What running backs have a chance of going to the HOF.

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  • KINGOFOOTBALL
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2009
    • 10343

    #46
    Originally posted by Senser81
    LOL at Curtis Martin being a lock, but Tomlinson only being "Good Chance".

    Tomlinson is easily the best RB of his generation. The only guy who was comparable to LT when he played was Priest Holmes, and that was only for a couple seasons.

    Bettis was a power back with longevity. Give me a guy who can get 3-4 tough yards every carry than a guy who breaks one for 20 then gets stopped at the line the next 3 carries.
    Im sooo going to use that against you one day =-).

    Does Martin get into the HOF ? I dont know ..will Jimmy Smith ?

    I think theres a collective realization that RB stats have been swollen the last decade or so. Teams arent pounding there guys between the tackles against 7-8 man fronts. Theyre delay,draw,tossing it to RBs in a spread offense against teams with often only 2 linebackers on the field and safeties who are glorified corners. Guys like Alexander are marquee examples of what good it does a RBs stats without him having to actually shoulder a game.
    Curtis Martin having his best season at 30 (or near ,I forget) winning a rushing title while never breaking a run longer than 20 is a great example of how soft those first 10 yards are.

    I give Martin nothing but credit for his career and being a damn good RB.
    But longevity is nothing without greatness.

    Bettis has 3 things on his side. He was a dominant runner early on in his career, his career resurrection in Pittsburgh including a story book SB win. And physically has a unique highlight reel of bulldozing runs but a stack of light on his feet moves to go with it. Him being a media darling is a huge plus. Id put him in before I put Martin even though it may not be fair.
    Best reason to have a license.

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    • KINGOFOOTBALL
      Junior Member
      • Feb 2009
      • 10343

      #47
      Originally posted by jeffx
      I'm with this. That's why I always put Earl Campbell right up there with Brown, OJ, Sweetness and Barry as the top RBs of all time. Yes, he had a short career, but the man dominated the opposition. You looked at him, and said, wow!

      Terrell Davis is interesting. Could one of you stats experts(Dell, Senser) post his numbers?
      TD
      1117
      1538
      1750
      2008
      211
      282
      701

      Those numbers dont make a HOF career. His the opposite of Martin. Greatness but no longevity.

      Earl had another dominant season after his injury still had more years and more yards/tds than Davis. He was also arguably the most dominant physical style runner ever , certainly of his era.
      Best reason to have a license.

      Comment

      • dell71
        Enter Sandman
        • Mar 2009
        • 23919

        #48
        Originally posted by Senser81
        I think you are overrating Martin's pass-catching. A lot of RBs catch dump-offs. Guys like Thurman Thomas, Marshall Faulk, Brian Westbrook...they were actually a major part of their team's passing game. Guys like Curtis Martin were good players who caught dump-offs. Its more of a reflection of the team's offensive style than a reflection of greatness. Clearing 40 receptions isn't that big of a deal, IMO.
        True, he wasn't the receiving threat the guys you mentioned were but it shows trust in his ability to even be on the field in passing situations. Yes, lots of teams used a feature back during his career but most teams also utilized the 3rd down back. So I give him credit.

        Eddie Murray was probably the best 1B in the late-70's thru early 80's, then became a step below the best when Don Mattingly was in his prime. 500 homers and 3000 hits in itself are HOF achievements, and Murray accomplished both! Lock for Baseball HOF, which is more stringent than Football HOF.

        Martin was never the best RB. He was never the 2nd or 3rd best RB. He was always 5th or 6th best. He doesn't have any statistical HOF-lock achievements. He is nowhere near Eddie Murray's class. I'd compare Martin to Steve Garvey. Durable, good all-around player, probably more valuable than you think, but not an elite player.
        I can live with that assessment but I will say that 14,000+ rushing yards will carry a lot of weight.


        When Campbell came into the NFL in 1978, he was immediately the best player in the entire league as a rookie, regardless of position. Campbell turned an average team in to the 2nd best team in the NFL. He was way better than Alexander. Campbell was the best RB in the NFL. Alexander was never the best RB in the NFL. Alexander had a lot of TDs and played longer, but Campbell still had more 100 yard games in nearly half the time that Alexander played. In a 5 game stretch in 1980, Campbell had more 200-yard games (3) than Alexander had in his entire career (2).

        Alexander might have better stats, but I don't think anyone would say he had a better career or was a better "all-around" player.
        I can live with that, too. Damn, I'm sucking wind here.
        Originally posted by jeffx
        I'm with this. That's why I always put Earl Campbell right up there with Brown, OJ, Sweetness and Barry as the top RBs of all time. Yes, he had a short career, but the man dominated the opposition. You looked at him, and said, wow!

        Terrell Davis is interesting. Could one of you stats experts(Dell, Senser) post his numbers?
        True.
        Originally posted by KINGOFOOTBALL
        Im sooo going to use that against you one day =-).

        Does Martin get into the HOF ? I dont know ..will Jimmy Smith ?

        I think theres a collective realization that RB stats have been swollen the last decade or so. Teams arent pounding there guys between the tackles against 7-8 man fronts. Theyre delay,draw,tossing it to RBs in a spread offense against teams with often only 2 linebackers on the field and safeties who are glorified corners. Guys like Alexander are marquee examples of what good it does a RBs stats without him having to actually shoulder a game.
        Curtis Martin having his best season at 30 (or near ,I forget) winning a rushing title while never breaking a run longer than 20 is a great example of how soft those first 10 yards are.

