Posts Tagged football

Why Marques Colston Is the NFL’s Most Underrated Receiver

Marques Colston is the most underrated receiver in the NFL

And it’s not even close. 

The New Orleans Saints No. 1 wideout has never made a Pro Bowl or been given All-Pro distinction. While he wouldn’t be considered a secret weapon, the former seventh-round pick from Hofstra doesn’t get the credit he deserves in many circles. 

Hopefully this examination will shed light on Colston’s sterling resumé, especially in relation to well-known, highly-regarded receivers in the league today.

Let’s begin by comparing Colston to three wideouts who are considered among the best in the game, guys who certainly aren’t underrated. 

(They also happen to have joined the NFL around the same time Colston did in 2006.)

Name Career Receptions Per Game Career Yards Per Game  Career TDs Per Game
Greg Jennings 4.42 68.1 .55 
Calvin Johnson 5.30 85.2 .58
Brandon Marshall 5.72 72.5 .42
Marques Colston 5.21 72.5 .57

Surprised? 

Colston’s per-game numbers are clearly quite impressive across the board. In this case, they’re better than Jennings in every category and Colston’s receptions-per-game and touchdowns-per-game averages are on par with the undisputed top receiver in the NFL. 

Jennings, Johnson and Marshall have been named to a combined nine Pro Bowls and three First-Team All-Pro teams.

Remember, the Pro Bowl is far from being the purest practice of correctly labeling the league’s best players, as it’s become somewhat of a yearly popularity contest. 

But the fact that Colston has never been named to one speaks to his public perception and subsequent underrated status.

If 1,000-yard seasons are your thing, Colston checks out favorably in relation to his receiving peers, too. 

He has eclipsed the 1,000-yard mark in six of his seven professional seasons, tied with Reggie Wayne, Roddy White and Marshall for the most 1,000-yard campaigns since 2006. 

Altogether, Wayne, White and Marshall have been named to a whopping, yet deserved, 14 Pro Bowls and three First-Team All-Pro teams. 

The most common criticisms against Colston as an elite receiver are as such, and actually are related: Drew Brees‘ consistently prolific, pass-happy offense inflates Colston’s statistics and his comparatively lower single-season receiving yard career high of 1,202. 

Brees’ quarterbacking brilliance and high-volume passing attack are undoubtedly beneficial to Colston. 

However, New Orleans’ offense is mainly predicated on distributing the football to a wide range of receivers, tight ends and running backs. 

Brandon Marshall 9.62
Greg Jennings 7.64
Calvin Johnson 9.58
Roddy White  9.09
Reggie Wayne 9.57
Marques Colston 8.09
Name Average Targets Per Game Since 2006

While Colston definitely gets his fair share of targets every game and every season, he’s not targeted nearly as much as some of the more prominent receiving names. 

He saw 144 targets in 2007, the most of his career, which is considerably lower than most of the aforementioned top wideouts

Brandon Marshall 194 (2012)
Greg Jennings 139 (2008)
Calvin Johnson 205 (2012)
Roddy White  181 (2011)
Reggie Wayne 173 (2010)
Marques Colston 144 (2007)
Name Career High of Targets in a Single Season

Colston simply hasn’t had the football thrown in his direction as often, which could be part of the reason why his single-season receiving yard career high is lower than most of the household names at his position. 

Also, Colston has been dubbed as more of a chain-moving, possession receiver than a downfield threat during his time with the Saints, something that may have given the impression that he was a boring, underneath receiver incapable of making big plays.

After all, we love big plays.

Actually though, his career yards-per-reception average stacks up with the league’s best.

Name Career Yards Per Reception Average
Brandon Marshall 12.7
Greg Jennings 15.4
Calvin Johnson 16.1
Reggie Wayne 13.5 
Roddy White 14.0
Marques Colston 13.9

Obviously, Colston hasn’t been as vertically dangerous as some of his wide receiver mates, but the notion that he can’t or doesn’t stretch the field is probably overblown, right?

A career yards-per-reception average between Wayne and White is surely respectable to say the least. 

Heck, with the crowd of tremendous receivers in the NFC, there’s a legitimate chance he never makes a Pro Bowl and is never a member of the All-Pro team.

But with years of sustained high-level production and not nearly as much to show for it as his wideout cohorts, it’s easy to see that Marques Colston is the most underrated receiver in the NFL.

 

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Why Marques Colston Is the NFL’s Most Underrated Receiver

Marques Colston is the most underrated receiver in the NFL

And it’s not even close. 

