Per PFF he had 15 career drops in 39 games.
5 of them happened in 4 games.
5/15 is 1/3
4/39 is 10.25% or roughly 1/10
So how is what you quoted above not true? That I said 1/10 instead of 10.25%? C'mon now.
So facts don't matter when they don't fit your agenda. This is like debating with texags back in the day.
Ok, I will play along for fun. This concept of "big games, at crunch time" as you call it. How would you define it objectively? Once you define it, what was the percentage of opportunities that Worthy had where he made the catch vs where he had a drop? I think if you actually look at the data you would be quite surprised. It's typical for the mind to only remember part of the story. That's the problem with relying on something experiential as opposed to objective facts.
See the thing about stats is that it erases emotion from the equation. Sure he dropped balls when healthy. 10 over 35 games and around 205 catchable attempts. We all saw them. It was right about what you would expect, or slightly better, of any elite college receiver.
Pattern? A lower percentage pattern than most NCAA receivers, but I guess technically a pattern.
This is the oddest conclusion yet. You are either too blinded by emotion or don't pay attention to many elite receivers in college football.
Wow, the lengths you are going to here are insane.
The reality is that even with a broken hand which made it tougher to catch the ball, Worthy was by far the best option to throw passes towards. He never once used the injury as an excuse, and did everything he could to make plays.
The assumptions that you make about Sark and risk of further injury require an incredible leap from fact to fiction. I am genuinely hoping that your pride is the only reason you are still clinging onto this nonsense.
Clearly.