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Everything posted by Mikie2times
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How many sacks a team allows in a given year has a lot to do with how many passes a team attempts. So if you’re going to evaluate an offensive line, a much better indication of their ability is average number of pass attempts per sack, as opposed to overall sacks allowed. What I did was find the average number of pass attempts per sack for every team and year from 2002-2005. Below is the best 15 seasons, and worst 15 seasons teams have registered during that time frame. I also combined each teams stats to find it's overal pass attempts per sack average since 2002. Keep in mind the NFL average for this statistic from 2002-2005 is a sack every 14.37 attempts. Top 15 Year......Team...............Pass Attempts per Sack 2003......Detroit...........................53.45 2004......Green Bay......................42.71 2005......Indianapolis....................37.89 2004......Indianapolis....................37.64 2004......Denver...........................34.73 2003......Indianapolis.....................29.95 2005......Green Bay.......................28.86 2002......Detroit............................28.85 2002......San Francisco..................25.95 2003......Tampa Bay......................25.74 2002......Indianapolis.....................25.70 2003.......Kansas City.....................25.52 2003......Green Bay.......................24.89 2005.......Cincinnati.......................24.07 2002.......Tennessee.......................23.81 Bottom 15 Year......Team...............Pass attempts per sack 2005......Houston.............................5.76 2002......Houston.............................5.88 2004......Chicago.............................7.14 2005......Minnesota..........................7.57 2004......Atlanta..............................7.90 2002......Dallas................................8.72 2005......San Francisco.....................8.84 2005......NY Jets...............................9.11 2004.......NY Giants...........................9.13 2005.......Buffalo...............................9.44 * 2004.......Houston.............................9.61 2003.......Buffalo...............................9.84 * 2004.......Pittsburgh...........................9.94 2003.......Baltimore..........................10.12 2005.......St. Louis............................10.51 2002-2005 (From worst to first) TEAM........Pass Attempts per sack (2002-2005) Houston …………7.8 Chicago …………10.5 Buffalo ………….10.7 * Minnesota………10.8 Atlanta ………….11.2 Baltimore………11.8 Dallas ………….12.1 St. Louis…………12.5 Pittsburgh………12.6 Cleveland………13.2 Washington……13.4 NY Jets ………….13.5 Arizona ………….13.5 New Orleans…..13.6 Carolina………….14.2 NY Giants…………14.4 San Francisco….14.4 Jacksonville………14.6 Tampa Bay………14.7 Philadelphia………14.8 Miami………….......14.9 Oakland …………..15.4 Seattle ………….. 15.5 Cincinnati………….16.7 Tennessee…………18.0 New England……..18.6 Kansas City……….18.6 Denver …………...18.7 San Diego…………..20.5 Detroit …………......21.5 Green Bay…………..27.8 Indianapolis…………31.2
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An alternative QB ranking system
Mikie2times replied to Mikie2times's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Thanks for the kind words, here is the category %Positive Plays as it compares to completition %, If you would like to see others let me know. These aren't the actual values of the stat, just how each player ranked overall in both areas. In the NFL QB rating completition % makes up 25% of the overall value. Name----------------------------%Positive Plays--------------------COMP % Carson Palmer--------------------------1--------------------------------1 Peyton Manning-------------------------2--------------------------------2 Marc Bulger-----------------------------9-------------------------------- 3 Drew Brees------------------------------7--------------------------------4 Brian Griese-----------------------------5--------------------------------5 Daunte Culpepper----------------------15-------------------------------6 Drew Bledsoe----------------------------8--------------------------------7 Kurt Warner-----------------------------11-------------------------------8 Brett Favre-------------------------------6--------------------------------9 Matt Hasselbeck-------------------------10-------------------------------10 Trent Green------------------------------14------------------------------11 Steve McNair----------------------------12--------------------------------12 Anthony Wright--------------------------16-------------------------------13 David Carr-------------------------------20-------------------------------14 Jake Plummer----------------------------4--------------------------------15 Ben Roethlisberger----------------------13-------------------------------16 Tom Brady-------------------------------17-------------------------------17 Jake Delhomme-------------------------19--------------------------------18 Trent Dilfer-------------------------------21-------------------------------19 