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Milanos Milano

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Everything posted by Milanos Milano

  1. Yeah, which is lower than most of the other spots where RB is taken. I’d rather take my chances given the elite club Hall belongs to.
  2. It’s a category where only the freakiest of athletes are found. Of course it’s going to be a small sample size. AP, JT, Edgerrin, and Sanders is great club to be in. Only Tevin Coleman is the outlier. Lol it would probably go unread or in the spam file haha.
  3. There is no place to read it because it’s my own doing. As far as I know the three metrics being used together hasn’t been done anywhere online. It’s only happened a handful of times. It’s not a large sample size. It’s elite company.
  4. Statistics is shilling? If I’m wrong, prove I’m wrong.
  5. It does have a correlation if it’s coupled with an elite RAS score and great college production that I outline earlier. All 3 used together is the best formula for NFL success that I’ve found to date. If you know one that is better, let me know.
  6. Even if they meet the metrics of RBs like AP, JT, Edgerrin, and Sanders? Name a better correlator.
  7. I know that RAS doesn’t mean everything, that’s why I included the 3 metrics I provided. You are right, Rachaad is to slow for my metrics. It doesn’t mean he can’t become a good pro, it just means the bust % is higher. The only scrubs I could fine so far is Tevin Coleman. But like I said, it’s 80%+ success rate. Which not many better correlations. All the RBs I listed had a RAS better than 9. And Barry Sanders supposedly broke the gauge lol.
  8. Lol @NewEraI’m still waiting for these LOTS of RBs that stunk that met my metrics.
  9. Nobody in the draft meets my 3 metrics other than Breece Hall. Kenneth Walker is the closest and his metrics profile matches Reggie Bush the best. It’s possible to have a great NFL career without meeting it, but the risk % bust increases.
  10. I just want a RB that meets all 3 of my metrics because they foretell of a good NFL career if they stay healthy. I have the stats to back it up. Breece Hall is in good company.
  11. They didn’t meet all 3 of my metrics.
  12. Which is why he was a bad draft pick. He does nothing elite and can’t get outside.
  13. A 40 below 4.4 ? And a RAS above 8 and at least 2 years of solid production 1,400+ or 1 year 1,800+ ? List them. There aren’t many. Runners like Reggie Bush and Darren McFadden are the floor.
  14. According to the statistics, Reggie Bush and Darren McFadden are the floor.
  15. Edgerrin James, LT, AP, Barry Sanders, and JT all had roughly the same metrics as Breece Hall. That’s good enough for me at 25.
  16. That’s his base minimum. 3 seasons at over 1k seasons is the bare minimum that’s to be expected given his metrics. The vast majority of the sample sizes were HOF candidates or candidates on their way of making a HOF case.
  17. You got me, it doesn’t make sense to me. By all historical accounts, he’s in the upper echelons with some of the biggest names out there.
  18. It’s not just about the general RAS score, you have to pair it with other metrics. They must have at least 2 highly productive college seasons or 1 phenomenal season 1,800+ . And an elite 40 time. Over 80% of the RBs in the dataset that met those criterias had at least 3 good NFL seasons and most were top 30 all time RBs or on their way to becoming a top RB. I posted a link a few pages back.
  19. I can’t vouch for what other people have said in the past. I’m telling everyone based on the statistical metrics I’ve outlined, only a handful of RBs have done it and the vast majority of them were very very good RBs. To me, that is worth the 25th pick alone.
  20. Imagine knowing that Breece Hall has the same RAS, college production, and 40 time as 5 of some of the top NFL RBs to every play the game (Edgerrin, Sanders, LT, AP, and JT) and thinking Hall isn’t worth a 25th pick. If people don’t believe my statistical analysis, they can go through the entire dataset themselves.
  21. Laugh all you want. Whether the Bills take Hall or not, he will be a HOF RB if he stays healthy. The statistics are eye popping.
  22. Based on historic data, Hall is in HOF worthy discussion already. Every great NFL player with the metrics Breece Hall has went on to do great things if they remained healthy.
  23. Why would you vomit my post? Statistics are statistics. What I said is factually correct. There aren’t many RBs that have the metrics that Breece Hall does, and the ones that do were elite. His metrics of college production and 40 time aren’t elite. Statistically he isn’t on the same level as Breece Hall, and the RB dataset and NFL production agrees. Breece Hall is in the upper echelons with near all time greats.
  24. Oh it’s happening. Breece Hall’s statistics are eye popping. His RAS, 2 years of major production, and 40 time statistically translate very very well to the NFL. So much so, that he is in Edgerrin James, AP, LT, JT, and Barry Sanders territory. He’s in good company.
  25. I have a statistical breakdown that puts Hall in the Edgerrin James, AP, LT, JT echelon category. RAS+2 years of elite college production+ 40 times are all matches. Only so many rushers hit that trifecta. There are other metrics I used, and they all point to at least 3 years of 1,000 yards or more in the NFL if he remains healthy. It’s a 80%+ probability. At 25 that’s a bargain.
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