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Noll, Cowher, Tomlin…fire them all!

You serious?

Contextually, Minnesota’s era was completely different football. LeVeon and AB would have been tremendously athletic, but massively killed by the defenses at that time. Do your research before you respond. The rules then would have them clocked every play.

Kelly, Thomas, and Reed were all “in their prime”, played together and were league leaders. Not to mention they ALL wear Gold Jackets. Ben will be a first ballot for the HOF, AB won’t and LeVeon won’t get in.

Why obfuscate your true intent? You want to compare statistics of players to validate your disdain of Tomlin. It doesn’t matter anymore, you got your wish and he’s gone. Take a breather, you are going to need it when Tomlin gets his gold jacket and you start beating on the long dead horse..
Didn't think you had anything real to justify your position.
Thanks for verifying
 
Didn't think you had anything real to justify your position.
Thanks for verifying
I gave you all the data/statistics you asked for. You just don’t like the end sum of the justification.

Try it this way, YOU provide AB/LeVeon numbers to why they out shine multiple season All-Pros who have gold jackets.
 
I gave you all the data/statistics you asked for. You just don’t like the end sum of the justification.

Try it this way, YOU provide AB/LeVeon numbers to why they out shine multiple season All-Pros who have gold jackets.

Not even close​

PlayerCareer GamesReceptionsReceiving YardsReceiving TDsYards/Game
Antonio Brown14692812,2918384.2 (StatMuse)
Ahmad Rashad1394956,83144*~49.1*
Sammy White1323936,40050~48.5
John Gilliam1513827,05648~46.8


PlayerSeasonsAvg Receptions/SeasonAvg Yards/SeasonAvg TDs/Season
Antonio Brown1277.31,024.36.9
Ahmad Rashad1145.0621.04.0
Sammy White1039.3640.05.0
John Gilliam1134.7641.54.4

🧮 Career Totals & Derived Metrics​

🏈 Le’Veon Bell — Pittsburgh Steelers (2013–2017)

We’re isolating only his time in Pittsburgh (the years he was a Steeler):
  • Seasons: 5 (2013–2017)
  • Games played: 62
  • Total scrimmage yards: 7,996 (rushing + receiving)
    • 2013: 860 rush + 399 rec = 1,259
    • 2014: 1,361 rush + 854 rec = 2,215
    • 2015: 556 + 136 = 692
    • 2016: 1,268 + 616 = 1,884
    • 2017: 1,291 + 655 = 1,946
Per-Season Averages (Steelers)
  • Scrimmage yards/season: ~1,599
  • Games/season: 12.4
  • Scrimmage yards per game: ~129.0

🏈 Thurman Thomas (1988–2000)

Career totals over 13 NFL seasons:
  • Games played: 182
  • Total scrimmage yards: 16,532
Per-Season Averages
  • Scrimmage yards/season: ~1,271
  • Games/season: ~14.0
  • Scrimmage yards per game: ~90.8

🏈 Chuck Foreman (1973–1980)

Career totals over 8 NFL seasons (Minnesota and New England):
  • Rushing + receiving totals: ~9,106 total yards from scrimmage (5,950 rush + 3,156 rec)
  • Games played: Pro Football Reference doesn’t list a simple career GP in our search results, so we infer from his seasonal data that he played about 103 games (1973–1980 totals from PF-R show 12, 13, 14, 14, 14, 11, 9, 6 by season on their page — typical career totals). This is an estimate based on season counts.
Per-Season Averages (8 seasons)
  • Scrimmage yards/season: ~1,138
  • Estimated games/season: ~12.9
  • Estimated scrimmage yards per game: ~88.3

📊 Comparison Table​

PlayerSeasonsScrimmage Yds/SeasonScrimmage Yds/Game
Le’Veon Bell (Steelers)5~1,599~129.0
Thurman Thomas13~1,271~90.8
Chuck Foreman8~1,138~88.3 (est.)
 
I gave you all the data/statistics you asked for. You just don’t like the end sum of the justification.

Try it this way, YOU provide AB/LeVeon numbers to why they out shine multiple season All-Pros who have gold jackets.
Again not close. Numbers are numbers.

🏈 Career Passing Stats (Regular Season)

StatBen RoethlisbergerJim KellyFran Tarkenton
Seasons18 (2004–2021)11 (1986–1996)18 (1961–1978)
Games Played249160273*
Passing Yards64,08835,46747,003
Passing TDs418237342
Interceptions211175266
Completion %~64.4%~60.1%57.0%*
Approx. Career Passer Rating~93.5~84.4~80.0*
 

Not even close​

PlayerCareer GamesReceptionsReceiving YardsReceiving TDsYards/Game
Antonio Brown14692812,2918384.2 (StatMuse)
Ahmad Rashad1394956,83144*~49.1*
Sammy White1323936,40050~48.5
John Gilliam1513827,05648~46.8


PlayerSeasonsAvg Receptions/SeasonAvg Yards/SeasonAvg TDs/Season
Antonio Brown1277.31,024.36.9
Ahmad Rashad1145.0621.04.0
Sammy White1039.3640.05.0
John Gilliam1134.7641.54.4

🧮 Career Totals & Derived Metrics​

🏈 Le’Veon Bell — Pittsburgh Steelers (2013–2017)