        I give Martin nothing but credit for his career and being a damn good RB.
        But longevity is nothing without greatness.

        Bettis has 3 things on his side. He was a dominant runner early on in his career, his career resurrection in Pittsburgh including a story book SB win. And physically has a unique highlight reel of bulldozing runs but a stack of light on his feet moves to go with it. Him being a media darling is a huge plus. Id put him in before I put Martin even though it may not be fair.
        I still think they both get in. Still, I never bought Bettis as being a dominant back, either.

        Originally posted by KINGOFOOTBALL
        TD
        1117
        1538
        1750
        2008
        211
        282
        701

        Those numbers dont make a HOF career. His the opposite of Martin. Greatness but no longevity.

        Earl had another dominant season after his injury still had more years and more yards/tds than Davis. He was also arguably the most dominant physical style runner ever , certainly of his era.
        Comparing him to Earl, TD has the fact that he was the best player on 2 SB winning teams on his side and he was quite possibly the best player in the NFL. His first 4 years are more than comparable to Campbell's, he just never had that one more good season like Campbell who had a series of injuries and tons of carries that eroded him over time. TD tore his ACL and was never the same.

        Comment

        • young2rice
          Rockstar
          • Mar 2009
          • 2820

          #49
          Emmitt Smith
          Marshall Faulk
          LaDainian Tomlinson


          That's it. All others I never considered "The best in the league" at the time.


          ^^^ Fixed Link Finally!

          My Band's Myspace - Validus

          Comment

          • Coked Up Elmo
            omle pu dekoc
            • Jul 2009
            • 1259

            #50
            curtis martin was one of the most underrated rbs of his era
            sigpic
            "did you say cockintheass?"

            Comment

            • FlawLeSs
              South Beach Talent
              • Nov 2008
              • 1988

              #51
              Originally posted by coked up elmo
              curtis martin was one of the most underrated rbs of his era
              same could be said about fred taylor
              www.youtube.com/kingoffla

              Comment

              • Anthony
                In Brendan we trust.
                • Jun 2009
                • 5201

                #52
                Curtis Martin, The Bus, LaDainian Tomlinson (The REAL LT is already in the Hall), Corey Dillon, Marshall Faulk... & maybe Tiki (Crossing fingers)

                Comment

                • Fox1994
                  Posts too much
                  • Dec 2008
                  • 5327

                  #53
                  ^FlawLess: Indeed. He's definitely developed a reputation as "underrated". Which makes you wonder how underrated he is. lol.

                  Comment

                  • jeffx
                    Member
                    • Jun 2009
                    • 3853

                    #54
                    Originally posted by Anthony
                    ... & maybe Tiki (Crossing fingers)
                    I love Tiki too, but he's not a HOFamer.

                    Comment

                    • LiquidLarry2GhostWF
                      Highwayman
                      • Feb 2009
                      • 15428

                      #55
                      Fred Taylor will never make the Hall of Fame. Jimmy has a better chance as a Jaguar.

                      Fred didn't make the Pro Bowl at all legitimately (only made it as an alternate) and didn't score enough touchdowns.

                      Most of his career, he was a guy that split carries, which is one of the reasons the numbers aren't higher, but are also a reason that he played as long as he did. Fred couldn't stay on the field consistently for most of his career, especially during his breakout seasons.

                      Love Fred, he is my favorite player...but no Hall of Fame.

                      Jimmy Smith's numbers and place amongst the leagues best (in his generation, you could argue a legitimate third behind Moss and Harrison, but more likely in the Top 5) give him a legitimate claim, but I am unsure if he makes it. The lack of scores hurts him and players like Holt and Owens passing him up post early retirement hurts him.

                      The key player will be Isaac Bruce...if Bruce gets in, I think Smith should get in.

                      Comment

                      • dell71
                        Enter Sandman
                        • Mar 2009
                        • 23919

                        #56
                        Originally posted by Larry
                        Fred Taylor will never make the Hall of Fame. Jimmy has a better chance as a Jaguar.

                        Fred didn't make the Pro Bowl at all legitimately (only made it as an alternate) and didn't score enough touchdowns.

                        Most of his career, he was a guy that split carries, which is one of the reasons the numbers aren't higher, but are also a reason that he played as long as he did. Fred couldn't stay on the field consistently for most of his career, especially during his breakout seasons.

                        Love Fred, he is my favorite player...but no Hall of Fame.

                        Jimmy Smith's numbers and place amongst the leagues best (in his generation, you could argue a legitimate third behind Moss and Harrison, but more likely in the Top 5) give him a legitimate claim, but I am unsure if he makes it. The lack of scores hurts him and players like Holt and Owens passing him up post early retirement hurts him.

                        The key player will be Isaac Bruce...if Bruce gets in, I think Smith should get in.
                        Doesn't help that they were always better, either.

                        Comment

                        • young2rice
                          Rockstar
                          • Mar 2009
                          • 2820

                          #57
                          Isaac Bruce has a much better chance of getting in.

                          If he plays 2 more years, 50 per year catches avg (61 last year) he's already 3rd all-time only to Marvin Harrison and Jerry Rice in terms of receptions. He's 2nd all-time in reception yards only to Jerry Rice (will drop to 3rd as Owens will definitely pass him). I think he could easily get 9 td's in 2 years making him tie for 6th all-time touchdowns. He only needs 600 yards to be in the top 10 yards from scrimmage all-time list as well. With his rings, the pro bowls, he'll get in.


                          ^^^ Fixed Link Finally!

                          My Band's Myspace - Validus

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