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You have consistently versus variable. I love to have both.
I think this is an inappropriate analysis. I don't doubt that the overall stats are accurate. However …Last year Marshall failed to gain at least 3 yards about 30% of the time (26 carries).
This year, Mills has failed to gain at least 3 yards about 37% of the time (41 carries not including carries at the one or two yard line)
And in case you're wondering Marshall is sitting at about 33% this year. (29 carries)
So tell me again how Mills is bringing the consistent 3 yards that we didn't have last year?
lol half of those stops came from the Clemson game on Dedrick, not really his fault. Also Marshall has regressed this year in the 3 yard range? Shouldn't that tell you maybe teams are trying to stop it more? Not saying it's the case but it sure seemed like it early on. Also take away marshals big plays and let me know what he's averaging? I know the big plays are awesome, but I'm interested in seeing what the difference would be. And I mean big plays when he goes untouched that Dedrick would probably do the same thing on, not ones he created himself. The point in my post is to show numbers dont mean everything, I could even use the excuse Dedrick plus early in the game when the other teams D is fresh and Marshall plays late when the D is worn out, and if you flipped them and their playing time then the numbers could be flipped. Don't get me wrong I really like Marshall and think he's very good but it's pretty clear Dedrick is the more powerful back, which has been stated by our coaching staff.
• MM has had fewer carries this year and when he got most of his we had sorted out some (not all, but some) of the OL problems we had earlier.
• Mills is a true freshman playing a brand new position. It showed in the early games. Now recall UNC. He ran - remember - reliably up the middle and ended up with, if I recall right, 132 yards rushing.
Against UNC, Mills's last start, we won it by 5 minutes, despite a massive D fail. That's because, even subtracting his 39 yard run, he averaged 4.8 ypc. And that's what folks here mean when they say that the O runs more efficiently with Mills.
Marshall for his career is averaging 2 more yards per carry than Mills and has had no off the field incidents as far as I can tell. If Mills goes right back to being the starter then it isn't a competition. Competition implies both guys can possible win.
Last year Marshall failed to gain at least 3 yards about 30% of the time (26 carries).
This year, Mills has failed to gain at least 3 yards about 37% of the time (41 carries not including carries at the one or two yard line)
And in case you're wondering Marshall is sitting at about 33% this year. (29 carries)
So tell me again how Mills is bringing the consistent 3 yards that we didn't have last year?
but my eyes don't lie.
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First I thought it was obvious I wasn't being literal when I said half about the Clemson game, but 5 in one game changes the percentages majorly.I don't want an either or...I want them both. I just think Dedrick made Marcus a better player.
- Of course he averages more per carry, he's got a handful of extremely long runs that Dedrick doesn't have.
- CPJ has said Marshall will probably start
- You can twist the stats any way you want man, but my eyes don't lie. Up until the VT game Dedrick was more consistent at getting continuous chunks of yards. Hell, just watching him at the goal line shows you how much harder he's fought for yards. Marshall only started doing that two weeks ago.
This, plus the COACHES who see them both in practice have said Dedrick is more powerful, I think I'll take the coaches word on this one.I don't want an either or...I want them both. I just think Dedrick made Marcus a better player.
- Of course he averages more per carry, he's got a handful of extremely long runs that Dedrick doesn't have.
- CPJ has said Marshall will probably start
- You can twist the stats any way you want man, but my eyes don't lie. Up until the VT game Dedrick was more consistent at getting continuous chunks of yards. Hell, just watching him at the goal line shows you how much harder he's fought for yards. Marshall only started doing that two weeks ago.
First I thought it was obvious I wasn't being literal when I said half about the Clemson game, but 5 in one game changes the percentages majorly.
Second if Marshall goes untouched and has a big play what makes you think Dedrick wouldn't? Can you find the stats for yards after contact? That would be interesting.
Third you used marshals average for his career why not go by just this year alone seeing that Dedrick didn't play last year. Wouldn't that be better to compare so you are comparing with the same supporting cast around them? And only use the games where they both played considering one might play a good D and the other a crap D.
Third the point of saying if you take a way the big play is to show when you have to get those short yards Dedrick is better because those big plays aren't always going to happen and if you need 3 yards who will you put in? I understand those big plays are part of football, but like I said it's all about getting those short yards when everything is boxed in and that's why I asked about yards after contact.
Fifth you use the excuse with Marshall when he starts has his percentages go down and u you use that against all crap D's so is it not possible the same thing would happen with Dedrick? Like I said we must compare apples to apples.
I like both players and think the both bring something different Marshall is shifty and has speed and Dedrick has really good power. Coaches have said themselves that Dedrick is more powerful which would mean he gets those tough yards when needed and that's my point. I would not like seeing either leave the team.
