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eclem5 said:Who is the best Running Back in the Draft? Reggie Bush, DeMario Williams or Lendell White.
eclem5 said:Who is the best Running Back in the Draft? Reggie Bush, DeMario Williams or Lendell White.
The prestigious Doak Walker Award was created in 1989 to recognize the nation's premier running back for his accomplishments on the field, achievement in the classroom and citizenship in the community. It is the only major collegiate football award that requires all candidates to be in good academic standing and on schedule to graduate within one year of other students of the same classification.
The Walter Camp Award, named in honor of the father of football, is given annually to the College football Player of the Year, as selected by Division 1A coaches and Sports Information directors.
Apoch said:I realize I need to back up my opinion more...
Winner of the Heismann Trophy
...given to the best player in College Football.
Was third in the Nation with 1740 rushing yards, but had only 200 attempts. His average of 8.7 yards per carry topped the NCAA by several yards.
Average TD run was over 33 yds in length.
He is the best...
So Jason White is better than Michael Vick? Crouch over Carr, Peppers, AJ?YodAa said:But having the best year would make them the best would it not?
beerlover said:define RB -
can run thru a brickwall - LenDale White :brickwall
can worm his way underneath mountains - DeAngleo Williams![]()
can leap a tall building with a single bound - Reggie Bush![]()
mexican_texan said:So Jason White is better than Michael Vick? Crouch over Carr, Peppers, AJ?
mexican_texan said:Do you know Eric Crouch? The Heisman goes to the player with the best year, not the best.
Kaiser Toro said:Before anyone of them play a down in the NFL and before they finish their careers all of you are wrong on who will be the best, because as history shows there have been few sure things. Bush, Williams and White all have the potential to be All-Pros, but what separates them? Bush at this point has shown the ability to be a multi threat while Williams and White will have to develop in other facets of the game or go to the right team with the right philosophy. I don't necessarily look at who will be the best, but rather I want the best value. Bush at #1 significantly decreases his value to the team by taking up 7-8 million of cap space. His contribution will need to mirror other RBs in the league immediatley. Expectations will be immense and we will see how the young man adjusts physically and mentally. I feel White will be ROY and Williams will be close. They are the value picks - lower risk (cap, expectations) and high reward. Bush I see is high risk, high reward.
Just thought I'd point out that even though Ricky Williams won the Heisman as well as the Doak Walker (twice, actually), finished his career as the NCAA all-time leading rusher and has the highest YPC averaged of any RB with more than 700 attempts. Yet he wasn't the first RB drafted that year. Edgerrin James was. And so far, James has proven the Colts made the right decision.Apoch said:Yes, yes, love the "pick one statement out of the post and throw a half-hearted rebutal at it" strategy. Now, I can understand if you disagree, but at least put some effort into a rebutal if you want to prove someone wrong...
For every Crouch, White, or Salaam there is a Bo Jackson, Charles Woodson, or Ricky Williams. If you win the Heisman (especially by the margin Bush did) it makes a good argument.
...but lets be even more fair. Bush also (once again since you seemed to have missed it) won the "Best RB" award, another "Best Player" award, was third in the nation in rushing while having at least 108 carries less than the two RBs ahead of him, had an average of 8.7 yards per rush (no one in the top 40 even broke 6.6), and lead the NCAA in all-purpose yardage.
thunderkyss said:year after year, the top running backs in the league are not multitalented multipurpose players, but rather straight up runners. Their blocking doesn't generally have to be all that, as long as they get the job done, when you hand them the ball. TDs, and Rushing Yards are the meat and potatoes of the running backs game.
I'm not taking anything away from Bush....... I'm just saying all that other stuff doesn't necessarily make him the best RB in the draft. As a Matter of Fact, the first running back taken may not necessarily be the best back in the draft. That's all about how the teams evaluate the player, vs their needs.
We don't have a versatile tight end....... Bush's ability to be a reciever out of the backfield, to play the slot.... he might be a suitable replacement, and allow our TEs to focus on blocking.
I know that there are not many Vince Young fans in these MBs, but didn't Vince Young win the Player of the Year award?Apoch said:Yes, yes, love the "pick one statement out of the post and throw a half-hearted rebutal at it" strategy. Now, I can understand if you disagree, but at least put some effort into a rebutal if you want to prove someone wrong...
For every Crouch, White, or Salaam there is a Bo Jackson, Charles Woodson, or Ricky Williams. If you win the Heisman (especially by the margin Bush did) it makes a good argument.
