Well, I have no need to martyr myself on the cause because it is clear everyone will disagree with me but my point was that Dwyer was very quick. He hit his top gear almost instantly and he could cut while doing that. He was a consummate B-back.
But my point about his overall speed was that the play usually broke so fast, and he hit his top gear so quickly, that players were usually turning around to try to catch him, did not have an angle, or were not able to hit their top speed before he was in the end zone. I think the reason he was caught from behind so often in the pros was not just that he was up against faster players, it was because the plays run in the pros did not put defenders out of position, turning on their heels, or suddenly trying to hit their top gear when he was already at his top gear with a two or three yard head start.
One of the things I like most about our offense is that if the play breaks fairly cleanly at the line of scrimmage there usually are not a lot of people left to gang tackle or slow a runner down while other people close on the play. Watch Lucas Cox against Miami (1:24:28) in 2008. I would estimate that there are at least four defenders who are faster than him being out run because by the time they see the play it is already too late for them to catch up. That is what makes me so excited about this offense now that we are adding elite speed to it.
Anyway, I am over explaining because, even though people are free to disagree with me, I want to make sure they are disagreeing with what I am saying, not disagreeing with something I was not saying. I never said Dwyer was slow. And I never said he was caught from behind in college. I was implying that in a different kind of offense he would be more likely to be caught from behind. He had an entirely different kind of performance in the pros running out of a different offense.