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538 Quarterback chart


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4 minutes ago, Reader said:

I stumbled upon 538's bizarre quarterback graph. They think Allen is the 2nd best QB in the division being slightly below average. There are some other, interesting tidbits in there.

 

538

Big surprises for me are Jared Goff at 145 and Kirk Cousins at 171, just at a quick glance.

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19 minutes ago, Reader said:

I stumbled upon 538's bizarre quarterback graph. They think Allen is the 2nd best QB in the division being slightly below average. There are some other, interesting tidbits in there.

 

538

He's 2nd out of 10(Darnold came in 4th behind Fitz?) so I'm going to guess they're might be something throwing the average off(Brady). Then comparing him to other divisions he's tied with Baker Mayfield and Mitchel Trubisky and 1pt higher than Lamar Jackson and Derek Carr.

Edited by Warcodered
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25 minutes ago, Reader said:

I stumbled upon 538's bizarre quarterback graph. They think Allen is the 2nd best QB in the division being slightly below average. There are some other, interesting tidbits in there.

 

538

You have to look into their methodology to see where/why this happens. This is all data driven:

Performance is measured according to “VALUE,” a regression between ESPN’s Total QBR yards above replacement and basic box score numbers (including rushing stats) from a given game, adjusted for the quality of opposing defenses.

  • The formula for VALUE is: -2.2 * Pass Attempts + 3.7 * Completions + (Passing Yards / 5) + 11.3 * Passing TDs – 14.1 * Interceptions – 8 * Times Sacked – 1.1 * Rush Attempts + 0.6 * Rushing Yards + 15.9 * Rushing TDs.3
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25 minutes ago, BullBuchanan said:

 

  • The formula for VALUE is: -2.2 * Pass Attempts + 3.7 * Completions + (Passing Yards / 5) + 11.3 * Passing TDs – 14.1 * Interceptions – 8 * Times Sacked – 1.1 * Rush Attempts + 0.6 * Rushing Yards + 15.9 * Rushing TDs.3

I refuse to take up a hobby that involves more work than Grade 11 Algebra.

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43 minutes ago, BullBuchanan said:

You have to look into their methodology to see where/why this happens. This is all data driven:

Performance is measured according to “VALUE,” a regression between ESPN’s Total QBR yards above replacement and basic box score numbers (including rushing stats) from a given game, adjusted for the quality of opposing defenses.

  • The formula for VALUE is: -2.2 * Pass Attempts + 3.7 * Completions + (Passing Yards / 5) + 11.3 * Passing TDs – 14.1 * Interceptions – 8 * Times Sacked – 1.1 * Rush Attempts + 0.6 * Rushing Yards + 15.9 * Rushing TDs.3

 

I guess my remaining question is where do these multipliers on each of these stats come from? Not to get too meta, but i’d rather know the thinking behind the formula itself, rather than just the formula. 

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1 hour ago, BullBuchanan said:

You have to look into their methodology to see where/why this happens. This is all data driven:

Performance is measured according to “VALUE,” a regression between ESPN’s Total QBR yards above replacement and basic box score numbers (including rushing stats) from a given game, adjusted for the quality of opposing defenses.

  • The formula for VALUE is: -2.2 * Pass Attempts + 3.7 * Completions + (Passing Yards / 5) + 11.3 * Passing TDs – 14.1 * Interceptions – 8 * Times Sacked – 1.1 * Rush Attempts + 0.6 * Rushing Yards + 15.9 * Rushing TDs.3

A number of variables, which I agree is needed to evaluate a QB.  I’d like to know why  each variable is weighted by a specific amount.  How was that determined?

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1 hour ago, BullBuchanan said:

You have to look into their methodology to see where/why this happens. This is all data driven:

Performance is measured according to “VALUE,” a regression between ESPN’s Total QBR yards above replacement and basic box score numbers (including rushing stats) from a given game, adjusted for the quality of opposing defenses.

  • The formula for VALUE is: -2.2 * Pass Attempts + 3.7 * Completions + (Passing Yards / 5) + 11.3 * Passing TDs – 14.1 * Interceptions – 8 * Times Sacked – 1.1 * Rush Attempts + 0.6 * Rushing Yards + 15.9 * Rushing TDs.3

It isn't "data driven" as ESPN's Total QBR is loaded with subjective judgements. 

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4 hours ago, Ridgewaycynic2013 said:

I refuse to take up a hobby that involves more work than Grade 11 Algebra.

 

But this is just 5th grade math, at least where I went to school.      ✖️    :)

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Interesting. Allen has a higher score than Mayfield, Darnold, Rosen, and Jackson.

5 hours ago, D. L. Hot-Flamethrower said:

Big surprises for me are Jared Goff at 145 and Kirk Cousins at 171, just at a quick glance.

 

I got made fun of for saying Goff is not a great QB back when he got his new contract. I've watched quite a bit of him and I think he is a good QB, just not great, and I kind of doubt he will ever be great. He doesn't have that clutch gamer ability. Can't put the team on his back. So I'm not surprised his score is average.

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5 hours ago, BidsJr said:

 

Wait didn't Algebra happen in 7th grade?

 

Back when I was in HS (admittedly quite a # of years ago now) Math 11 was Trigonometry. Math 10 was Geometry and I believe Math 9 was Algebra. Math 12 was Calculus...

 

Edited by DefenseWins
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6 hours ago, MJS said:

Interesting. Allen has a higher score than Mayfield, Darnold, Rosen, and Jackson.

 

I got made fun of for saying Goff is not a great QB back when he got his new contract. I've watched quite a bit of him and I think he is a good QB, just not great, and I kind of doubt he will ever be great. He doesn't have that clutch gamer ability. Can't put the team on his back. So I'm not surprised his score is average.

I tend to agree that he's more of a good QB than great, nothing stands out about his game to me.

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Results on many stats are skewed after just 1 game. They saw what I saw -- A QB whose accuracy and ball placement looked much better that made several bonead plays. His "bonehead" plays all came after he'd been flushed from the pocket or under duress. The OL will get better and when Josh wasn't hurried, he was throwing dimes. He needs to handle pressure better. No one is better when they're running for their life, but handling it well is still a competitive advantage. An incomplete pass is better than a sack, or worse, a pick. He needs to learn to always put 2 hands on the ball before taking a hit. It will come for him. At least now that I know that he can aim, I like his chances better. Let's see how Allen looks in week 2. Big games for Zay and Isaiah against the Giants #3 & #4 DB's.

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13 hours ago, GoBills808 said:

Keenum above Stafford? Roethlisberger over Brady?

Since it seems like their formula is influenced by QBR in some way, over the past 10 games:

 

Big Ben: 65.52

Brady: 65.09

 

Keenum: 53.96

Stafford: 50.96

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