...but lets be even more fair. Bush also (once again since you seemed to have missed it) won the "Best RB" award, another "Best Player" award, was third in the nation in rushing while having at least 108 carries less than the two RBs ahead of him, had an average of 8.7 yards per rush (no one in the top 40 even broke 6.6), and lead the NCAA in all-purpose yardage.
dcarey20 said:this is where everyone stands. this is a mountain
bush, he is the peak, and then there is everyone else
lendale
deangelo
maroney
calhoun
addai
maurice drew
is this a trick question?eclem5 said:Who is the best Running Back in the Draft? Reggie Bush, DeAngelo Williams or Lendale White.
ReggieBushFan said:is this a trick question?
Reggie Bush is the best back in many years, DeAngelo Williams isn't even in the same class, Bush has more speed, better moves, he catches the ball better, and oh yeah, did I mention he has more speed! Nobody touches Reggie, trust me, all you guys that want Vince Young will be Reggie Bush fans in no time, the Texans will draft him and he will be amazing by year 2, just you wait and see, it will be Reggie's city!
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Huge said:Yet he wasn't the first RB drafted that year. Edgerrin James was. And so far, James has proven the Colts made the right decision.
thunderkyss said:If Ricky was in Indy, and put up the numbers he did in Miami, the two years before he went on Hiatus, the Colts would have won multiple SBs by now.
The thing about a Bruiser, a Ricky Williams, a Priest Holmes, a Jamal Lewis, an Eddie George/Emmit Smith in their Prime, is that they beat the crap out of a defense, they wear you down in a demorilizing way that makes them give up......
Ricky's numbers in Miami - 21.4 carries per game, 90.2 yards per game, .7 TDs per gamethunderkyss said:If Ricky was in Indy, and put up the numbers he did in Miami, the two years before he went on Hiatus, the Colts would have won multiple SBs by now.
Priest Holmes and Emmitt Smith aren't/weren't bruisers. Eddie George was a bruiser and averaged 3.6 ypc for his career. No thanks.thunderkyss said:The thing about a Bruiser, a Ricky Williams, a Priest Holmes, a Jamal Lewis, an Eddie George/Emmit Smith in their Prime, is that they beat the crap out of a defense, they wear you down in a demorilizing way that makes them give up......
Yes I do, It's not about the numbers.Huge said:But you think the difference between those numbers is the reason the Colts don't have multiple Super Bowls?
Yes they areHuge said:Priest Holmes and Emmitt Smith aren't/weren't bruisers. Eddie George was a bruiser and averaged 3.6 ypc for his career. No thanks.
Huge said:"Bruisers" don't wear down defenses. Offensive lines do. If your RB is picking up first downs, it doesn't matter how he's doing it. Picking up first downs means your offensive line gets to beat on somebody for at least another 3 plays. When a defense can't get off the field and they continue to get beat on, that's what wears them down.
Huge said:"Bruisers" don't wear down defenses. Offensive lines do. If your RB is picking up first downs, it doesn't matter how he's doing it. Picking up first downs means your offensive line gets to beat on somebody for at least another 3 plays. When a defense can't get off the field and they continue to get beat on, that's what wears them down.
infantrycak said:And as one of the biggest Emmitt Smith fans ever, he was not a bruiser. He was a contact minimizer (not avoider like Sanders)--he had great vision and enough shiftiness to make potential hits go from full hits like Earl Campbell took into arm tackles and glancing blows he could either run thru or at least get extra yards while finishing the run.
MorKnolle said:DeAngelo Williams is the best runner at RB in this draft, he has speed (not as much as Bush but he's not too far behind), good moves, he can run with power and break thru tackles, and he has proven he can carry a heavy load. He is also the only senior among the top four RBs in this draft.
2002: 103 carries, 684 yards, 6.6 ypc, 5 TDs, 5 catches, 51 yards, 0 TD
2003: 243 carries, 1430 yards, 5.9 ypc, 10 TDs, 35 catches, 384 yards, 3 TDs
2004: 313 carries, 1948 yards, 6.2 ypc, 22 TDs, 18 catches, 210 yards, 1 TD
2005: 309 carries, 1959 yards, 6.3 ypc, 18 TDs, 12 catchs, 78 yards, 1 TD
Total: 968 carries, 6021 yards, 6.2 ypc, 55 TDs, 70 catches, 723 yards, 5 TDs
Season Avg: 242 carries, 1505.3 yards, 6.2 ypc, 14.8 TDs, 17.5 catches, 180.8 yards, 1.3 TDs
Reggie Bush is the best all-round player at RB, he has better speed and is quicker, right now he's a little smaller than DeAngelo (yes 6-0 200 is smaller than 5-8 208), he is more versatile as a better receiving option out of the backfield or lining up at WR, and he can return kicks/punts (we wouldn't need him on kickoffs as Mathis is already a pro-bowler there). Bush has not yet proven he can carry a heavy workload, but at the same time he has not proven that he can't carry it, and in one sense he does have "less wear on the tires", although I'm not sure how much that really means at this point in his career.