Donovan McNabb------------------------18--------------------------------20 Chris Simms-----------------------------24--------------------------------21 Byron Leftwich---------------------------22--------------------------------22 Mark Brunell-----------------------------23--------------------------------23 Michael Vick------------------------------3---------------------------------24 Joey Harrington-------------------------26---------------------------------25 Josh McCown----------------------------25---------------------------------26 Aaron Brooks----------------------------27---------------------------------27 Kerry Collins-----------------------------29--------------------------------28 Kyle Orton--------------------------------28--------------------------------29 Eli Manning-------------------------------31---------------------------------30 Gus Frerotte------------------------------32--------------------------------31 J.P. Losman------------------------------30---------------------------------32 -
An alternative QB ranking system
Mikie2times replied to Mikie2times's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Run the Damn Ball/AKC- I would include defensible passes, or tipped INT's, the problem is I don't have access to that information as NFL stats are still fairly limited in depth. This is just an attempt at a more accurate system using every variable I have access to, still a much more accurate system could be made with more detailed stat keeping. MDH- 50% of the normal NFL QB rating is made up of yards per attempt, and Completition %. Now I'm not going to argue that YAC success isn't influenced by accuracy, we all know QB's that deliver a well placed ball will allow receivers to gain additional yards. The problem is once a pass is either caught, or incomplete, the QB has no additional impact on the outcome of the play. With half the standard passer rating being made up of completition% and yards per attempt it leaves short system passers a much easier path to boost the ratings. With what we have available we can't do much to change the higher accuracy numbers, and accuracy still needs to play a roll in any system, but we can still take away the credit a QB receives for having a 5 yard slant turn into a 30 yards play. In terms of measuring performance, a QB that actually completed a 30 yard pass threw the air probably had a much more difficult completition then a 5 yards slant, so I give that QB a small boost in his overal ratings. -
At this point the Bills are probably past determining if Holcomb might play. Your first year QB is showing solid improvement and the Bills have pretty much fizzled out of the playoff picture. It's a no brainer at this point.
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In his first 4 starts JP's line looked like this 45 of 94 47.8% 433 Yards 1 TD 2 INT Since then JP played from the middle of the second quarter on against KC, and started against SD, and Carolina. So for you math majors that’s about 2 1/2 games. During that time his line looks like this 45 of 81 55.5% 502 Yards 3 TD 2 INT Mid 50's completition% is more then ok for a first year guy, and he's starting to pick his yardage totals up as well. No doubt he is making good progress, I just hope he can have a little red zone success to bring into next season. A multi dimensional QB like JP has the ability to make the red zone a strength if he keeps developing.
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An alternative QB ranking system
Mikie2times replied to Mikie2times's topic in The Stadium Wall Archives
Here are some numbers that I thought might surprise, or confirm opinions. Some explanation of the stats is included below, but a full explanation is in the first post. System QB? -Tom Brady had the biggest adjustment to his yardage total when subtracting his YAC yards. His average per attempt with YAC places him 6th in the league, without YAC he ranks 13th. Same Old Drew -Bledsoe ranks 25th in turnover %. Running for his life - JP Losman is second in the NFL in Rushing Attempts per drop back. He runs 12.5% of the time, while Vick runs 21.7% of the time. Big Ben, Deceptively good - One common trend I found in teams that score a lot of points, and don't score a lot of points, is turnover%, and TD%. While big ben might not have the gaudiest statistics he simply dominates in those two categories, ranking 2nd in turnover%, and 1st in TD%. Not exactly Trent Dilfer - Kyle Orton's 10 Fumbles, and 12 INT's rank him dead last in Turnover%. He puts the ball at risk on 6.6% of his drop backs. Eli could be more efficient. - % Positive plays takes into account the number of drop backs a QB has taken, and the number of times a positive result was achieved. Positive results include pass completions, or rushing plays (to register as a rush the play must be positive). Eli Manning registers a positive play only 52% of the time, ranking 31st in the league. Also of note is out of Eli's 7 fumbles, only 1 has been lost, a clear indicator of the breaks that can happen in football. -
