
Originally Posted by
soulman
Sayin' it don't make it so. I think whoever wrote that should check his stats because I don't understand how a team that rushes for 1700 yards and averages 4.6 ypc can do that behind a line that blocked poorly. That means only 281 runs actually gained yardage and their average then climbs to 6.1 ypc. Barber was the only back to average less than 4.0 ypc mostly because he got the majority of the short yardage carries and Forte had the longest run from scrimmage, 46 yards.
Even if we accept that as being true where's the catastrophe? They gained yardage on 76% of their plays, averaged 6.1 ypc on those plays and had a top ten rushing offense. I wouldn't call that a catastrophe. I'd say somebody had to be blocking someone some of the time. My guess is that he's including the yardage lost on sacks and the number of sacks in his calculations. Those are not rushes. They're charged against passing yardage.
My calculations are based on just what the three RB's did. I didn't include QB scrambles where the average ypc on those runs would tend to be higher because it doesn't measure the efficiency of the run blocking. I question the accuracy of Seifert's report. He's grinding his axe over Webb and the rest of the line gets unfairly drawn in and he goes looking for data to support his position. Sorry but the true stats don't jive. When a team runs for 1700 yards and averages over 4.5 ypc run blocking can't be "catastrophic". The Bears run blocking was okay. It was the pass blocking that sucked. Even Webb is fair run blocker.