or pass blocking (yet if you watch his highlights he has a few good hands catches - as opposed to body catches - and his career ypr is solid). He actually improved his pass blocking last year and was used specifically as a pass blocker at times. I had read that he worked extensively on his pass catching last offseason but never got much of a chance to utilize it.

When he called Martin a hamster after the draft, Schiano cussed him out and told him he'd "never be a buccaneer man". I don't think for a second that he got a fair shot under Schiano. The Bucs don't even want him this year. They signed him just to try to flip him for a late draft pick. I wouldn't be surprised if they cut him if they don't find a trade partner. His contract was incentive laden.

And as Fanatic pointed out, it is irresponsible to keep spreading this bull**** about him being late, getting fined, and needing a driver to get to meetings on time as if it is still going on. That information is no longer pertinent. That story pertained to 2011 when the whole freaking team was flaking out on Morris. Blount got his act together last offseason and kept it together despite playing for a d0uch3 bag coach who doesn't like him. There wasn't a single negative thing written about him during the 2012 season.

You need to reread the context pic.
 
You need to reread the context pic.
i've read it, it's hilarious. so there was nothing negative written about him off the field in 2012. ok, you got me!! moving on, there's plenty about him on the field in 2012, which for him is pretty important at this point if he expects to continue a career in the NFL. he could have had a miraculous change and become a model NFL player, but let's not ignore what he's done in the NFL the last 2 years. it may be more productive for us to talk about his regression from 2010, than his personality makeover.
 

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