The New Orleans Saints No. 1 wideout has never made a Pro Bowl or been given All-Pro distinction. While he wouldn’t be considered a secret weapon, the former seventh-round pick from Hofstra doesn’t get the credit he deserves in many circles. 

Hopefully this examination will shed light on Colston’s sterling resumé, especially in relation to well-known, highly-regarded receivers in the league today.

Let’s begin by comparing Colston to three wideouts who are considered among the best in the game, guys who certainly aren’t underrated. 

(They also happen to have joined the NFL around the same time Colston did in 2006.)

Name Career Receptions Per Game Career Yards Per Game  Career TDs Per Game
Greg Jennings 4.42 68.1 .55 
Calvin Johnson 5.30 85.2 .58
Brandon Marshall 5.72 72.5 .42
Marques Colston 5.21 72.5 .57

Surprised? 

Colston’s per-game numbers are clearly quite impressive across the board. In this case, they’re better than Jennings in every category and Colston’s receptions-per-game and touchdowns-per-game averages are on par with the undisputed top receiver in the NFL. 

Jennings, Johnson and Marshall have been named to a combined nine Pro Bowls and three First-Team All-Pro teams.

Remember, the Pro Bowl is far from being the purest practice of correctly labeling the league’s best players, as it’s become somewhat of a yearly popularity contest. 

But the fact that Colston has never been named to one speaks to his public perception and subsequent underrated status.

If 1,000-yard seasons are your thing, Colston checks out favorably in relation to his receiving peers, too. 

He has eclipsed the 1,000-yard mark in six of his seven professional seasons, tied with Reggie Wayne, Roddy White and Marshall for the most 1,000-yard campaigns since 2006. 

Altogether, Wayne, White and Marshall have been named to a whopping, yet deserved, 14 Pro Bowls and three First-Team All-Pro teams. 

The most common criticisms against Colston as an elite receiver are as such, and actually are related: Drew Brees‘ consistently prolific, pass-happy offense inflates Colston’s statistics and his comparatively lower single-season receiving yard career high of 1,202. 

Brees’ quarterbacking brilliance and high-volume passing attack are undoubtedly beneficial to Colston. 

However, New Orleans’ offense is mainly predicated on distributing the football to a wide range of receivers, tight ends and running backs. 

Brandon Marshall 9.62
Greg Jennings 7.64
Calvin Johnson 9.58
Roddy White  9.09
Reggie Wayne 9.57
Marques Colston 8.09
Name Average Targets Per Game Since 2006

While Colston definitely gets his fair share of targets every game and every season, he’s not targeted nearly as much as some of the more prominent receiving names. 

He saw 144 targets in 2007, the most of his career, which is considerably lower than most of the aforementioned top wideouts

Brandon Marshall 194 (2012)
Greg Jennings 139 (2008)
Calvin Johnson 205 (2012)
Roddy White  181 (2011)
Reggie Wayne 173 (2010)
Marques Colston 144 (2007)
Name Career High of Targets in a Single Season

Colston simply hasn’t had the football thrown in his direction as often, which could be part of the reason why his single-season receiving yard career high is lower than most of the household names at his position. 

Also, Colston has been dubbed as more of a chain-moving, possession receiver than a downfield threat during his time with the Saints, something that may have given the impression that he was a boring, underneath receiver incapable of making big plays.

After all, we love big plays.

Actually though, his career yards-per-reception average stacks up with the league’s best.

Name Career Yards Per Reception Average
Brandon Marshall 12.7
Greg Jennings 15.4
Calvin Johnson 16.1
Reggie Wayne 13.5 
Roddy White 14.0
Marques Colston 13.9

Obviously, Colston hasn’t been as vertically dangerous as some of his wide receiver mates, but the notion that he can’t or doesn’t stretch the field is probably overblown, right?

A career yards-per-reception average between Wayne and White is surely respectable to say the least. 

Heck, with the crowd of tremendous receivers in the NFC, there’s a legitimate chance he never makes a Pro Bowl and is never a member of the All-Pro team.

But with years of sustained high-level production and not nearly as much to show for it as his wideout cohorts, it’s easy to see that Marques Colston is the most underrated receiver in the NFL.

 

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2013 Fantasy Football Profile and Projection: Saints WR Marques Colston

One of the ways to build a competitive fantasy football team is to draft players that other owners in your league undervalue.

New Orleans Saints wide receiver Marques Colston is often one of those players.