2003: 90 carries, 521 yards, 5.8 ypc, 3 TDs, 15 catches, 314 yards, 4 TDs
2004: 143 carries, 908 yards, 6.4 ypc, 6 TDs, 43 catches, 509 yards, 7 TDs
2005: 200 carries, 1740 yards, 8.7 ypc, 16 TDs, 37 catches, 478 yards, 2 TDs
Total: 433 carries, 3169 yards, 7.3 ypc, 25 TDs, 95 catches, 1301 yards, 13 TDs
Season Avg: 144.3 carries, 1056.3 yards, 7.3 ypc, 8.3 TDs, 31.7 catches, 433.7 yards, 4.3 TDs
LenDale White is a great all-round RB. He's not as fast as either Bush or DeAngelo, but he's bigger and a more powerful runner. He also has not proven that he can carry a heavy workload as he split carries with Bush, but at the same time he has also not proven that he can't carry a heavy workload, and the majority of his carries were up the middle attacking the heart of the defense rather than outrunning it.
2003: 141 carries, 754 yards, 5.3 ypc, 13 TDs, 6 catches, 15 yards, 1 TD
2004: 203 carries, 1103 yards, 5.4 ypc, 15 TDs, 11 catches, 97 yards, 2 TDs
2005: 197 carries, 1302 yards, 6.6 ypc, 24 TDs, 14 catches, 219 yards, 2 TDs
Total: 541 carries, 3159 yards, 5.8 ypc, 52 TDs, 31 catches, 331 yards, 5 TDs
Season Avg: 180.3 carries, 1053 yards, 5.8 ypc, 17.3 TDs, 10.3 catches, 110.3 yards, 1.7 TDs
Lawrence Maroney is a good all-round RB. He has split carries for the majority of his career, but got the chance to be a star this year. He has a decent mix of size and speed and should be a solid NFL RB, but is not of the caliber of White, Bush, or Williams.
2003: 162 carries, 1121 yards, 6.9 ypc, 10 TDs, 1 catch, 11 yards, 0 TD
2004: 217 carries, 1348 yards, 6.2 ypc, 12 TDs, 3 catches, 16 yards, 0 TD
2005: 281 carries, 1464 yards, 5.2 ypc, 10 TDs, 17 catches, 170 yards, 1 TD
Total: 660 carries, 3933 yards, 6.0 ypc, 32 TDs, 21 catches, 197 yards, 1 TD
Season Avg: 220 carries, 1311 yards, 6.0 ypc, 10.7 TDs, 7 catchse, 65.7 yards, 0.3 TD
thunderkyss said:There were too many times that I've seen Emmit push, drag, and carry defensive players for an extra yard or two after minimizing contact for me not to call him a bruiser. I think what made/makes Emmit sooo special, is that he was the perfect combination of speed, moves and strength... he had enough speed, to burst through the line, enough shiftiness to turn a shoulder tackle into a grazing arm tackle, and enough strentght to punish you.......really badly for trying to stop him.....
MorKnolle said:Emmitt Smith ran with power, but I still wouldn't call him a bruising RB. When I think of big, bruising RBs, I think of the ones like Jerome Bettis, Jamal Lewis, Mike Alstott (anyone remember that play against the Bears a couple years ago when he broke I think 9 tackles on a single run?), Eddie George kind of fits in there, etc. Emmitt, Priest Holmes (I don't consider him a power back at all) and some of those others definitely ran with power, but I would just consider them all very complete and well-rounded RBs, ones that had some speed, good quickness, but could still break thru tackles, those guys could do it all. Barry Sanders had some power to, he could drive thru tackles and break thru a lot of the time, but he was still fast enough that he could completely avoid the contact most of the time, it remains to be seen if Reggie Bush will develop that characteristic where he can instinctively avoid guys like Sanders (he does have comparable speed, quickness, and balance) but still bounce off guys, drive thru potential tackles, and keep on running.