When a guy goes out in game 1 of the season on a non-contact hammy after a long run, load management decisions get forced.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑17 Mar 2024 11:41I guess I just find it strange/convenient that for years we complained that coaches haven't utilized Jones enough and now we have a back who coaches probably utilized too much and we act as though their utilization is an inherent trait of each player, not decisions and load management done by coaches.
I don't think that the past utilization tells us a lot about the health and availability of either guy--past or future.
Packers are signing RB Josh Jacobs!
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And that's the sort of single-season recency bias that ties the whole thing together. THIS season, Jones had injuries and availability issues. And so we've re-written his whole career into one where he just couldn't stay healthy. Even though we have already established that over the five seasons that Jones and Jacobs were both in the league, they have played in the exact same number of games.mnkcarp wrote: ↑17 Mar 2024 13:10When a guy goes out in game 1 of the season on a non-contact hammy after a long run, load management decisions get forced.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑17 Mar 2024 11:41I guess I just find it strange/convenient that for years we complained that coaches haven't utilized Jones enough and now we have a back who coaches probably utilized too much and we act as though their utilization is an inherent trait of each player, not decisions and load management done by coaches.
I don't think that the past utilization tells us a lot about the health and availability of either guy--past or future.
Meanwhile, Jacobs is coming off of his worst season as a pro by many metrics, and the recency bias is being applied less heavily toward those concerns because a) his team was a chaotic mess, and b) we didn't actually go through the season watching and relying on him ourselves, so we can more easily write it off.
Jones and Jacobs have been utilized very differently. I think both career trajectories lead to questions moving forward. So when people say that "availability is the best ability" as their primary differentiation between these two players, to me that is a muted difference and not one that justifies the contractual difference and final decision made.
And that's all I'm saying--if the PRIMARY reason you make this move is availability, then I think you're mis-reading the record and miscalculating the risk of a player with Jacobs' resume versus one of Jones' resume.
Food for thought.
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Rush Rush Rush Rush Rush Rece Rece Rece Rece Rece Rece Rece Rece
Rk Player G GS Att Yds Y/A TD 1D Tgt Rec Yds Y/R TD Ctch% Y/Tgt 1D
1 Josh Jacobs 73 72 1305 5545 4.2 46 286 254 197 1448 7.4 0 77.6 5.7 62
2 Aaron Jones 97 85 1177 5940 5.0 45 296 364 272 2076 7.6 18 74.7 5.7 101
The part of the record we don't misread is that Jacobs has carried more of a load in specific seasons and shown out when he did it. Whether AJ could ever have done what Jacobs did is a question that cannot be answered, but we know our coaches didn't think so, and so he didn't. And I'd bet the house he won't going forward, either.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑17 Mar 2024 13:27And that's all I'm saying--if the PRIMARY reason you make this move is availability, then I think you're mis-reading the record and miscalculating the risk of a player with Jacobs' resume versus one of Jones' resume.
Before "legal tampering" I was secretly thinking to myself that, I wish the Packers would resign Aaron Jones and then go out and sign D. Henry to a team friendly deal. Doesn't matter now, but the idea of it seemed like a good idea to me. Of course AJ would have been gone.
I see all sides here in this current discussion. Obviously I am just hoping it works out really good for the Pack and Josh Jacobs. Generally speaking I really don't disagree with much that has been said.
I see all sides here in this current discussion. Obviously I am just hoping it works out really good for the Pack and Josh Jacobs. Generally speaking I really don't disagree with much that has been said.
There's no doubt Jones has been a significantly better runner on a play to play perspective, averaging 0.8 yards more per carry. It was even worse last season at 1.16 yards per attempt.lupedafiasco wrote: ↑17 Mar 2024 10:55I liked Jones. Great person and great player. The way Packers fans talk about him is like he was AP. Jacobs will be a better back simply because of availability and consistency from a play to play perspective.
The Packers will most likely be able to use Jacobs on more attempts but they won't be more efficient with him.
Never possible to compare apples to apples. I'm curious what Jacobs will do with a passing attack that can actually keep defenses from selling out to stop him (and a line that can keep them out of the backfield).CWIMM wrote: ↑18 Mar 2024 05:11There's no doubt Jones has been a significantly better runner on a play to play perspective, averaging 0.8 yards more per carry. It was even worse last season at 1.16 yards per attempt.lupedafiasco wrote: ↑17 Mar 2024 10:55I liked Jones. Great person and great player. The way Packers fans talk about him is like he was AP. Jacobs will be a better back simply because of availability and consistency from a play to play perspective.
