re
[edit: woops, I posted twice but deleted the first, identical post. the second one is here (it's the same text)]
That might not be necessarily true, and since you bring up completion %, I would like to offer Pittsburgh's QB as an example. Big Ben has a very high career regular season completion% and QB rating, but that is largely because he has had a dominant running offense, and he has not had to make difficult throws on a regular basis. Another example is batting average in baseball. Two players can bat .350, but if one only has 100 at-bats in the 9th hole and the other has 500 at-bats at cleanup, their batting average does not indicate that their contact skills are equal.
For tight ends, it is difficult to look only at balls thown and balls caught and try to draw any conclusions about a player's hands or ability as a receiver. There are a few variables that can greatly affect this number:
1. Being a team's #1 option and facing constant double teams, versus being a team's #3 option and facing a team's lesser coverage player.
2. Having a bad QB who throws to you when you are not open, or is not accurate in general when throwing.
3. Running easy short curls or flat patterns, as opposed to attacking the defense with mid or long patterns.
4. Easy and tough catches may not average out among all players over the course of a season, because tight ends are used so differently by every team.
I think it's going a little overboard to believe Graham is as good a pass catcher as Antonio Gates. We are talking about a player who has averaged 2 catches a game in his career, and who is sometimes subbed out for defensive players at the goal line. If he truly had great hands, then Dan Graham should be the highest paid tight end in the game, since it would make him a great receiver as well as blocker. Due to his injuries, statistics, and use in goal line situations, I think some can agree that Dan Graham isn't the complete package that some have claimed him to be.
For being an outstanding blocker, I would value Graham at slightly higher than 2Mill, but I think his skills are replaceable. I don't buy the argument that he is a multi-dimensional threat. If he were, we would be arguing about whether Graham was worth 4+ million or not, instead of somewhere between 1.5-3million. Finally, since Graham has been here, I have never associated him with being a key 3rd down target, or a weapon in the red zone (with the exception of a string of games in 2003, I believe).
I am not anti-Graham. I know he is a good player, but I feel that some of his skills have been inflated here. I guess I should mention, so people can have an idea of how I view players, that I thought letting Adam and Willie go were the right moves, despite my sentimental attachments to them. I'll admit that I tend to take a more ruthless approach to player evaluations, and try to keep my own subjectiveness out of things, which sometimes skews my perspective.