Knee-Jerk Fantasy Observation: Trade Fast Willie Parker If You Can…Fast

willie-parker-fantasy update - may lose starting job to mewelde mooreLadies and gentleman, we are one game into the NFL and fantasy football seasons and I am already issuing my first mea culpa.

In my Week 1 Start Em-Sit Em column from earlier this week, I recommended Pittsburgh running back Willie Parker, seen at your left getting flattened by a throng of Titans, as a solid play against Tennessee in the Thursday night season opener.

My reasoning certainly sounded good to me at the time, but after Parker’s 13 carry, 19 yard performance last night…I feel a little bit like Nick Nolte’s mugshot. 

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After citing Parker’s strong start to the 2008 season, plus his solid return immediately after a midseason injury, this is what I wrote:

I think Pittsburgh and coach Mike Tomlin will want to establish their running game early in the 2009 season and will take advantage of Parker’s fresh legs to do so. You may want to think about trading Fast Willie after Week 3 or 4, because he tends to wind down, but this is a week to take advantage of having him on your roster.

I was right on the first part. The Steelers tried to establish the run, and they tried to establish power running between the tackles. The problem is that running between the tackles is not Willie Parker’s forte, nor is it something he seems all that excited about doing. Add to that the fact that the Steelers are struggling along the offensive line and, well, 13 carries for 19 yards seems like a pretty reasonable outcome.

But now comes this update on Willie Parker, from Pro Football Talk:

In the wake of Thursday night’s regular-season opener, we’re hearing that the sun could soon be setting on Parker’s tenure as the team’s go-to tailback.

The scuttlebutt in the wake of the Week One game is that Parker seems to be reluctant to run between the tackles.  

That’s not the best way to start a contract year.

Florio explains that because of Parker’s growing reluctance and inability to be a between-the-tackles runner, the Steelers may soon turn to Rashard Mendenhall Mewelde Moore as their feature back. That’s right, the Steelers’ 2008 1st round pick Rashard Mendenhall may not even be the guy to fill in for Parker if he’s replaced.

How soon before we can officially label Mendenall a bust? (Perhaps we should ask this guy his opinion first…)

But getting back to Parker, from a fantasy standpoint this is clearly not good news. The following article by Jason Cole of Yahoo Sports echoes many of the growing number of real-life and fantasy concerns about Willie Parker.

The Steelers were able to eek out a victory last night with Ben Roethlisberger throwing for over 300 yards, but they still only produced 13 points. Granted, Tennessee has a strong defense — and may not skip a beat without Albert Haynesworth — but the Steelers want to control the ball and the clock. Less than two yards per carry and an aversion to inside running is not going to get that done.

So my advice to Willie Parker fantasy owners: float some trade offers, and do it right now. Some more astute owners in your league will shoot you down immediately, and with good reason. But there may be other owners who a) like to stockpile backs, b) who owned Parker a couple of years ago, or c) who give the Titans’ D a lot of credit and consider last night’s performance an anomaly.

The other option is to wait until after Week 6 to trade Parker. The Steelers face the Lions and Browns back-to-back in weeks 5 and 6. Whoever is running the ball for the Steelers will no doubt have success in those two games. If it’s still Parker toting the rock full-time, his value could increase. The risk you run is that he may already have been relegated to third down duty by then, at which point he would be nothing more than waiver wire fodder.

If you can find an owner right now with a void at running back who was high on Parker in the preseason — and there were some out there — see what you can get in return. You may not get exactly what you want, but it may be your only way to salvage value for Parker before he’s lost his starting job for good.

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* – Willie Parker photo credit: Reuters via DayLife

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About Jerod Morris

A proud graduate of Indiana University, Jerod Morris founded Midwest Sports Fans in August of 2008 and has been its Managing Editor every day since. Follow him on Twitter (@JerodMorris) for MSF updates, sports discussion, and a compelling daily assortment of funny and interesting links.
In addition to his work at MSF, Jerod hosts the fast-growing Indiana basketball postgame show The Assembly Call and provides regular music recommendations at IndieChristmas.com. He also helped develop the Synthesis Managed WordPress Hosting platform on which MSF and all of his other sites are run.

  • http://www.superfan99.com Superfan99

    This is general overreaction to the only real game we have seen so far. Parker struggled mightily last year against the Titans, only to come back and rush for 260 yards and three scores in his next two.

    If anything trade FOR Parker right now, because is value is in the basement. The Steelers have the following games left on their schedule: @CIN, @DET, Cle, @DEN, Cin, @KC, Oak, @CLE, GB, @Mia.

  • http://www.midwestsportsfans.com JRod

    @Superfan99,

    True, Parker did struggle against Tennessee last year, carrying 19 times for 31 yards. So perhaps reacting strictly to this game is unwarranted.

    But, there are other troubling signs.

    Since Parker burst onto the scene in the 2004-2005 season, look at how his yards per carry has dropped:

    04-05: 5.8
    05-06: 4.7
    06-07: 4.4
    07-08: 4.1
    08-09: 3.8
    09-10: 1.5 (through only one game)

    He also only has 7 TDs over the past two seasons, and his inability run inside kills any chances of goalline TDs. With numerous reports citing how slow Parker looked last night (perhaps tentative is the more operative word), chances are he will struggle to get the long TD runs he had in the past.

    Also, consider that Parker had only 3…3!…receptions out of the backfield last year. Add it all up and it equates to a one-dimensional back whose one dimension…speed…is either diminishing or not being utilized properly.

    And if he’s out of a starting job or splitting carries, will he ever be more than a flex player at best over the course of the season?

    The truth is that my recommendation of Parker for Week 1 was probably an overreaction to his fast start last year. Certainly, Parker will do better against defenses less stout than Tennessee’s. But it’s pretty clear that his best times are behind him, and he doesn’t contribute receptions or TDs to make up for his dwindling yardage (93.4 to 87.7 to 71.9 yards per game over the last three years).

    That’s why I think if you can find a taker now, and get decent value in return, I’d jump at it.

    Source for stats: http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/players/7073/career;_ylt=AnWSzm_ukZKvCtyaV2U6WhD.uLYF