This is going too far. I don't care if Collins has Moss, Harrison and Owens - he's not putting up more fantasy points than Culpepper. Culpepper was the #1 QB last year without Moss much of the season. Consistency is the key and it doesn't help to have a guy like Collins put up 40 points one week and come back with 5 the next. Collins had some good games last year but they were mostly against bad pass D's - Saints, Chargers, Broncos, Chiefs and Titans. Culpepper is a lock for 20 points regardless of who the Vikes play.
Did you look at his games without Moss?In his first game without Moss, Culpepper threw for 183 yards and one TD while rushing for 4 yards. I know you said "regardless of who the Vikes play", but this was against Tennessee, a "Great Matchup". I didn't do the math, but it looks like he was just shy of the 20 point mark in that game. Still it was his first without Moss, so we'll give him a mulligan.
He bounced back the next week with 231 yards, 1 TD and 2 INTs against the Giants. Even with his 32 rushing yards, that was a little south of the 20 points you said he was a lock for.
But don't worry, he had a great matchup the following week against Indianapolis. Sure, he didn't have Moss, but he put up a whopping 169 yards and a TD. His 27 rushing yards brought him into the double digits range, though, so it wasn't a complete waste.
He blew up against Green Bay, but he barely broke the 20 point mark against Detroit the following week.
He then bounced back and averaged almost 300 yards and more than 2 TDs a game the rest of the way once Moss came back. It's a small sample size, but his rush yards even went back up, and he scored his only rush TDs of the season while Moss was playing.
I'm absolutely amazed that people assume Culpepper's just going to overcome the loss of a player of Moss' caliber and continue to be a 320+ point QB, when the only evidence we have of Culpepper without Moss points to him struggling
against the worst pass defenses in the league.
You do make good points and it does appear that Cpep's number could go down. You base this on Moss leaving of course. Not sure what you are projecting for him but I thought it was interesting to also review 04 to 03.2003 Minnesota Vikings 14 14 454 295 65.0 3479 7.66 59 25 11 37/196 41 10 96.4
2004 Minnesota Vikings 16 16 548 379 69.2 4717 8.61 82 39 11 46/238 63 18 110.9
Not sure what your opinion is on what Cpep will do this year but even if he falls back to his '03 production he will still beat Collins once you add in his rushing totals. Also, Cpep missed 2 games in '03 due to the back injury or his numbers would of been a little higher.
Why would you assume that he falls back to his production in a year when he had Moss? We have no basis for comparison here except the games Moss missed, and that's spotty at best.
Help me work through this because I found it interesting that in '03 when Moss was healthy and didn't miss any games Cpep's numbers were lower than in '04 when Moss did miss games. Based on your assertion Culpepper should of had a poor season in '04 when Moss was injured and missing games. Yet he had a career year. How does that support your theory that Moss leaving will drop Culpepper below Collins?
Based on your theory that Moss affects Cpep so dramatically then when Cpep had his best ever year why did Moss have his worst ever year? Yes, Moss was injured but then how did Cpep do it? Clearly we know that Moss was no where near 100% the rest of the season yet he continued to put up big numbers. How?
Culpepper had a ridiculous 18 TDs through his first 5 games. Think about that - he was blowing away Manning's pace. Moss had 8 of them. Moss gets hurt, Culpepper throws for a total of three TDs in his next three games. He blows up against Green Bay, has an unspectacular game against Detroit, and then heats back up again when Moss returns. During that time, Moss catches a TD in every game but one. In summary, there were three parts of the season. Moss healthy - Culpepper tremendous. Moss hurt - Culpepper sucks. Moss gimpy - Culpepper good again, but not as good as when Moss was completely healthy.
Look at their 2004 game logs, it's really compelling:
Moss 2004 game log
Culpepper 2004 game log
It's also interesting to note that before Moss became injured that except for TD's he was having his worse season since '01. He projected out to 83-1260-25. Of course that ain't bad by any stretch but how does Culpepper improve so dramatically and leave Moss having one of his worse seasons by his standards? The TD's were great but someone else was catching all those extra balls, not Moss.
Except for the TDs? He was on pace for 25 TDs with 8 in his first 5 games. His receptions and yards may have been down, but that's because the Vikings were killing teams on both sides of the football
until Moss went down.
BTW-the Tenn game that you point to Cpep as having a bad game, if you look at the game log you can see MN was manhandling them with Moore running all over them and protecting an early lead. And Cpep was 24/30. Not too bad considering.
So you're saying that, without Moss, the Vikings went to a ball control, run based offense, and Culpepper's fantasy stats suffered. In 2005, without Moss, the Vikings have stated that they want to move to a ball control, run based offense. Do you see why that's not good for Culpepper's fantasy numbers?
So all in all I would say Moss leaving will have a negative impact but not so much that Cpep isn't still one of the elite QB's in the game. 1 player does not make or break a QB's career.
Here's an example of 1 player making or breaking a QBs career:With great WR(*): 16 games, 4387 passing, 34 TDs, 9 INTs, 251 rush, 3 rush td
Without great WR: 16 game, 3216 passing, 16 TDs, 11 INTs, 355 rush, 3 rush td
That great QB was McNabb. The great WR was Owens. Note that those numbers are prorated from the 14 games that McNabb started to a full 16 game season (this seems fair because he was benched for playoff rest; I also subtracted out his 3 passes for 36 yards and a TD that he got in his 15th game).
By the way, McNabb's worst game passing was the Dallas game when Owens got hurt, and his numbers in the playoffs, while good, improved significantly when Owens came back, despite playing the Patriots who had crushed opposing playoff QBs in back to back games.
So we don't have a lot of evidence of what happens when QBs gain/lose a top WR. But everything we DO have points to a huge gain when that top WR arrives, and a huge dropoff when he leaves. And that passes the logic test, which says that a top WR opens up the offense and catches a lot of balls himself.
For fun, let's apply the same pro rating that we saw with McNabb without Owens, to Culpepper without Moss:
McNabb prorated 2005: 4387/34/9, 251/3 rush
McNabb actual 2004: 3216 passing, 16 TDs, 11 INTs, 355 rush, 3 rush td
Projected change due to Owens:
x.73 pass yards
x.47 TDs
x1.22 INTs
x1.41 rushyd < It seems people are right to expect his rushing to go up
x1 rushTD
Let's apply those numbers to Culpepper:
Culpepper actual 2005: 4717/39/11, 406/2 rush
Culpepper projected 2006: 3457 passing, 18 TDs, 13 INTs, 574 rush, 2 rush TD
That would put him at 289 fantasy points in a 1/25 passing, 6 pt passing TDs, -2/INT, 1/10 rush, 6 pt rush TDs scoring system, which is certainly not worth a first round pick.