
Brett Clark
26.2K posts

Brett Clark
@MrBrettClark
Learner. Leader. Dreamer. My tweets are my own.


















Math. Did Luke write this? We just discussed it… If you average the salaries of 175 Running Backs and then average the salaries of 46 Kickers… the data is skewed. Using the base salary of top 3 and the bottom 3 of each… RBs avg $5.5M and Kickers avg $2.2M. You could also use percentages to be more accurate. Running Backs: 58 (33%) out of the 175 make the base salary of $750K. 90 (51%) out of the 175 Running Backs will have a base salary of more than $900K this year. 67 (38%) will have a base salary of over $1M this year. 12 (7%) over $3M and 10 (6%) have a base salary over $4M. Kickers: 16 (34%) make the base salary of $750K. 25 (54%) out of 46 have a base salary of over $1M. 7 (15%) out of 46 have a base salary over $3M. However, zero percent of kickers have a base salary more than $4M… compared to 6% of running backs. When you look at it this way- they both have about the same percentage of the number lowest paid base salaries (33% RB 34% K). A higher percentage of kickers make more than $1M (54% K 38% RB). That being said… the data shows that running backs have a much higher value at the “elite” level, leaving top kickers in the dust. Bringing us back around full circle, showing that the average overall salary of a running back is higher than that of a kicker ($5.5M vs $2.2M) Someone else in the comments said it would be more accurate using 10 player salaries, so I took the bottom 10 and the top 10 of each. (RB avg $4.5M K avg $1.9M). And if I just took 10 total (5 top and 5 bottom)… RB avg $5.5M and kickers $2.2M. Which shows my math checks out. Or maybe it doesn’t? There are so many different ways you could slice it. Also… I’m a writer, not a mathematician, but data does matter and it’s important to compare apples to apples. ❤️



Guns and Roses. 🔥

Free agent guard Shake Milton has agreed to a deal with Minnesota, source tells ESPN.