A poster mentioned in an earlier thread just how out of whack the QB rating system is. I was thinking the same thing and was working on developing a more accurate system. That post got me to finish it off tonight, and I just wanted to see how people feel about the approach. The following is how I arrived at each statistic for my rating, and how it compares to the NFL rating system. My ratings are in bold, and feel free to ask questions as I'm sure I left a few things out. % Positive plays= Rushes+Completitions/Attempts+ Sacks+Rushes NFL passer Rating system= Completitions/Attempts TD%= Rushing TD's + Passing TD's/Attempts+Sacks+Rushes NFL passer Rating System= TD passes/Attempts Yards Per Attempt= (Passing Yards- Yards After Catch)+Rushing Yards/Attempts+Sacks+Rushes NFL passer Rating= Yards/Attempts Turnover%= INT+FUMBLES/Attempts+Sacks+Rushes NFL Passer Rating= INT/Attempts TD's a Game= Rushing TD's+Passing TD's/Games Turnovers a Game= INT's+FUM/ Games Played Running Ability- Rushing Yards/Games To come up with how I weighted each stat I measured how much each stat was correlated with points above the league average and below league average based on 4 years of data. The order of importance went TD%, TURN%, TD/GAME, TURNOVER/GAME, adjusted yards per attempt, % Positive plays, and Running ability. Here is how the 2005 QB's shape up so far. Name----------------RATE Carson Palmer------102.8 Peyton Manning ----102.0 Ben Roethlisberger--97.2 Jake Plummer------- 89.3 Matt Hasselbeck-----84.4 Michael Vick----------82.1 Drew Brees-----------81.9 Byron Leftwich-------80.3 Tom Brady---------- 80.2 Marc Bulger----------79.7 Steve McNair---------78.3 Drew Bledsoe--------76.6 Mark Brunell---------73.6 Trent Green----------72.3 Eli Manning------------72.1 Donovan McNabb----72.0 Brett Favre-----------70.2 Jake Delhomme------70.2 Aaron Brooks---------70.0 Brian Griese----------69.3 Kurt Warner-----------64.9 Kerry Collins----------64.4 Chris Simms----------62.5 Josh McCown----------61.5 David Carr------------60.4 Anthony Wright-------58.6 Trent Dilfer------------57.4 Daunte Culpepper----56.5 Gus Frerotte----------52.9 J.P. Losman-----------51.1 Joey Harrington-------51.1 Kyle Orton-------------45.4
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Only because my brilliant mind must be toned down for other people to understand me
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It could be a legit excuse, but I just don't think it adds up. I still smoke a little bit, but if I was going to completely quit I certainly wouldn't keep my bongs, and pipes around to temp me. I also wouldn't be very inclined to be hanging around smokers, or allow any pipes in my car that could get me in trouble. I could see why he wouldn't want his kids to find that stuff but wouldn't it be a little more logical to just throw it in the trash? Does the guy think his kids are going to go rummaging threw the garbage to find the pipes they don't even know about? Perhaps I might believe it if he never had a history, but Irvin does, and it's a history filled with doing much heavier stuff the pot. I really could give a crap less if the guy wants to light up from time to time, I just don't believe his story, because it's practically the same one everybody gives if they get caught with something, and the same one I gave my father back in the day. I just doubt most people would actually own up to that, especially a high profile guy who’s sworn to be clean for years.
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Henry/Willis I did this comparison the other day, it shows how he compares to Henry's two strong years in 2002 and 2003. The thread also has some additional debate on the subject.
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Pinning that colostomy bag on one player is like saying it was all Bledsoe’s fault
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The Bills defense was 1st in the league in 2003 and 2004 in average yards per play. That statistic is a much better overall indicator of success then yards per game, but if you want to go by yards a game we ranked 2nd both years. From those numbers a logical assumption would be that the defense is pretty good, but as you pointed out the strength of your opponents does matter. So I visted FootballOutsiders.com Who created a ranking system that pretty much destroys every other in existence. It's so good in fact that a major media outlet in Fox adopted the rankings for it's power rankings. I'm not going to get into the details oh how exactly they do it because you can check out the link, but they do include a heavy adjustment for strength of schedule. According to them the Bills ranked 7th in 2003, and 1st in 2004 in total defense. So now we have actual facts that say our defense was pretty damn good those two years, and we have a ton of evidence to support that our defense is pretty awful this season. The DE's remained the same for both the good and bad defenses, while the DT's went from Adams and Pat, to Anderson and Bannon. Sounds a little more logical to me that it’s the DT’s.
