The 5 I was referring to was in a season, which I got wrong, it was 6. No I didn't watch it live but I have talked to various people who did, some who watched football religiously, some who just followed Taylor. My argument is that most of his carries came up the gut, and everyone besides you will agree with that.
Before talking to anyone about it and seeing any footage, I thought all they ran was the sweep because thats what is so famous when you talk about the Packers from that day, but they didn't run it as often as you think and it was mostly designed for Hornung.
Its not as easy to gain big plays running between the tackles. Jim Brown was pretty much the first featured back, its hard to say he wasn't, he got more carries and didn't have a guy like Hornung that he had to split time with. Hornung while not elite imo, was well above average in running the ball.
If you want to read pro football reference go look up they opponents eached faced. It basically states that the division he was in was weaker than the division Taylor was in. Brown averaged
4.04 yards per carry against the West, and 5.47 ypc against the East from 1960-1965. The West schedule was pretty balanced for Cleveland during that time, as they played each team at least once over that span and nobody more than twice. Brown had only three 100 yard rushing games out of eleven, and three games with 150+ total yards against the West out of eleven.
vs. NFL East teams
Jim Brown: 109.6 (70 games)
Jim Taylor: 102.0 (12 games)
vs. NFL West teams
Jim Brown: 74.2 (11 games)
Jim Taylor: 81.7 (68 games)
Why is it that in the 2 postseason games I saw he didn't look like an elite talent? tougher defense? When it was all on the line? After looking slightly above average against Detroit the next year against the Giants he averaged 1.14 yards per carry.
I have to go but I will read more on it when I get back. From glancing at it, it appears they are closer to 1a and 1b than 1 and 2. It looks like they are separated by around 7 yards per game. Yes it isn't a huge sample size as the article mentions but its something to think about, as well as the fact that Brown was a closer to a featured back compared to Taylor who had to split his carries a little more.
http://www.pro-football-reference.com/blog/?p=3306
"How bad was the NFL East versus the NFL West during Jim Brown's career? Well, it ranged from being near equal in a couple of seasons, to being downright lopsided in a few others. Jim Brown entered the NFL in 1957 and played his whole career with the Cleveland Browns and in the NFL Eastern Division. During that time, the NFL West Champion won seven out of nine NFL Championship games. Cleveland was a pretty good team for that entire nine year run. Cleveland went 7-10 (with an average margin of -4.4 points) against the NFL Western Division during Brown's career, compared to 71-24-5 against the other teams in the NFL Eastern Division. "