Last season, Colston finished with 83 receptions for 1,154 yards, which ranked 13th in the league, and eight touchdowns. Even better, only 10 receivers scored more fantasy points than Colston in 2012.

With Colston, fantasy owners get a highly productive and consistent receiver even though he lacks the upside to provide elite numbers.

Since entering the league as a seventh-round rookie in 2006, Colston has 1,000-plus receiving yards in six of seven seasons. The only exception was his injury-shortened 2008 campaign, but he was on pace for another 1,000-yard season that year.

Colston has been fairly durable even though he has had multiple knee surgeries. In the past four seasons, he has missed a total of only three games. The 2008 season was the only year that Colston played in fewer than 14 games.

Often working out of the slot, Colston has a knack for finding the end zone. He has caught 58 touchdowns in 102 career games, which is an average of 9.1 per 16 games. Only Arizona‘s Larry Fitzgerald (59) had more receiving touchdowns than Colston during that span.

In an offense where Drew Brees spreads the ball around, Colston is still a lock to get 100-plus targets and lead the Saints receiving corps provided he stays healthy. Even though tight end Jimmy Graham and running back Darren Sproles will get a lot of targets as well, Brees has thrown 1,327 pass attempts for 10,653 yards and 89 touchdowns in the past two seasons.

While I don’t go into fantasy drafts with the mindset of specifically targeting Colston, he’s a player that I’ll gladly roster once he falls further than he should. Based on current average draft position data (ADP) from Mock Draft Central, Colston is the 26th wide receiver and 63rd player overall, on average, off the board in mock drafts.

Despite being drafted as a WR3, he is a safe WR2—and even has the potential to be a low-end WR1, like last season.

 

Fantasy Strength of Schedule

Based on the cumulative fantasy points allowed by their opponents from Week 1 to 16, Colston and the Saints receivers have the league’s least favorable schedule among wide receivers.

 


2013 Stat Projection: 85 Receptions, 1,199 Yards, 9 Touchdowns

 

Also, check out:

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New Orleans Saints: Projecting the Top 5 Offensive Leaders in 2013

Last year amidst the chaos and turmoil that was “Bountygate”, the New Orleans Saints still managed to rack up some serious yardage on offense.

Behind the black eye paint and golden arm of their fearless leader Drew Brees, the Saints offense finished second in the NFL, racking up 6,574 total yards (via ESPN). And for the second year in a row, the team led the league in passing yards per game thanks to a whopping 312.3 yard average.

With head coach Sean Payton and General Manager Mickey Loomis reinstated for the 2013 season, the Saints will be looking to get back to business—making a deep playoff run the process.

But, who will step up and help guide this prolific offense to another monster year? Start the slideshow below and check out the top five projected offensive leaders for the Saints in 2013.

Begin Slideshow

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What Should the New Orleans Saints Do with Kenny Vaccaro?

The New Orleans Saints suffered through a dismal 2012 season, due in no small part to a horrific defense that ranked dead last in the National Football League.

The Saints hope that defense will improve this year under first-year coordinator Rob Ryan, and the team took steps to aid in that transition in the first round of the 2013 NFL draft, selecting Texas safety Kenny Vaccaro with the 15th overall pick.

The question now becomes what the Saints intend to do with the 6’0″ 214-pounder.

It would appear that even the Saints aren’t exactly sure how they’re going to utilize their shiny new toy, at least judging from the recent comments made by head coach Sean Payton to Nakia Hogan of The New Orleans Times-Picayune.

We are excited we were able to get a player we had put in our cloud and spent a lot of time on. With Kenny clearly he’s a guy we felt very comfortable with. I think he is versatile enough to play either one of the safety positions, and certainly a guy who can handle some of the nickel.

There’s good reason for the Saints to be a bit unsure as to where Vaccaro might fit best for them.

The Saints’ pass defense was awful last year, allowing nearly 293 yards per game through the air. As the following table shows, that was due in large part to abysmal play from the safety position.

Rankings courtesy of Pro Football Focus.

Player

Coverage

Run Defense

Pass Rush

Overall

Ranking

Roman Harper

-13.2

-1.3

-2.3

-18.1

87th

Malcolm Jenkins

-8.6

-6.0

-1.1

-19.3

88th

Mind you, these rankings are out of 88 possible players. Harper and Jenkins were literally the two worst players at their position in the National Football League in 2013 according to Pro Football Focus.

For his part, Vaccaro told Hogan he’s willing to help the Saints in any way that he can, and that he feels his versatility as a player will be an asset in that regard.

