The Chiefs locked up for Jamaal Charles for what looks to be about 6 million per year.
Make no mistake about it, this is one of the best deals any franchise has made with any vet in a long time. Here's the post I made at footballoutsiders.com about him:
Charles is straight-up the most valuable running back in the league. He has outperformed Chris Johnson over the last year and a half.
Let's get an all-time leaderboard of RBs since Jim Brown by yards per attempt in their first three seasons. Minimum 400 attempts.
5.95 Jamaal Charles
5.39 Paul Lowe
5.13 Gale Sayers
5.08 Larry Johnson
5.08 DeAngelo Williams
5.07 Jim Brown
5.07 Delvin Williams
5.04 Chris Johnson
5.02 Napoleon Kaufman
4.97 Abner Haynes
4.95 Lawrence McCutcheon
4.93 Barry Sanders
The absolute worst of this list is probably Delvin Williams or Larry Johnson, who still went on to become first-team all-pros once apiece after their third years. And Jamaal Charles isn't just on this list - he leads it, and it's not even close.
This doesn't even factor in the fact that Charles is an excellent receiver, too.
I claim that the only RB comparable to Charles in value is Chris Johnson. So the question for you is, do you take a 25-year-old with 867 career carries at a 5.04 ypc clip, or a 24-year-old with 439 carries at 5.95 yards per carry? I'd take the latter, given that a large workload does seems to put "mileage" on a player and reduce his effectiveness.
Make no mistake about it, this is one of the best deals any franchise has made with any vet in a long time. Here's the post I made at footballoutsiders.com about him:
Charles is straight-up the most valuable running back in the league. He has outperformed Chris Johnson over the last year and a half.
Let's get an all-time leaderboard of RBs since Jim Brown by yards per attempt in their first three seasons. Minimum 400 attempts.
5.95 Jamaal Charles
5.39 Paul Lowe
5.13 Gale Sayers
5.08 Larry Johnson
5.08 DeAngelo Williams
5.07 Jim Brown
5.07 Delvin Williams
5.04 Chris Johnson
5.02 Napoleon Kaufman
4.97 Abner Haynes
4.95 Lawrence McCutcheon
4.93 Barry Sanders
The absolute worst of this list is probably Delvin Williams or Larry Johnson, who still went on to become first-team all-pros once apiece after their third years. And Jamaal Charles isn't just on this list - he leads it, and it's not even close.
This doesn't even factor in the fact that Charles is an excellent receiver, too.
I claim that the only RB comparable to Charles in value is Chris Johnson. So the question for you is, do you take a 25-year-old with 867 career carries at a 5.04 ypc clip, or a 24-year-old with 439 carries at 5.95 yards per carry? I'd take the latter, given that a large workload does seems to put "mileage" on a player and reduce his effectiveness.
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