We can go round and round with numbers all we want because numbers can be twisted in many ways so I'll leave it at this. I want both and think they are both very good players.
Eyewitness is worthless in the eyes of science. Eyes lie all the time. Facts are a much better thing to go by. I would be looking at ball security as my main point when comparing the two.
Let's take this point by point, shall we?And his numbers were better last year when we had even more OL problems.
Against UNC Mills had 5 carries of less than 3 yards out of 19 for 26%. So that still just puts him even with what Marshall was doing the past two games when he was starting. So that still doesn't support the notion that Mills is the more consistent runner. Also Marshall was a true freshman playing a new position last year as well. He had better numbers then as well.
Oh, well we won the ToP. I'm glad that makes you happy. See to me, I wouldn't call 5 and 6 minutes drives resulting in 0 or 3 points as efficient. Of course the ironic thing is the only TDs we scored in that game came on a one play 80 yard pass and on a drive where Mills had his longest run of the season. But hey, our 4 longest drives totaled 21 minutes of ToP. I guess that's great. So should we go for the win in points or the win in ToP? I'll have to sleep on that one.
First I thought it was obvious I wasn't being literal when I said half about the Clemson game, but 5 in one game changes the percentages majorly.
Second if Marshall goes untouched and has a big play what makes you think Dedrick wouldn't? Can you find the stats for yards after contact? That would be interesting.
Third you used marshals average for his career why not go by just this year alone seeing that Dedrick didn't play last year. Wouldn't that be better to compare so you are comparing with the same supporting cast around them? And only use the games where they both played considering one might play a good D and the other a crap D.
Third the point of saying if you take a way the big play is to show when you have to get those short yards Dedrick is better because those big plays aren't always going to happen and if you need 3 yards who will you put in?
Fifth you use the excuse with Marshall when he starts has his percentages go down and u you use that against all crap D's so is it not possible the same thing would happen with Dedrick? Like I said we must compare apples to apples.
The whole point of the O is to do two things: limit the opponents opportunity to score and wear down their D as the game progresses.
I mean take away the ones that were below 3 yards not the whole game, but we obviously dissagree, not big deal. I'm just going to keep believing the staff on this one. And yes I brought up Dedrick against fresh D's but your going to tell me there's not a difference in a D like Boston college or vandy conpared to mercer? I'll take a worn out D from vandy or Boston college over mercer any game, would you not? Are you really going to compare them by that? You must have missed the point where I clearly said the teams you mentioned were awful D's.Except it doesn't change his percentages at all. No literally, take away the Clemson game and it stays at 37%. Well if we're being exact the percentage actually goes up vy a fraction of a percent.
He doesn't have the speed, acceleration, or vision that Marshall does. You act like Marshall has nothing to do with those plays going untouched. It's almost like that .3 difference in their 40 time translates to the field.
Okay use this year, Marshall averages 1.5 more yards per carry. Also, let's look at the 6 games that both played in. Marshall had 179 yards on 29 carries for 6.2 ypc. Mills had 446 on 95 carries for 4.69 ypc. So Marshall was 1.3 ypc better against the same opponents.
But Mills isn't better reliably getting those short yards. He in fact gets less than 3 yards more often than Marshall does. Mills is a better power back, but it hasn't translated to a bonus that offsets the advantage Marshall brings with his big play ability.
What? You were the person who brought up the notion that Mills playing against fresh defenses is cause of his percentages. I just showed that Marshall against fresh defenses still has better numbers.
The primary purpose of the offense is to score points. You'd have a point if we always converted our drives into points. But we don't. Against UNC we had 4 drives, our longest 4, result in 21 minutes of ToP and 6 points. Won the ToP. Lost the game by 28. But hey, at least it helped our defense, I guess. Also, ironic that the two TDs we scored that game came on a 1 play 83 yard drive, and a drive centered around Mills' longest run of the year.
Ok, one more time.The primary purpose of the offense is to score points. You'd have a point if we always converted our drives into points. But we don't. Against UNC we had 4 drives, our longest 4, result in 21 minutes of ToP and 6 points. Won the ToP. Lost the game by 28. But hey, at least it helped our defense, I guess. Also, ironic that the two TDs we scored that game came on a 1 play 83 yard drive, and a drive centered around Mills' longest run of the year.
Dude doesn't want to give up his spot next week. Not sure which was more impressive, his long TD run or his refusal to go down run of 2o yards. It sure is nice to have both Marshall and Mills to trot out there! We should be able to keep fresh legs in there against the mutts which could make all the difference in the 4th qtr.