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Seriously
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Seems pretty close to the team I would like to see assembled. Here are any changes I would make to the starters. WR- David Givens for PP LT- One of many candidates available in the First Round LG- Gandy C- LeCharles Bentley RT Peters DT Grady Jackson (Assuming we stick with the same defensive philosophy) Notes- Ngata is the guy I really want at DT in the draft, I would also like to see Allen replace Clements if we trade him or he walks. Ideally I would like to trade him to get back in the first round which you have us doing. Good Job
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That’s not right, we would lose common opponent tiebreaker which comes before the conference tiebreaker in games played within the division. Essentially we need to win out and win the division tiebreaker, because we have no chance at the common game tiebreaker anymore.
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Depending on how you look at it anything’s possible. Buffalo is either 2 games out of a division tie (only winning the tiebreaker if NE loses to Miami or the Jets, and the Bills beat Miami, Jets, and NE). Or One game out of the 5th pick in the draft. As of now the 5th pick has 3 losses, and going by the current draft order the Bills SOS is only more difficult then one team in the top 18 picks. That team is the Titans who have played a schedule .001 points more difficult then Buffalos. For those that don't know reverse strength of schedule is used to break draft order ties.
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The difference between a 4.9 and a 4.53 is massive. The fastest players in the NFL run around 4.3's at the combine, which is about two tenths of a second faster then Watson. Peters is four tenths of a second slower then Watson, so take the difference between Watson and the fastest players in the league and multiply it by 2, and that’s the difference in speed from Peters to Watson. As for game speed that is the reason Peters can't play TE. The 40 measures straight line speed, which Peters does exceptionally well at for such a large man. But the 40 doesn't properly measure his football speed, which for a TE would be snail like. He doesn't have much agility, or acceleration, and doesn't move in and out of his cuts with any fluidness. That is of course measuring him against other TE's, for OL he fairs really well in all of these areas. They stopped giving the heaviest kid the ball around elementary school for good reason. If we did start him at TE he would be a slow glorified OL, with no good knees left from DB's cut tackling him. We already have a couple TE's that fill that role; the goal is to find one that can give us more then that (Everett PLEASE!!)
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C- Its Teague’s last contact year and I would be surprised to see the Bills work out a deal to keep him. The Saints OL hasn't exactly been great this year but LeCharles has built a solid reputation, and is a player I really want the Bills to pursue. RG- CV is a solid player who's getting old, and it would be difficult to count on him much past next year. With Bentley at C, Preston can take the experience he got this year at RG and be groomed to replace CV after the 2006 season. LG- I'll gladly take Hutch but with Alexander not around to use up Seattle’s Franchise tag Hutchinson will probably get it. Gandy's most recent action before signing with the Bills was at LG in Chicago, and unlike some I feel like he has been one of the Bills best OL this year (I know, not saying much). I say we move Gandy over to LG, and explore LT options via the draft. LT- If PP has first round value so does Nate Clements. I'm not delusional about how much Nate means to the Bills, he is an outstanding player and top 5 NFL corner. The problem is a CB loses its value, just like many other positions will, when you’re getting killed in the trenches. Replace Nate with Will Allen, or Jerry Azumah, and trade him away for a 1st rounder we can use to address LT. RT- Peters has looked like a converted TE in his first few starts, but who really expected him to look much better then that at this point? The Bills already have a ton of holes to fill on both lines so hopefully by the end of the year Peters will show enough at RT that we don't need to find a replacement. DE- Back when this defense was among the best in the NFL the combination of Chris Kelsey, Ryan Denney, and Aaron Schobel led the charge at DE. Now when this defense is among the worst in the NFL a more experienced Chris Kelsey, Ryan Denney, and Aaron Schobel are again leading the charge at DE. The point is the high motor guys aren't killing us at DE. It wouldn't hurt the Bills to add talent at this spot but OL, and DT is a much more pressing matter. DT- If Grey's around we need a fat SOB to eat up blockers, Grady Jackson is not an elite DT, but he is a fat SOB that can eat up blockers. For his partner I make Haloti Ngata (Oregon’s DT) our first round pick. Jackson, Ngata, Anderson, and Edwards will certainly be more effective then what we have at this point. In just about every scenario I can come up with have Rookies, and FA's filling a big part of the equation. This rebuilding probably won't happen overnight, or be complete by 2006. That said we can still make the lines strong enough to not be such a glaring weakness, and hopefully start the foundation of good line play or years to come.
