Marshall Faulk is actually as awesome as Al B. thinks he is.
Let me put it this way: if I were to make an all-time team, I would take Jim Brown, Barry Sanders, and Marshall Faulk as my three running backs.
Marshall Faulk in his prime was the most efficient receiver in modern NFL history. No other player is even close. On a volume basis, a very elite handful of wide receivers put together more valuable seasons - Rice, Moss, Irvin. But on an efficiency basis, Faulk is the greatest receiver of all time.
Don't believe me? Let's look at Faulk's absolute best receiving season. He was thrown 104 passes, catching 87 of them for 1048 yards. Ten yards per passing attempt, to a possession receiver, is unheard-of. Faulk's 84% catch rate is one of the most statistically impressive accomplishments by any player in my lifetime.
But what we really want to know is how good the combination of 10.0 yards per attempt, 84% completions is. Fortunately, footballoutsiders.com has developed a statistic called DVOA, which accurately measures the value added by a receiver per play. 0% is league average. -13% is what you'd expect out of a scrub on an average team. The best receiving DVOA by a back other than Marshall Faulk is 46%, by Larry Centers in his hundred-catch season.
Marshall Faulk hit 71.2% that year. That's a mark that nobody has ever even come close to, especially on that many throws. In fact, here's a complete list of the best receiving seasons by a back with over 100 pass attempts:
1999 Faulk 71.2%
1998 Faulk 58.3%
2001 Faulk 47.6%
1995 Centers 45.9%
2000 Faulk 42.3%
These are the five most efficient receiving seasons ever for a player with 100+ passes. Even Randy Moss or Jerry Rice or Michael Irvin only hits about 30% in a great year. Obviously, comparing backs to receivers is apples to oranges: a great #1 gets more like 160 passes. But it turns out that even on a cumulative basis, these five seasons are comparable to the jawdropping ones by WRs, like Rice in 1994 or Moss in 2007.
Faulk is one of the three or four greatest receivers in modern history.
Let me put it this way: if I were to make an all-time team, I would take Jim Brown, Barry Sanders, and Marshall Faulk as my three running backs.
Marshall Faulk in his prime was the most efficient receiver in modern NFL history. No other player is even close. On a volume basis, a very elite handful of wide receivers put together more valuable seasons - Rice, Moss, Irvin. But on an efficiency basis, Faulk is the greatest receiver of all time.
Don't believe me? Let's look at Faulk's absolute best receiving season. He was thrown 104 passes, catching 87 of them for 1048 yards. Ten yards per passing attempt, to a possession receiver, is unheard-of. Faulk's 84% catch rate is one of the most statistically impressive accomplishments by any player in my lifetime.
But what we really want to know is how good the combination of 10.0 yards per attempt, 84% completions is. Fortunately, footballoutsiders.com has developed a statistic called DVOA, which accurately measures the value added by a receiver per play. 0% is league average. -13% is what you'd expect out of a scrub on an average team. The best receiving DVOA by a back other than Marshall Faulk is 46%, by Larry Centers in his hundred-catch season.
Marshall Faulk hit 71.2% that year. That's a mark that nobody has ever even come close to, especially on that many throws. In fact, here's a complete list of the best receiving seasons by a back with over 100 pass attempts:
1999 Faulk 71.2%
1998 Faulk 58.3%
2001 Faulk 47.6%
1995 Centers 45.9%
2000 Faulk 42.3%
These are the five most efficient receiving seasons ever for a player with 100+ passes. Even Randy Moss or Jerry Rice or Michael Irvin only hits about 30% in a great year. Obviously, comparing backs to receivers is apples to oranges: a great #1 gets more like 160 passes. But it turns out that even on a cumulative basis, these five seasons are comparable to the jawdropping ones by WRs, like Rice in 1994 or Moss in 2007.
Faulk is one of the three or four greatest receivers in modern history.
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