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Consensus Cheat Sheet, pick #5


Skippy
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This is the Consensus Cheat Sheet voting thread that you have stumbled into. This is very easy but please follow my request to help make this easy on those of us that are tracking this thing.

 

Post you choice for the pick, (preferably in bold), separate from any commentary you want to add. Commentary is okay with your post for your pick but please try to refrain from open discussion in the voting threads. If you really want to debate the pick, (that is fine and encouraged), either open a thread and call it CCS discussion on pick whatever or look for a discussion thread that is already open.

 

If you need to see the scoring or other particulars that this redraft cheat sheet is being built around then check right here.

 

Results from last vote:

 

Clinton Portis - 42 (46%)

Tiki Barber - 33 (35%)

Edgerrin James - 13 (14%)

Carnell Williams - 2 (2%)

Steven Jackson - 2 (2%)

Rudi Johnson - 1 (1%)

 

 

---------------------------------

2006 Consensus Cheet sheet

 

1. Larry Johnson, RB KC

2. LaDainian Tomlinson, RB SD

3. Shaun Alexander, RB SEA

4. Clinton Portis, RB WAS

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Ronnie Brown

 

Reason: He's young and Hudson Houck

With the Chargers in 2004, Houck helped to revitalize an offensive line which featured five new starters from the previous year. The Chargers ranked tenth in the NFL in total offense, including a No. 6 finish on the ground, as they averaged 136.6 yards rushing per contest. LaDainian Tomlinson ran for more than 1,300 yards in each of Houck’s three years there, including more than 1,600 in his first two. The Chargers’ line permitted just 21 sacks in 2004, the fourth-lowest total in the NFL and the eighth-fewest in that franchise’s 45-year history. Overall in Houck’s three seasons with the Chargers, the offensive line allowed an average of only 24.6 sacks per season. Their total of 74 sacks over this three-year period is the fourthlowest in the NFL over this stretch.

 

Houck joined the Chargers following a nine-year stint as offensive line coach with the Dallas Cowboys (1993-2001). This included four years (1994-97) when he also held the title of assistant head coach. Over this nine-year period, the Cowboys permitted a total of only 203 sacks, the lowest figure in the NFL. They yielded less than 20 sacks three times and less than 30 on six occasions. During Houck’s tenure in Dallas, six different offensive linemen made a total of 22 trips to the Pro Bowl. This group included Larry Allen (7), Nate Newton (5), Erik Williams (4), Ray Donaldson (2), Mark Stepnoski (2) and Mark Tuinei (2). The unit helped Emmitt Smith to a pair of NFL rushing titles over this nine-year stretch as he ran for more than 1,000 yards each time.

 

Prior to his stint with the Cowboys, Houck spent one year (1992) tutoring the offensive line with the Seattle Seahawks, when Chris Warren rushed for 1,017 yards, the first time in his career that he reached the 1,000-yard mark. This came on the heels of another successful nineyear run, with the Los Angeles Rams from 1983-91. Over his nine-year stint with the Rams, there were seven different individual 1,000-yard rushing seasons and four individual league rushing titles, including an NFL-record 2,105 yards by Eric Dickerson in 1984. Over this stretch, five different Rams offensive linemen were voted to a combined 21 Pro Bowls, including Jackie Slater (7), Doug Smith (6), Kent Hill (3), Dennis Harrah (3) and Tom Newberry (2). In the final three years of Houck’s tenure with the Rams, quarterback Jim Everett passed for more yards than any other signal caller over this span and he also did not miss a start from 1988-91.

 

 

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I'll let

 

Tiki Barber

 

slide just ahead of Edge here, but it really is a tough decision

 

 

 

I agree. Edge and Arizona are too big a question mark right now for a #5 pick, so TIKI.

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All you people that do not study history are doomed to repeat it. You will be F'ed by Tiki once again.

 

Tiki Barber

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