Originally Posted by Meatloaf:
Since someone(s) made mention of the pass-blocking capabilities of our RBs, and how DW is better than McKinnon at pass-blocking, I thought I'd look it up. Of course, the "Bible" of all football things is PFF, so I used that. And yes, I know many of you totally disdain said site, but it is what it is, so believe it or not.
Anyway, they gave DWilliams a PBlk rating of 36.5, CEH with 45.3, McKinnon with 84.0 and Burton with 83.9. I must say, that with my own eyes, I do think McKinnon is our best pass-blocking back. And yes, I'm surprised DW is so low.
Just thought I'd toss this out there for your heart-felt consideration.
McKinnon has always had a reputation for being a really good blocker, especially for his size. He broke the RB Bench Press record at the combine with 32 reps of 225. Dude is deceptively strong, hope he gets more playing time this postseason. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Chiefnj2:
Playing Hill this past week was incredibly stupid. Clearly injured. The risk greatly outweighed the reward.
You lose that game and you fall to the 3 seed. At that point you play NE (a clearly tougher matchup than Pitt) and then likely go on the road to play Buffalo.
You make your path to the SB significantly more difficult. Moreover, they had no way to know the Colts would lose (or the Bengals) or that the Chargers wouldn't get past Oakland.
There was a possibility of slipping all the way to the 4 seed and playing the Chargers in round 1 with the Bills for you in R2.
That was a bigger win than many will acknowledge and they didn't exactly overuse Hill. He took 14 snaps - fewer than Josh Gordan or Noah Gray. It was an acceptable risk in a game that meant a fair amount, especially at the time the game was played. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Hammock Parties:
Tyreek looked fine at the end of the game, too.
Sounds for all the world like a heel bruise.
A little rest and some pain management and he'll be fine. Adrenaline was able to get him through most of it anyway.
I just don't see any real likelihood that playing on it was going to do more to aggravate it. As such, the 'risk' was minimal. And the reward was pretty significant. [Reply]
Honestly I'd be fine keeping Tyreek on the sideline until the 2nd quarter or even half, depending on how things are going.
Or, conversely, if we do start him I'd be fine pulling him out very early if we get a decent lead, and keeping him warm on the bike or whatever. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Dante84:
Or, conversely, if we do start him I'd be fine pulling him out very early if we get a decent lead, and keeping him warm on the bike or whatever.
I want both Tyreek and Kelce and the OL on a pitch count in all playoff games.
If we're up big, it's time to start rotating players. [Reply]
For a team that's not known for being strong at RB, the Chiefs have a lot of depth there. CEH, Williams, Gore, McKinnon. You could make an argument for any of the four being the best RB on the roster. [Reply]