https://www.pro-football-reference.c...tm#draft::none -- PFR appears to have made their draft search tools $$$ now, so I couldn't limit it to just wideouts.
Burress doesn't count for me because everyone was "in" on him going into his draft year.Ward is one of their first "hits", but it took too long for them to realize it and commit to getting him on the field. Plus that was the same period of time that they were drafting Danny Farmer, Malcom Johnson, Chris Taylor, and Lee Mays. Clearly, whatever the formula is now, they hadn't figured it out yet! That takes us to 2004 and the drafting of a certain starting QB.
In 2006, they draft their new franchise QB a first round WR in Santonio Holmes. Again, I discount him from the "WR Assembly Line" because the entire NFL was pretty hyped on Holmes entering his draft year.
2008 - Limas Sweed. I am not trying to derail the thread with another re-litigation of the Sweed pick. But, for me, this is when the foundation for the "Colbert and Company WR Factory" was initiated. Looking at Sweed's measurables and college tape and you can see the "beta" version of the Steelers WR plan. Especially the idea that if you look for the right traits (size, speed, elusiveness (they tend to gravitate towards guys that returned kicks in college), and what Tomlin calls "natural catchers", etc...I'm sure others can refine this list); you can find WRs outside of the first
2009 - Mike Wallace
2010 - Emmanuel Sanders and Antonio Brown
2012 - they whiff on Toney Clemons. Another in a line of attempts (stretching back to Farmer in 2000) to get a "big" WR.
2013 - Wheaton and another whiff on the "big" WR (Justin Brown)
2014 - they finally put together the pieces on a "big" WR and draft Martavis Bryant
2015 - they try and go back to the Bryant well again and fish out Sammie Coates...so meh?
2016 - Demarcus Ayers...so meh again?
2017 - Juju Smith-Schuster gets the assembly line back on track
2018 - James Washington fits the profile and lots on here like him...but meh?
2019 - Diontae Johnson is Sanders and AB all over again.
2020 - Claypool looks like an even bigger version of Martavis Bryant who importantly does not have mental health and sobriety challenges.
So by my accounting that is 13 WR's drafted since 2009. 8 have been high reward picks and 5 have been average (James Washington) to below average (Clemons, Brown, Coates, and Ayers). I think a trait list of what the team is looking for can be listed out...BUT...interesting correlation that COULD be causation that the Pittsburgh Steelers WR Factory only comes online when they fully shift the offensive philosophy over to a certain franchise QB.
Next 3 games will tell us a ton about Claypool. 3 good teams that know he's coming.
Yeah, he might not get the kind of exploitable matchups that he’s seen so far, like his 4th TD where Ben audibled to take advantage of it. But if we look at some of the catches Claypool has made, some have been uncoverable. His size, strength, concentration, and body control are just objectively there.
Plus he’s a beast on ST. That doesn’t necessarily count towards being a “hit” at WR but it tells me a lot about his physical and mental toughness.
I am totally willing to label Claypool a home run pick, barring injury.
I was hoping he’d be nicknamed Optimus Prime instead
Chase Claypool is the offense's version of Stephon Tuitt.
Meaning, when we drafted him, he "fell" to us in the 2nd round.
Glad we got both of those guys because both are balling right now.
The rise of Chase Claypool.
In just five games played ( 1 game started ), Claypool has been nothing short of impressive.
24 targets, 17 catches ( 70.8% catch percentage ). Impressive on the surface, but as we drill down, many of the passes his way were of the more difficult variety. He's not catching easy check-down passes. He's converting on deep balls and jump balls and thrown a short pass, he's making something happen with serious RAC.
Extrapolated over the season, he's on pace for the following:
54 catches
19.7 yards per catch
1,072 yards receiving
19 touchdowns ( Receiving and Rushing )
In my opinion, he will have more catches and yards than what his current pace shows, as he should be getting more targets, but a pace of 19 touchdowns for a rookie is simply amazing. Can he do it?
How rare would this be? Better than TO's best year, Marvin Harrison's best year, or Calvin Johnson's best year. Better than Ward's, Fitzgerald, or Carter's too. Only Jerry Rice and Randy Moss had more touchdowns than this in just one season each of their historic career. This rookie is on pace to be in gold Jacket company in terms of touchdown scored.
Although he's only played 5 NFL games, it's clear that Claypool has Pro Bowl ability. Whether he advances beyond that depends on his health and QB PLAY, but he sure can become an All-Pro.
I hope Claypool will never be once again in the special team on coverage...I don't want him to be hurt on the special team....
Was Claypool doubled up most of the day? Seemed Johnson and Shuster got most of the reps?
Steelers WR usage:
Diontae Johnson
- 37 routes
- 15 targets
- 7.5 air yards/target
JuJu Smith-Schuster
- 40 routes (75% slot)
- 14 targets
- 6.8 air yards/target
Chase Claypool
- 30 routes
- 1 target
- -4.0 air yards/target
James Washington
- 10 routes
- 1 target
This is exactly why you don't want a prima Donna WR. What one does great one week makes opportunity for the others the next week. Chase will get his turn as teams focus on johnson in coming weeks. And juju is always there when we need it
Sent from my moto x4 using Tapatalk
Merry Christmas
I have no problem with his work today. He sucked their coverage from DJ and Juju who had great games. And don't forget (unlike Juju) he was smart enough to stop and run back through Butler to draw that DPI call on an early drive. If Juju did that today that INT in the endzone doesn't happen and a DPI is called.