- Running backs in football are like first basemen in baseball. Yes, it is great to have one. But take a look at championship teams of the past. My team, the Patriots, won their first two SB's with a patchwork running game led by an aging Antowain Smith. The third one was won by Corey Dillon, a talented head-case who the Pats got for a song. This year, the Steelers won with a running game comprised of an undrafted FA (Willie Parker) and Jerome "Rasputin" Bettis. And, in 2002, the Buccaneers won with Warrick "Duck" Dunn and Mike Alstott, both of whom were good but not world-class.
- Yes, the Ravens won in 2000 with Jamal Lewis, an elite back, and yes he did play a key role. I would submit, though, that he is the exception that proves the rule. Those Ravens won not because of their offense, which was pedestrian and efficient at best. Rather, they won because of their dominant, for-the-ages defense.
- As in all sports, while offense puts asses in the seats and generates sales of merchandise, it is defense that wins championships. Especially in football, where if Mario Williams is as good as advertised - and he was generally considered one of the elite players in this draft - he will go a long way toward making that Texans defense viable.
So I think the Texans made the right call, and I think, when all is said and done, a lot of these idiot sportswriters and talk show hosts will need to reconsider.
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