I don't think it's the best way to look at things at all. But on one sunday last year 6 of the 32 teams starters went to 2 colleges. That's pretty good I think.
Not great NFL QBs per se, but highest rates appear to be Michigan State & NC State.
MSU had Stanton, Cousins, and Hoyer all start in the same week a few times.
NC State had Rivers, Glennon, and (kind of) Russ Wilson.
You're going to have to help me out here. He obviously didn't score a TD in the Colts game that he missed with an injury, but in his last 5 starts we went 3-2 losing to the Pats twice. Tyrod had at least a TD in 3 of those games, he had 2 in one of them, and our O scored 2 more TDs that aren't accounted for in Tyrod's stats. How is that incapable of leading the team to even 1?
Can we please stop with the gross exaggeration to the point of being false?
That's a bad game for sure. But literally no QB has a rating that low over any sustained period. The worst for the season last year was Kizer with a 60.5
The latter is the chart I use. All of the values in the base 100 chart are derived from actual trades that have occurred between the 2011 and 2016 drafts. 2017 deals all seem to fall in line with it as well, but they weren't part of the basis for the values.
They went 13-1 twice in his 3 years starting in the SEC. The year after he left they went 8-5, and they've only had double digit wins twice since he left.
Really?? Stafford has 32 career game winning drives (7th among active QBs, and nobody else in the top 10 is from 2009 or later) and he has 26 4th Quarter comebacks (T-4th among active QBs, and nobody else in the top 10 is from 2009 or later).
ESPN Insider published Football Outsiders' Draft Guide for each team. I'll post the Bills needs and a small bit of the commentary for each.
Biggest Need: QB
Quiet Need: LB
Not a Need: RB
Not exactly news on this board, but it's nice to see a national piece that makes some sense I suppose.