'wiscstlatlmia said:
'rizzler said:
'Greg Russell said:
From his tweets it sounds like Foster was sick today. If so I wonder if that was a factor for why the Texans went as RBBC as they did, or if it is something we'll see more of.
Edit to add: If anyone has access to play count (not just touches) for both players for the game I'd be interested to hear what the breakdown was.
to be fair, Foster had 34.... I repeat, 34 touches of the ball today.So, yes, while it's true that Tate had 11 carries, it was still nowhere close.
And yes, Foster was apparently extremely sick with the flu... which makes his performance even more amazing
111/31= 3.5 YPC ...I'm not trying to be annoying, but I have no clue what is impressive about that number. The receiving yards per catch is impressive though.
If this were not Foster, you would not be impressed by that number. If Kevin Smith put up 111 yards on 31 carries, would that be impressive?
Actually, you have that part backwards.If this were not Foster, YOU would be saying it was a truly impressive performance and lauding his ability to fight and gain aggressive, tough yards against one of the best run defenses in the league. This wasn't the Cleveland Browns or St. Louis Rams defense he did this against, it was the Atlanta Falcons defense, where running backs have been going to die for 15 straight weeks.Repeat after me: "Arian Foster is a great player and I have been wrong every step of the way."
It will be therapeutic to say it and finally get it off your chest, trust me.
To review:
- His first knock would be that he wouldn't be able to keep the job and would devolve into a timeshare with Tate. That concern died when Tate exploded onto the scene the first 3 weeks of the season and Foster still came back and resumed his dominant lead back role
- His second knock was that he couldn't produce without Andre Johnson lining up wide to draw so much of the defensive attention and pressure. That concern died weeks 5 through 11 when Andre Johnson hurt his hamstring and missed every one of their games, yet Foster continued to perform at a top level and didn't miss a single beat
- His 3rd knock was that he was purely a product of the offense and that he couldn't keep producing if the offense regressed and the situation wasn't as perfect as it was. That concern is now dying after 2 weeks of still top level production (one of those against the 2nd best run defenses in the league) despite a low round rookie QB, no Andre Johnson, the flu, and a myriad of other issues.
I'm sure you will find some sort of excuse to come up with next, but the reality is you have lost this argument every...single...step...of...the...way. There are no excuses left. The answer is Arian Foster is an extremely, extremely good football player who just so happens to play in a running back friendly offense, but is PLENTY capable of continuing to produce at truly elite levels (meaning best running back in the league levels) even if that situation regresses.