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10 interesting stats I have been playing with this week | Allen, Diggs, Cook, Defense


Einstein

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19 hours ago, ngbills said:

He is playing smarter (not sure that is the best word) as he is taking much less risk this year. But...is that what we want? While his completion % is up and his efficiency looks better much of that is due to a much higher number of short passes and dump offs. His rushing numbers are down and so are his passing yards. So it begs the question do we want Allen to become more of a high efficiency / game manager QB? Is that what equals success and his best year ever? 

I don't think that is the goal at all, but Allen is taking more of the high percentage, short passes out of necessity. He still likes those downfield shots but defenses are doubling those deep routes. The idea with 12 personnel and running more is to force one of the safeties to play  short. Taking those quick hit passes is just another method to do the same. The Bills definitely want to take deeper shots but you have to get single coverage to do it. Allen took the league by storm with deeper shots in his first couple of seasons. Defenses are adjusting. Josh also must adjust. I think Josh, in play action passes, is pushing the ball downfield a lot. Problem is, if you do that too much, defense sit back there in coverage waiting for opportunities to pick him off.

 

I think Josh is often at his best when he is scrambling and extending plays. There is a concerted effort across the whole offense to suck those defenders in close so Josh can take those deep shots. They aren't trying to turn him into Brady. They are trying to open up that deep ball game and also become more diverse with play calling. They've had some success all ready. I think they are only going to improve as the season progresses. We all love those big plays. They will come, though. Patience....

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People just don’t like their team losin lol around the league a bunch of great qbs are having tough games any given week but nobody notices 

 

I think Miami being in our division has skewed some people’s perceptions about what expectations for an nfl offense should be which is understandable, I do think they will continue to struggle against good teams while demolishing bad teams though but we’ll see 

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20 hours ago, eball said:

 

He had one bad game (half, really) -- and it was one of the worst of his career.  Since then he's been brilliant.  I just wish he'd run a bit more when it's wide open in front of him.

 

 

Agreed. Running less, okay. Running HALF the amount times he has in the past!? That's too much of a reduction. I just want to see him go nuts in the postseason with the running. 

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23 hours ago, Einstein said:


I'm assuming the first WR the QB focuses on after the snap. That's a fairly clear indicator.

However, this is one of several questions I have asked them for clarification on.

I'm guessing that this stat has to involve a certain amount of conjecture.  I'm sure there are times when a really good QB will look off their first read initially in order draw coverage away from him.  What might look like a checkdown could in fact be the intended target all along. 

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6 minutes ago, BigAl2526 said:

I'm guessing that this stat has to involve a certain amount of conjecture.  


Sure. 


But as long as the data uses the same methodology for all QB's, you can still make accurate comparisons. This is because the comparisons would be based on a standardized process, which is essential for understanding relative differences or similarities.

 

33 minutes ago, HoofHearted said:

Any idea who’s doing the data mining?


I submitted this question to them and will report back when I hear. If I were to guess i'd say PFF, simply because of their connection PFF.

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30 minutes ago, HoofHearted said:

Any idea who’s doing the data mining?

My guess is they either purchase existing PFF data wholesale or farm out the specific info they are looking for to the same analysts. 

 

Which would make it significantly less interesting imo. I do not trust PFF analysts to know what QB reads/progressions are on a given play.

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Just now, GoBills808 said:

I do not trust PFF analysts to know what QB reads/progressions are on a given play.


I would.


I certainly would not trust it to be 100% accurate, but as a comparison tool absolutely.


PFF employees many former NFL player and executives.

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Just now, Einstein said:


I would.


I certainly would not trust it to be 100% accurate, but as a comparison tool absolutely.


PFF employees many former NFL player and executives.

You shouldn't imo. The people breaking down the film are not former NFL players and executives. In many cases they have never played the sport in their lives.

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5 hours ago, Not at the table Karlos said:

Not really. It just shows his targets as first read. He can still get the ball as second or third read. He's not the first on every play. 

The math is not, as you suggest, totally obvius.

 

But the fact that  Diggs is 11th in the NFL in first read targets suggests, to me at least, that Diggs is usually the first read. Also, he's far and away our best target so I would be surprised if Diggs is not the first read the majority of the time.

 

That said, outside of the stats, the eye test tells us Josh doesn't always spread the ball around enough. Not every game but some games he locks onto Steph too much. I think it's a trust issue. 

When this offense can consistently spread the ball around to multiple targets, it will be very, very hard to stop. 

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3 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

You shouldn't imo. The people breaking down the film are not former NFL players and executives. In many cases they have never played the sport in their lives.

