It's really challenging when you get into the details. Ken actually eliminated Nevers based on not meeting his 4 year minimum requirement otherwise I think he would have had him at fullback.Bryan wrote:What are your thoughts on Ken picking Joe Guyon for his 2nd team? Seems like its almost a semantical argument...like how Mike Alstott would rack up pro bowl berths at the FB position. Was Guyon really one of the top 8 backs of the 1920s?
Guyon = 14 TDs scored, 3 TD passes, 13 XPs.
Nevers (3 seasons) = 24 TDs scored, 14 TD passes, 5 FGs, 28 XPs.
Like you noticed, Guyon seems to be a notch below the others, but Ken actually had him at wingback. So if I didn't allow myself to cheat by shifting players into positions they didn't play, mine would be similar to Ken's:
TB: Friedman, Driscoll
FB: Elliot, McBride
WB: Latone, Guyon
BB: Lumpkin, ??
I actually think an argument can be made to just choose the best backs and ignore positions. But, I get the other side - it comes up a lot. Above I list 7 backs and none are Lewellen, yet I think Lewellen is a HOF snub. It would be more comfortable to just list 8 backs. I'd have Lewellen over Guyon and I'd throw in Lambeau (I think my 8 would all have at least 4 seasons if I did that.)
If you have to pick modern 4-3 DEs, are you allowed to choose both from the strong side if you think those are the two best or do you have to choose a player who lines up on the weak side? I don't know if there's a right answer.