skinsfan#33 wrote:welch wrote:Regarding injuries, see
http://www.the-hogs.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=25346The fewer the players, the greater the victory.
Get me a tall, fast, WR, with good had (NOT Tod Pinkston

)
Make Jake can find an ex-Redskin who fellow that Gibbs decoded didn't like to practice. Endinded up in CFL, but was the best receiver, of a poor bunch, that Spurrier brougtin. Charlie Taylor, the greatset of them all (and I'm peparerd to arhue that Talalor was better than Jerry Rice, and Rice was better than any WR playing tody)
Charlie is on my Avatar, thanks again to our atist-in-residentce NC43, along with the finest passer of modern football.
Backto he topic. The Skins have woi before with loads on injuries Thius week the DB's worry me.
Maybe Redskin fans wre spolied by Baugh, Jurgensen, Charlie Taylor, and Art Monk.
Still, an Art Monk / Charlie Taylor clone is on my draft wish-list.es, Charlie: 6-3, 217 pounds, rookie of he year as a RB with a medocre line, and played two-way fotball at Arizona State. Coladhave started as a Redskn strong safety.
Oh, well. I'm so sleepy that I can't type. Just dream of another Charlie T or Art Monk.
Still, we are not toast. Remember when Mike Bass got badly hurt, and was temporaruily paralied? Never okayed again,
Charlie Taylor was the best all time and I agree he was better than Rice.
Who wouldn't want a Art Monk type? Ask yourself who would help this team more right now, Rice in his prime, Monk in his prime or C Taylor in his prime. I would rank it this way: Taylor, Monk, Rice.
With all due respect, you guys are smoking some of that Redskin peace pipe.
You may be able to argue that Charlie Taylor was a better football player than Jerry Rice, because of his versatility, but as far as being a better receiver... no way on Earth. And that's putting it lightly. And Art Monk better than Jerry Rice? The only place that's even possible is in the mind of a dedicated Skins fan.
Rice Taylor Monk
Games--
303 165 224
Top 10 catches(seasons)--
12 9 4
Top 10 rec yds(seasons)--
12 6 3
Top 10 rec tds(seasons)--
12 6 1
Top 10 yds from scrimmage(seasons)--
8 2 0
Top 10 rush/rec tds(seasons)--
9 3 0
All time catches (rank)--
1st 36th 6th
All time rec yds (rank)--
1st 37th 12th
All time rec tds (rank)--
1st 19th 31st
All time yds fm scrimmage--
1st unk 33rd
Pro Bowls--
13 8 3
Postseason) Taylor’s best years were obviously his first few in the league, when he was productive as a runner and receiver. Monk played in 15 postseason games, but outside the Buffalo superbowl, his big games were all in losing efforts. Jerry Rice logged more postseason games than some guys log career games, and his best games were the biggest games:
In 4 Super Bowl appearances, Jerry Rice tallied 39 catches for 589yds and 8tds.
Case closed.
He even scored 1 less rushing touchdown than Taylor on 1/5th as many carries and less than half as many yards. He wasn’t just statistical dominance, he was as big a big game player as there’s ever been, and bigger than most.
Simply put, if the league weren’t so biased towards QBs and RBs when determining the game’s best players, Jerry Rice would be considered the best football player that ever lived. Charlie Taylor and Art Monk were greats, but Jerry Rice is the standard against which all other receivers are measured.
When it comes to the notion that any other receiver that’s ever played is better than Jerry rice, there is no good argument. Not yet.