I haven't made myself clear.Pondering Her Percy wrote: ↑Wed Apr 15, 2020 3:19 pmNo worries Kapp but I guess this is my question, when should you ever extend a RB? Do we just rent them for 4 years and let them walk every time? For RBs to stay healthy for entire seasons year after year is low to begin with. It’s just not realistic anymore even though mccaffery somehow pulled it off. But look many of the big time backs. Barkley, Fournette, Kamara, Gurley, Gordon, Elliott, etc. Any idea how many full 16 game seasons were played out of those 6 RBs total in their careers? 5 out of a possible 22 seasons, those RBs played a full season. So given that statistic does that really make dalvin cook injury prone or is that just the nature of the position. I’m going with the latter.J. Kapp 11 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 15, 2020 2:57 pm
Gotta disagree with you here, PHP. And it kills me because I LOVE Dalvin Cook. (I'm sorta partial to running backs, anyway.)
Dalvin was injured three times in college before ever being drafted. He of course had the ACL tear, but missed a lot of time in 2018 with hamstring and other injuries. He only missed five games completely but was on a pitch count for several others.
Last year, Cook finished 12th in the NFL in touches, but 243 of his 303 came in the first 10 weeks of the season. In the four games he played through the end of the regular season, he averaged 12.5 touches per game, an average that would have ranked him 33rd for the overall season. He did have a stellar game against the Saints in the playoffs and had 31 touches, but then had 9 carries for 18 yards against the 49ers, even though the game was close throughout the first half.
But the biggest thing, and it PAINS me to say this, is that teams that pay running backs big money tend to not make the playoffs. Of the top 10 highest-paid running backs in 2019, only three of their teams made the playoffs. Two of those, Jerrick McKinnon and Lamar Miller, didn't even play during the season. The other was Duke Johnson, who will never be confused with Gayle Sayers.
It's the case every year in today's NFL. You can't blow the cap on running backs. And you certainly can't pay running backs the kind of money Dalvin is likely to demand and expect to win. And if Gary Kubiak can make 1,000 yard rushers out of Reuben Droughns, Arian Foster and Justin Forsett, then we'll probably be fine without Dalvin Cook.
Even though I hate the idea of not having him, this is probably the time to deal him, when his value is highest, if the Vikings can find a partner. Let somebody else worry about paying him or not paying him.
I get what some are saying that you don’t want to pay that much for a guy that’s going to miss games but what else do you do other than rent a RB for 4 years and draft a new one when his 4 years is up. The chances of finding a RB that plays FULL consecutive seasons year after year is about as high as me hitting the lottery. So given that it’s the nature of the position, doesn’t it make sense to pay the elite ones when you have the chance? Just a different way to look at it I guess. Many of you make some very fair points but you gotta look at the other side of it too
I don't want to pay a running back that kind of money PERIOD, no matter if he plays every game. Even if his name is Dalvin Cook.
The league is demonstrating that teams that pay running backs huge salaries don't typically fare all that well. I'd rather direct the cap toward the lines, CBs, receivers and a QB.
Look at last year's best teams. KC paid their kicker more than their starting RB. San Francisco paid their top 3 running backs about $3 million total (this doesn't count Jerick McKinnon's salary). Derrick Henry earned just $1.7 million. Green Bay's total RB salary was just shy of $2 million. These are the four top teams from last year. Meanwhile, the Ravens paid Mark Ingram $6.5 million, and look where it got them. New England, believe it or not, had nearly $8 million allocated to RBs ... one and done.
Again, if you look at the top 10 highest paid RBs in the league last year, only two of their teams made the playoffs -- Houston and San Francisco -- and NONE of those running backs actually played in the playoffs (Jerick McKinnon and Lamar Miller were hurt all year). Paying a huge salary to a running back (huge, in my mind, being defined as more than about $4 million) hamstrings the salary cap and weakens the team in more important areas.
It just doesn't benefit the Vikings to pay Dalvin Cook anywhere near what he's likely to demand, even though he's elite, and even if he stays healthy all year.