We’re isolating only his time in Pittsburgh (the years he was a Steeler):
  • Seasons: 5 (2013–2017)
  • Games played: 62
  • Total scrimmage yards:7,996 (rushing + receiving)
    • 2013: 860 rush + 399 rec = 1,259
    • 2014: 1,361 rush + 854 rec = 2,215
    • 2015: 556 + 136 = 692
    • 2016: 1,268 + 616 = 1,884
    • 2017: 1,291 + 655 = 1,946
Per-Season Averages (Steelers)
  • Scrimmage yards/season: ~1,599
  • Games/season: 12.4
  • Scrimmage yards per game: ~129.0

🏈 Thurman Thomas (1988–2000)

Career totals over 13 NFL seasons:
  • Games played: 182
  • Total scrimmage yards: 16,532
Per-Season Averages
  • Scrimmage yards/season: ~1,271
  • Games/season: ~14.0
  • Scrimmage yards per game: ~90.8

🏈 Chuck Foreman (1973–1980)

Career totals over 8 NFL seasons (Minnesota and New England):
  • Rushing + receiving totals: ~9,106 total yards from scrimmage (5,950 rush + 3,156 rec)
  • Games played: Pro Football Reference doesn’t list a simple career GP in our search results, so we infer from his seasonal data that he played about 103 games (1973–1980 totals from PF-R show 12, 13, 14, 14, 14, 11, 9, 6 by season on their page — typical career totals). This is an estimate based on season counts.
Per-Season Averages (8 seasons)
  • Scrimmage yards/season: ~1,138
  • Estimated games/season: ~12.9
  • Estimated scrimmage yards per game: ~88.3

📊 Comparison Table​

PlayerSeasonsScrimmage Yds/SeasonScrimmage Yds/Game
Le’Veon Bell (Steelers)5~1,599~129.0
Thurman Thomas13~1,271~90.8
Chuck Foreman8~1,138~88.3 (est.)

What kind of comparison analysis is this? You are throwing numbers together just to show volume in totality.

Where are Andre Reed’s numbers? Why are you using #2 receivers (White and Gilliam) in the analysis? Ahmad Rachad and Sammy White numbers were during an era that had absolutely zero the advantages AB had. Completely different type of game was played in the 70’s. Of which AB would have been killed playing against the DBs and LBs of that era.

Comparing RBs numbers in seasons totality? With the avg scrimmage yards used in the dataset. Really? Why are not the top five seasons being used for Thomas and Foreman like you used for Bell? Use the comparison table with Le’Veon eight seasons in the league, not just with PIT. The statistical exercise is simple, but you are conflating the data to fit your thesis.

Hey, I loved Le’Veon just as much as the next PIT fan, but to imply he was on the same level as Thomas is nonsense. Maybe he could have been, had he kept playing for PIT, but he wasn’t clever enough to make the right decision.
 
Again not close. Numbers are numbers.

🏈 Career Passing Stats (Regular Season)

StatBen RoethlisbergerJim KellyFran Tarkenton
Seasons18 (2004–2021)11 (1986–1996)18 (1961–1978)
Games Played249160273*
Passing Yards64,08835,46747,003
Passing TDs418237342
Interceptions211175266
Completion %~64.4%~60.1%57.0%*
Approx. Career Passer Rating~93.5~84.4~80.0*

What is this for? Who was questioning Ben’s numbers? He’s a future 1st Ballot HOF player.
 
What kind of comparison analysis is this? You are throwing numbers together just to show volume in totality.

Where are Andre Reed’s numbers? Why are you using #2 receivers (White and Gilliam) in the analysis? Ahmad Rachad and Sammy White numbers were during an era that had absolutely zero the advantages AB had. Completely different type of game was played in the 70’s. Of which AB would have been killed playing against the DBs and LBs of that era.

Comparing RBs numbers in seasons totality? With the avg scrimmage yards used in the dataset. Really? Why are not the top five seasons being used for Thomas and Foreman like you used for Bell? Use the comparison table with Le’Veon eight seasons in the league, not just with PIT. The statistical exercise is simple, but you are conflating the data to fit your thesis.

Hey, I loved Le’Veon just as much as the next PIT fan, but to imply he was on the same level as Thomas is nonsense. Maybe he could have been, had he kept playing for PIT, but he wasn’t clever enough to make the right decision.
Try again

Statistical Breakdown
  • Le'Veon Bell (Pittsburgh Years): Bell’s 62 games with the Pittsburgh Steelers represent a historical peak for all-purpose production. In that span, he recorded 5,336 rushing yards and 2,660 receiving yards, making him the league leader in yards from scrimmage per game among players with at least 50 games played during that era.
  • Thurman Thomas (Peak Stretch): Thomas’s most productive 62-game stretch encompasses his record-breaking four consecutive seasons leading the NFL in scrimmage yards (1989–1992). Over those four seasons (63 games), he averaged roughly 125 yards per game. Narrowing this to his absolute best 62-game window brings his average to 122.5 yards.
  • Chuck Foreman (Peak Stretch): Foreman’s best 62-game span came from his rookie season in 1973 through the first 9 games of the 1977 season. While he was a pioneer of the dual-threat running back position, leading the NFL in receptions in 1975, the lower-scoring era and 14-game schedules kept his volume slightly below Bell and Thomas.
62-Game Comparison Table
Le'Veon Bell2013–2017 (PIT Career)7,996129.0
Thurman Thomas1989–1992 (Full) + 1993 (Partial)7,597122.5
Chuck Foreman1973–1976 (Full) + 1977 (Partial)6,957112.2
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