I was merely citing Dee Ford (US version) as an example of a superior defensive player. I chose him not as the be-all-end-all but rather because I am an Auburn homer and will tend to use AU players as my first choice. There were obviously better defensive players than Dee Ford over the season as a whole, Moseley being one - my point was that Sam apparently did not deserve the award, as the combine is proving.
Superior player generally? Possibly. Superior performance in 2013? Doesn't appear to be. Clowney's arguably superior over both of them generally, but I'm not giving him SEC DPOY just because he is
usually better or
should be better. It's an award based on their performance for the year...if they don't perform, they don't win.
As far as combine performance goes, maybe he had a bad day. Doesn't refute what he did or didn't do during the season, or what he will or won't do in the future. Plenty of players have had amazing combine performances and turned out to be a bust. Plenty of players have failed to impress at the combine and turned out to be a stud. One day does not a career make.
Dee not only rotated, but had some of the biggest defensive plays of the year for Auburn on the biggest stage, Georgia and Turds being two. All of that coupled with his steady improvement over the year should have made him a better candidate than Sam when you look beyond the numbers. The QB record for most passing yards in a game is usually held by some Div II or III guy for the same reason that Sam's stats looked so good.
Sam rotated as well, so I don't see why this continues to be brought up as a defense of Ford.
As far as Ford having "big plays" against Georgia and Alabama, again, the award is based on performance for the year, not just a few games or a few plays. And although there may have been a handful of plays in those two games that were crucial to winning, look at his overall performance for those two games: 2 tackles and 1 sack.
Also, there wasn't "steady improvement" by Ford over the course of the year. 3 tackles against Arkansas, 2 tackles against Tennessee, 1 tackle against Georgia, 1 tackle against Alabama...that's a decline over the last four games of the regular season. It's a defensive player's job to make tackles, sacks, interceptions, etc. Those appear in the stats. If you don't do a good job defensively, the stats reflect that.
Did he improve his play style or tenacity? Maybe, but if you don't make plays defensively that show up in the stats, then how do you win defensive player of the year? It'd be like giving an RB offensive player of the year because he showed tenacity and physicality against larger defensive linemen when executing his runs, but wasn't actually able to produce yards or score points.
As far as Div II and Div III players having awesome stats, I wasn't aware Sam was in Div II or III. That argument doesn't really apply here.