All phases.
Not a hole in his game. Then again, plenty here will say they'd take Barry over Emmit. I wouldn't.
Two different guys. Both great. One could do it all, though.
I wish that i could say that, but there is an obvious one.
He's no longer a breakaway home run hitter. He's not quite 2016 version but he is still a fine all purpose back..
But he no longer provides that Adrian Peterson like instant scary threat he shoots through a gap and takes it to the house.
I don't see that 2016 instant acceleration.
- With the 2016 zeke, teams were terrified of him breaking the long one, ..they simply cannot let up for an instant. i don't even see the guy that
easily high- hurdled over whiff tackling defenders. Its a different body frame and a different style.
- But many of us are bias and want to see and believe the best for Zeke, so we grant him the
image of his best, most impressive season
where we saw his full game display ... a home run game breaker that could crack the game open with a 60 yard TD run..
or a quick screen on hsi way to pay dirt...
- This 2020 Zeke, we are seeing the "
angry " runs, the powering, punishing leg-driver that can be difficult to corral when he gets a head steam,
he can be seen flat trampling over a helpless safety in the end zone,..or dragging three ATL defenders on a power run.
- Frankly once we get to at least the five yard line, i tend to automatically count it as a TD, when he gets those touches that close to end zone.
Zeke is just pure hell on a defense nea. the goal line, He has a terrific knack for finding soft spot in such tight quarters and he can be just overpowering.
- Maybe continuously overlooked and underappreciated is his critical pass-blocking and his amazing durability.