Clifford
Footballguy
I think examining total team offense is a great insight to where the value players are, and by looking at who are historically the worst offensive teams could save some owners from overspending on high-talent/low-opportunity value plays. So I'll start the same way by looking at the bottom ten teams in terms of total yards from the past three seasons.
2010
23 Minnesota Vikings
24 San Francisco 49ers
25 Buffalo Bills
26 St. Louis Rams
27 Tennessee Titans
28 Seattle Seahawks
29 Cleveland Browns
30 Chicago Bears
31 Arizona Cardinals
32 Carolina Panthers
2009
23 Chicago Bears
24 Cincinnati Bengals
25 Kansas City Chiefs
26 Detroit Lions
27 San Francisco 49ers
28 Tampa Bay Buccaneers
29 St. Louis Rams
30 Buffalo Bills
31 Oakland Raiders
32 Cleveland Browns
2008
23 San Francisco 49ers
24 Kansas City Chiefs
25 Buffalo Bills
26 Chicago Bears
27 St. Louis Rams
28 Seattle Seahawks
29 Oakland Raiders
30 Detroit Lions
31 Cleveland Browns
32 Cincinnati Bengals
Consistently bad (2010+1 other season): 49ers (3), Bills (3), Rams (3), Seahawks (2), Browns (3), Bears (3)
My list of players on these teams that might be overvalued:
Vernon Davis
Crabtree
Gore
Stevie Johnson
Steven Jackson
Mike Williams (SEA)
Peyton Hillis
Forte
Also, I was thinking that the bad offensive teams might be above average in the run department, but actually none of the 6 consistently bad teams ranked in the top half of the league in rushing yards. Of the bottom 10 for 2010 only the Panthers ranked in the top 15 for rushing in the same year.
I plan on avoiding any and all tier2 and down players on the above six teams. I think Gore, Hillis, and Forte will continue to be good, but maybe slightly overvalued considering they play on teams that can't consistently maintain drives. All three will likely go well before Bradshaw, Shonne Greene, and Ryan Mathews who will have much greater opportunity to succeed.
2010
23 Minnesota Vikings
24 San Francisco 49ers
25 Buffalo Bills
26 St. Louis Rams
27 Tennessee Titans
28 Seattle Seahawks
29 Cleveland Browns
30 Chicago Bears
31 Arizona Cardinals
32 Carolina Panthers
2009
23 Chicago Bears
24 Cincinnati Bengals
25 Kansas City Chiefs
26 Detroit Lions
27 San Francisco 49ers
28 Tampa Bay Buccaneers
29 St. Louis Rams
30 Buffalo Bills
31 Oakland Raiders
32 Cleveland Browns
2008
23 San Francisco 49ers
24 Kansas City Chiefs
25 Buffalo Bills
26 Chicago Bears
27 St. Louis Rams
28 Seattle Seahawks
29 Oakland Raiders
30 Detroit Lions
31 Cleveland Browns
32 Cincinnati Bengals
Consistently bad (2010+1 other season): 49ers (3), Bills (3), Rams (3), Seahawks (2), Browns (3), Bears (3)
My list of players on these teams that might be overvalued:
Vernon Davis
Crabtree
Gore
Stevie Johnson
Steven Jackson
Mike Williams (SEA)
Peyton Hillis
Forte
Also, I was thinking that the bad offensive teams might be above average in the run department, but actually none of the 6 consistently bad teams ranked in the top half of the league in rushing yards. Of the bottom 10 for 2010 only the Panthers ranked in the top 15 for rushing in the same year.
I plan on avoiding any and all tier2 and down players on the above six teams. I think Gore, Hillis, and Forte will continue to be good, but maybe slightly overvalued considering they play on teams that can't consistently maintain drives. All three will likely go well before Bradshaw, Shonne Greene, and Ryan Mathews who will have much greater opportunity to succeed.