Player Spotlight: Chris Chambers vs. Lee Evans

By Dalton Del Don – Senior Writer

Chris Chambers just finished possibly the worst season a wide receiver has ever had in the history of the NFL. Chambers was targeted 154 times this year, the fourth most in the league. He turned all of those looks into just 59 catches, a historically low 38.3 percent reception rate. Of the top-16 most targeted receivers, every other one eclipsed 1,000 yards, with most in the 1,200 range. And then there’s Chambers, who finished with just 677 receiving yards. Terry Glenn was targeted 44 fewer times, yet accumulated 1,047 yards. And don’t blame poor quarterback play, as the rest of Miami’s receivers combined to catch 63 percent of intended passes. In 64 fewer looks, teammate Marty Booker accounted for nearly 100 more receiving yards and two more TDs, while hauling in 61.1 percent of the passes thrown his way.

In contrast, Lee Evans was probably football’s most productive receiver. While Chambers got 4.4 yards per target, Evans got 9.4, second only to Reggie Wayne (9.6), who had far superior teammates. Defenses needed to worry about stopping Marvin Harrison and the best QB in the game, while Buffalo is bereft of talent. Evans also hauled in six passes for 40 yards or more, and if JP Losman continues to improve (7.1 YPA this year), Evans could easily crack the top-5 as a fantasy WR next year.

Bottom line, Chris Chambers is a dreadful receiver in real football, and it finally translated into the fantasy realm this year. Lee Evans is already a top-5 WR talent in the league, and fantasy owners should take notice, as his numbers will reflect this as soon as next year.

Random question: How do Drew Brees and Carson Palmer finish 2nd and 3rd in Comeback Player of the Year voting? It’s one thing for Brees to rebound from that 24 TD, 7.2 YPA, 16 games played 2005 season, but how about Palmer bouncing back from his 32 TD, 7.5 YPA, MVP-worthy 2005 campaign? Someone get the AP a dictionary.


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6 responses to “Player Spotlight: Chris Chambers vs. Lee Evans”

  1. G Money Avatar
    G Money

    I knew Chambers was bad but not that bad. He was one of the biggest fantasy busts of the year, probably #1 worst. Nice breakdown of his true worthlessness.

  2. Troy Avatar
    Troy

    haha, those comeback #2 and #3 selections were a joke. No Winslow?

  3. Nuke187 Avatar
    Nuke187

    Lest we forget, “comeback” used to mean “suffered a major injury and returned triumphantly.” The voters changed the definition a few years back when they gave the award to Brees (who “came back” from merely sucking) instead of Mark Fields (who missed the previous season due to *cancer* and returned to make the Pro Bowl).

    Most NFL awards, though, are usually travesties. Does anybody really think LT2 is more valuable to his team than Drew Brees? Does anybody really think a Chargers team with Michael Turner would be worse off than a Saints team with Jamie Martin?

  4. RotoScoop Avatar
    RotoScoop

    Good call Nuke. I know it’s just semantics, but my problem was that these injuries were suffered at the end of Week 17 and during the playoffs. What if a guy gets hurt during the offseason? I mean, Carson Palmer literally had a better season last year than this one.

    But as you suggest, the awards given out in general seem to always be off. I might go over this in more detail soon, but I agree with you, no matter how insane LT’s #s were this year, he wasn’t more valuable than Brees.

  5. Robby Avatar
    Robby

    Well, Peyton Manning has been the most valuable player (regular season) to his team the past few years and will probably continue to be for the next few as well.

  6. Keith Avatar
    Keith

    I would vote for Peyton too…take him away, and that Colts team is going to be terrible. Brees wouldn’t be far behind though.

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