I’m excited to come down there and play. I’m just real versatile. I can do different things. I don’t think I have many limitations. I can cover and I can run support. I think I can bring that to the team.

That versatility will indeed come in handy, because in this writer’s opinion, it’s not as easy for the Saints as just saying “Kenny Vaccaro is the starting free (or strong) safety,” and plugging him into that spot.

They need to move Vaccaro around.

Malcolm Jenkins, a converted cornerback, isn’t very good in run support, so in base defense and short yardage packages, the Saints could look to line up Harper at strong safety, with Vaccaro manning the free safety spot.

Meanwhile, Harper is a huge liability in coverage. When teams spread the Saints out, or in obvious passing situations, New Orleans could then yank Harper, slide Vaccaro over to strong safety (where he played the majority of his time with the Longhorns) and get Jenkins back onto the field at free safety.

In fact, in certain passing situations, it might even behoove the Saints to leave all three safeties on the field. Vaccaro could man the strong safety spot, Jenkins at free safety and Harper could function as a nickel linebacker in a similar fashion to Bryan Scott (a converted safety) with the Buffalo Bills.

Granted, as safeties go, Harper is terrible in coverage, but that doesn’t mean he wouldn’t have a better chance of covering a tight end over the middle than Curtis Lofton, David Hawthorne or Jonathan Vilma.

The Saints could even slide Jenkins or Vaccaro to the slot and then adjust the safeties accordingly.

The point is that it would be folly for the Saints to pigeonhole Vaccaro at one position. In today’s pass-wacky NFL, the line between free safeties and strong safeties has become blurred. On many teams those names are little more than that: a name.

It’s unfortunate for in-the-box “thumpers” like Harper (who are going the way of the dinosaur), but luckily for the Saints, Kenny Vaccaro very much fits the mold of the new-age safety in the NFL, a player capable of wearing many hats.

Hopefully Payton and Ryan realize this, they’ll avail themselves of Vaccaro‘s versatility, and the team will get the most bang for their buck from their first pick in the 2013 draft.

 

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Projecting the 2013 Impact of Each Saints Selection

Now that the New Orleans Saints have officially brought in five rookies via the draft, it is appropriate to project how each new Saint will fair in 2013. 

Coming into the draft, the Saints were hoping to acquire two starters—one with their first-round pick and one with their third-round pick. It is too early to say for sure if either selection in those rounds will start from Day 1.

It seems unlikely that any of the Saints’ draft picks will start in Week 1 at home against the Atlanta Falcons. Still, four of the five selections are likely to see the field for the team at some point in 2013. 

Here’s how the five project in terms of production and statistics in their rookie campaigns. 

Begin Slideshow

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Saints 2013 Draft: Aggregating Report Cards from the Web

With the 2013 NFL draft in the books, draft analysts have just one more responsibility before they too can close the books on this year’s draft class: Grade the picks.

While I personally trust other draft analysts more than the ones on this list, for sake of ease and notoriety, we have gone with some of the more well known analysts for aggregate report cards of the Saints‘ 2013 draft class.

Here is what some of the experts have said regarding the Saints’ 2013 draft class.  

Begin Slideshow

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Initial Post Draft Depth Chart for New Orleans Saints

As the 2013 NFL draft has come and gone, clarity has been brought as to just what the 2013 New Orleans Saints depth chart will look like. Changes can, and likely will, still be made based upon further free-agent signings, cuts, waived players and perhaps even trades. 

It is undeniable still that a two-deep view of the Saints roster can be had at his point in the offseason. 

Here is the initial post draft depth for the New Orleans Saints. 

Begin Slideshow

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Rufus Johnson to the New Orleans Saints: Instant Video Reaction

Player Name: Rufus Johnson

Position: DE

School: Tarleton St.

Drafted by: New Orleans Saints

Pick Number: Round 6, Pick 15 (183rd overall)

Tune into the video above to see Bleacher Report’s NFL draft experts break down what this pick means to the Saints.

Questions? Comments? Hit us up in the section below!

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New Orleans Saints’ Post-Draft Wish List

The 2013 NFL draft is over. It is time for teams to begin signing the undrafted free agents.

As Sean Payton told the media Saturday after the New Orleans Saints‘ final pick in the sixth round, using the success the team has enjoyed in the undrafted free-agency period is the “No. 1 pitch” to recruiting players. 

The Saints are going hard after certain targeted prospects as this is being written. 

Here are some of the players who should be high on the Saints’ wish list. 

Begin Slideshow

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