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Panthers RB's 2013 rankings.


KintnerBoy

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Tolbert was # 1 FB on their rankings. Our RB field is stacked and should be leaned on heavily with younger improved OL.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1949455-br-nfl-1000-top-16-fullbacks

 

Oh okay, it's a separate ranking... Tolbert's definitely #1 on that but where Williams and Stew are ranked surprises me. I'd say DeAngelo should be around 15th or so, and Stewart should be somewhere outside the top 30. Talent wise I understand where their ranked, but not on current play... And yeah I agree we need to base our offense around the run and our backs.

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I don't get all the DeAngelo hate. He was fairly consistent last year - 4.3 YPC isn't bad considering he wasn't breaking off any 20+ or 40+ yard runs to boost his YPC. For the most part, he was consistently averaging decent yardage with an occasional deep burst, and that's all we're asking from him at this point. We're obviously going to be relying more on our backs to catch so I wouldn't be surprised to see him get 35 or 45 catches.

J-Stew is obviously a top 16 back when healthy. Problem is, he isn't healthy. And its freaking dumb we re-signed him because Tolbert can literally do everything he does (block, run, and catch) just about as well.

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CRA in 3...2...1...

My issues has mainly always been both of them being paid and on our roster.....too many RBs

Not a talent issue. A health Stewart on talent I think can be a top 5 RB if he had the opportunity to prove it....which he won't

Really, people got irrataed with me....over something I was just early to that party for. It was a bad idea and I wasn't blinded by the fact they were good players and guys.

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Considering his health entering the season, Stewart should be commended for his play in 2013.

 

Huh? He was hurt going into the season and got hurt after a few games. That is pretty much exactly what I expected from him. And according to B/R we should commend him for this? This guy knows AP rushed for 2000 yards coming off a torn ACL right? Thats fuging commendable.

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