But yes, it's plainly obvious to me that Jones warranted more carries - at the expense of anyone else who carried the ball besides McFadden initially, but also at the expense of McFadden. And I'm also certain this would have decreased Jones' ypc and I'm stunned at the push-back this is getting here. But it's also fun to discuss.
Okay, put it another way...
McFadden and Jones were both RBs at Arkansas at the same time. So we can remove coaching differences, system differences, etc. There's no truly obvious talent differential here either. McFadden was drafted higher at 4th overall vs Jones at 22nd, but they were both first-round NFL talents.
Do you believe that the coaching staff used them both interchangeably with regards to playcalling? Or did they call different plays based on whether they had McFadden or Jones on the field? Did the coaches use them identically, or did they call plays suited to each player's strengths. Did they substitute players identically, or did they use one or the other more in certain down/distance, certain field positions, game/score/time situations, etc?
I am asserting that they were NOT used identically, and that usage is the reason why Jones had ~2 ypc advantage. Not that he was fresher, or not that the sample size wasn't big enough. I think Jones had ~2 ypc because the coaches used him in situations and playcalls that had a higher likelihood of being broken for long gains.
I submit that you're right, in one sense. If Jones had gotten more carries, and they were the playcalls that the coaching staff would have ordinarily given to McFadden, his ypc would probably have gone
down. Possibly by more than "expected", as he wasn't suited to the playcalls McFadden got.
However, I submit that the corollary to this is that if McFadden got more carries, and they were the playcalls that the coaching staff would have ordinarily given to Jones, his ypc would probably have gone
up. Possibly not by as much as "expected", as he wasn't as suited to the playcalls Jones got. But still up.