 

I think you may have a misunderstanding of how PFF grades. 

If this were the case, NFL and College teams wouldn't be paying PFF 6+ figures every year for their data.

 

The grading is not one-and-done.

 

It is first graded by an analyst, then it gets sent for review by a more knowledgeable analyst, and then it goes for final review by a senior analyst (I remember reading that Solomon Wilcots was a senior analyst).

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3 minutes ago, Einstein said:

I remember reading that Solomon Wilcots was a senior analyst

 

That's really interesting, if true.

I loved Solomon Wilcots; he was one of the very best in the business before it became a shouting contest.

Genuinely smart guy. 

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1 minute ago, Einstein said:

 

I think you may have a misunderstanding of how PFF grades. 

If this were the case, NFL and College teams wouldn't be paying PFF 6+ figures every year for their data.

 

The grading is not one-and-done.

 

It is first graded by an analyst, then it gets sent for review by a more knowledgeable analyst, and then it goes for final review by a senior analyst (I remember reading that Solomon Wilcots was a senior analyst).

I can almost 100% guarantee you teams are not paying for grades. They are paying for the metadata that doesn't rely on analysts.

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23 minutes ago, Simon said:

 

That's really interesting, if true.

I loved Solomon Wilcots; he was one of the very best in the business before it became a shouting contest.

Genuinely smart guy. 

Wisdom of Solomon ! 
 

I think was what cbs called his “keys to the game”

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32 minutes ago, Simon said:

 

That's really interesting, if true.

I loved Solomon Wilcots; he was one of the very best in the business before it became a shouting contest.

Genuinely smart guy. 

 

It piqued my attention too when I saw it. It was several years ago.

I think he may have stopped working for them, because this is the last time I see his analysis on PFF: https://www.pff.com/news/nfl-wilcots-the-nfls-most-underappreciated-defensive-players

 

.

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43 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

I can almost 100% guarantee you teams are not paying for grades. They are paying for the metadata that doesn't rely on analysts.

 

 

I think you are mistaken if they don't pay attention to grades or anything but vague "metadata".    You are giving the teams way too much credit.   Teams have about 24 hours to put together gameplans on Monday morning.   It's abundantly clear that there isn't a great deal of "metadata" being analyzed for some of this scouting and self-scouting.  Like most things NFL,  fans tend to give the team and players far too much credit for work they are doing individually.    

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On 10/20/2023 at 1:49 PM, Virgil said:

How do they know what the first read is?

As well, is the first read open, or is Josh looking for a longer pass completion?  We will likely never No for certain, 

 

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4 minutes ago, BADOLBILZ said:

 

I think you are mistaken if they don't pay attention to grades or anything but vague "metadata".    You are giving the teams way too much credit.   Teams have about 24 hours to put together gameplans on Monday morning.   It's abundantly clear that there isn't a great deal of "metadata" being analyzed for some of this scouting and self-scouting.  Like most things NFL,  fans tend to give the team and players far too much credit for work they are doing individually.    


Agreed. 

There is a reason why Chris Collinsworth is so invested in PFF. He saw the market opportunity for teams that need fast turnaround and took it. 


There is only so much film that 12 coaches can dig through in 72 hours. 

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1 minute ago, Einstein said:


Agreed. 

There is a reason why Chris Collinsworth is so invested in PFF. He saw the market opportunity for teams that need fast turnaround and took it. 


There is only so much film that 12 coaches can dig through in 72 hours. 

That is not what I understand at all

 

Collinsworth got in and immediately PFF pivoted to consumer side fantasy and gambling

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6 minutes ago, GoBills808 said:

That is not what I understand at all

 

Collinsworth got in and immediately PFF pivoted to consumer side fantasy and gambling

 

Prior to Collinsworth, only a few teams bought the data. A year after Collinsworth took over, 30 of 32 teams bought it. Now, all 32 do.

While I do not trust the data blindly, I do believe it is fairly accurate. 

 

"(PFF) has hired former NFL figures, including longtime assistant coach Gunther Cunningham, former Redskins lineman Will Montgomery, and former Redskins assistant Bobby Slowik, who since has returned to coaching. Analyses are checked and cross-checked and re-checked; Collinsworth said he has seen single plays debated for 15 minutes, and that “if there’s any ambiguity at all” on a particular play, analysts are told not to downgrade a player. Longtime Bengals offensive line coach Paul Alexander last season reviewed about 600 plays where PFF had downgraded one of his blockers; he told company founder Neil Hornsby that he disagreed with perhaps 12, “which is pretty remarkable,” Alexander said." (link)

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