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2006 Draft Order The top 4 spots seem like they will be filled by Houston, SF, the Jets, and GB. All four of those teams are really struggling, and all have 2 wins. After those teams it really is anybody guess right now. The Bills come in at #10, and as of now have played the easiest schedule out of the higher picking teams, that means all tiebreakers go to Buffalo. My guess is we end up anywhere from 5-13. Also note that Tennessee will be drafting very high likely giving us two top ten 3rd rounders.
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Orton has been horrible; his QB rating is 62.5, that is even worse then JP's. Since they keep winning people think he is protecting the ball and letting the defense and ground game win, but he's not even doing that well. He's thrown 11 INT's, which is around the bottom of the league in that category. Grossman has already played in more games then Orton, and has shown more in the games he's played. You add a decent passing attack to that team and they're a legit threat to win the Super Bowl.
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I know the record with Orton, but he is running a watered down offense and has basically not messed up enough to cost them games. That defense is phenomenal, and approaching the class of the great Baltimore defense years ago. Call me crazy for messing with chemistry, but Rex played well when he played, and can make all the throws. Put him in and have him run the same watered down offense. He's more capable and seasoned QB then Orton, and with that ground game, and defense, could make them NFC favorites.
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Not counting the fumbles those two years Travis had were very solid, and same goes for Willis last year, and this year. I just think everybody from announcers to fans seem to place Willis in a category that’s too high for him yet. When you compare what he is and isn't able to do on the field his statistics aren't the only thing that is similar to Henry. Both are power players, who lack the speed and explosiveness to create. Neither one of the two posed a big threat on 3rd downs, and while McGahee is better then Travis at protecting the ball they both fumble. That nasty stiff arm Willis has gives him the edge over old school Travis, but it's not by much, and certainly not by as much as you would think.
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I know a lot of it has to do with the line, that's why I compared him to Travis who played behind a very similar nightmare.
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McGahee is a pretty good back, I just think his popularity at the U and injury built his star power more then production did. Back in 2002 and 2003 Travis put a couple good seasons together. He did fumble an insane amount of times, but in many other areas he was as productive or more productive then Willis. That’s not to say that Travis should be here or we should have never drafted Willis, I'm just comparing these players because of similar offensive lines, and because we seem to view the two players overall talents differently. We know now that Travis peaked out, and Willis is still getting better. If at some point Willis can regain his explosiveness to match his power I have no doubt he will become an elite player. It's just that right now he doesn't have that aspect in his game, and his yard per carry average reveals that. The line could certainly help Willis out but then again nobody was singing its praise when Travis played either. The Middle Column represents what McGahee's stats would be if he saw the amount of carries Travis had in 2002-2003. For receiving stats I based the middle column predictions on the average amount of receptions compared to rushes the players had. Willis McGahee (2004 and 2005)...Projected.............Travis Henry (2002 and 2003) 499 Rushes ............................. .656 Rushes.................656 Rushes 2023 Yards................................ 2657 Yards. ................2794 Yards 4.05 AVG................................... 4.05 AVG ...................4.25 AVG 17 TD. .......................................22TD......................... 23 TD 39 REC.......................................51 REC.......................71 REC 288 Yards....................................377 Yards.................. 467 Yards 0 TD........................................... 0 TD......................... 2 TD 5 FUM..........................................7 FUM.........................18 FUM
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We win a low scoring game Carolina 13 Bills 17