The Packers will most likely be able to use Jacobs on more attempts but they won't be more efficient with him.
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I would have done it differently. Keep Jones, let Dillon go and sign Jacobs.
That would have made a big (as opposed to a marginal change) improvement to the team.
That would have made a big (as opposed to a marginal change) improvement to the team.
Says he wants to catch more passes
hopefully means we get this version
hopefully means we get this version
maybe, thing is we've been far thinner at WR with Aaron Jones who is a fine receiver too and used him sparingly in that capacity, and now we are loaded up pretty good with receivers, so he may not see the pitches as he hopes to.
I hope they at least explore that dimension of his game. He literally has no receiving TDs, despite a solid receiving record.
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Yeah that’s a bonkers stat given his demonstrated ability in the passing game in college and some clips in the pros.
We don’t have to use him as a slot receiver to better utilize his passing game abilities than the raiders did; and I think we will.
Might be why Jacobs chose us too. Saw Jones and Dillon get a ton of receptions.YoHoChecko wrote: ↑18 Mar 2024 13:59Yeah that’s a bonkers stat given his demonstrated ability in the passing game in college and some clips in the pros.
We don’t have to use him as a slot receiver to better utilize his passing game abilities than the raiders did; and I think we will.
I expect it, in 21 and 22 Jones had 6 and 5 receiving TD's, last year just one but he was hurt, no reason not to think Lafleur will get him a few goal line passes.
Dillon to should get a few, to me this is basically the same backfield, replacing Jones with Jacobs assures the same or better production from what we do the most, play action, Jacobs will demand the same respect Jones did from opposing defenses.
The only thing that really matters is...........Where does he get drafted in fantasy? PPR of course.
I believe the passing offense benefitted from Aaron Jones late last season. In my opinion Jacobs needs to provide such a spark to the passing offense this season as well for them to perform at a high level. We'll see if he will be able to make that work.
Unfortunately that would have resulted in a significant higher cap hit though.TheSkeptic wrote: ↑18 Mar 2024 07:26I would have done it differently. Keep Jones, let Dillon go and sign Jacobs.
That would have made a big (as opposed to a marginal change) improvement to the team.
Going off his prior contract, yes. However, everybody, including Jones, knew the 2024 number was just a placeholder number for a reworked deal. As it worked out for MN, the cap number is not crippling nor is Jones going to be a long term cap nuisance for them.CWIMM wrote: ↑21 Mar 2024 03:19Unfortunately that would have resulted in a significant higher cap hit though.TheSkeptic wrote: ↑18 Mar 2024 07:26I would have done it differently. Keep Jones, let Dillon go and sign Jacobs.
That would have made a big (as opposed to a marginal change) improvement to the team.
The Packers still have $20m+ in available 2024 cap space. As more information comes out, it appears the Packers FO was just intent on moving on from Aaron Jones and it appears to have less and less to do with any contractual or cap impacts.
Even if the Packers and Jones would have agreed to a deal like he signed with the Vikings it would have resulted in a total of $5.7 million of new money counting against the cap at some point compared to them re-signing Dillon.APB wrote: ↑21 Mar 2024 07:00Going off his prior contract, yes. However, everybody, including Jones, knew the 2024 number was just a placeholder number for a reworked deal. As it worked out for MN, the cap number is not crippling nor is Jones going to be a long term cap nuisance for them.
The Packers still have $20m+ in available 2024 cap space. As more information comes out, it appears the Packers FO was just intent on moving on from Aaron Jones and it appears to have less and less to do with any contractual or cap impacts.
Ok, sure, but $5.7 mil "at some point" is about as "significant" as a popcorn fart in a hurricane in today's cap age.CWIMM wrote: ↑22 Mar 2024 01:58Unfortunately that would have resulted in a significant higher cap hit though.APB wrote: ↑21 Mar 2024 07:00Going off his prior contract, yes. However, everybody, including Jones, knew the 2024 number was just a placeholder number for a reworked deal. As it worked out for MN, the cap number is not crippling nor is Jones going to be a long term cap nuisance for them.
The Packers still have $20m+ in available 2024 cap space. As more information comes out, it appears the Packers FO was just intent on moving on from Aaron Jones and it appears to have less and less to do with any contractual or cap impacts.