Shanegotyou11
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Any time you see something like this it should be a red flag. The problem is that when you arbitrarily remove plays for whatever reason you have nothing to compare to unless you apply the exact same rationale to every other NFL team. QBR, ANY/A, and Completion% when calculated for the rest of the league include broken plays, blown coverages, plays against prevent defenses, and plays in garbage time.Matty Brown":1qf3ixl2 said:Removing the last play of the encounter (a quick throw to Tyler Lockett versus prevent defense) and Freddie Swain’s gift of a 68-yard touchdown versus broken coverage...
I think if we're analyzing Russ's ability to lead a pass-heavy offense, and discussing sustainable offense, it's not outlandish to opine that a broken coverage touchdown shouldn't weigh heavily in that conversation.AgentDib":4ihagc8k said:I think most agree with the basic premise but the article itself doesn't seem very informative.
Any time you see something like this it should be a red flag. The problem is that when you arbitrarily remove plays for whatever reason you have nothing to compare to unless you apply the exact same rationale to every other NFL team. QBR, ANY/A, and Completion% when calculated for the rest of the league include broken plays, blown coverages, plays against prevent defenses, and plays in garbage time.Matty Brown":4ihagc8k said:Removing the last play of the encounter (a quick throw to Tyler Lockett versus prevent defense) and Freddie Swain’s gift of a 68-yard touchdown versus broken coverage...
Our offense will look worse if you remove those plays but so will every other offense out there and there's nothing to say that we benefit more or less than other teams do. This issue crops up on these forums occasionally too, in the form of "if you ignore these X plays then..." but there's no clear logic regarding why those plays skew the data relative to other teams.
Sure, but if our benchmark for sustainable offense is other offenses that can sustain drives then we should consider that many of them probably take advantage of broken plays as well. Or for example, a key factor of the Packers offense is trying to keep the opponent from substituting and then getting them with twelve men on the field if they do. As long as you are sustaining drives I don't think there's a 'best' approach out there, and importantly anytime you come up with a statistic it needs to be the same for everybody or it's giving false info.hawk45":1x7irj7i said:I think if we're analyzing Russ's ability to lead a pass-heavy offense, and discussing sustainable offense, it's not outlandish to opine that a broken coverage touchdown shouldn't weigh heavily in that conversation.
Seriously? When's the last time you saw a sustained drive (multiple plays by definition) of broken plays? Broken plays typically result in a score on the broken PLAY or shortly there after. When's the last time you saw a defense in the NFL consistently give up broken plays on defense from beginning to end?AgentDib":2m3g4m8h said:Sure, but if our benchmark for sustainable offense is other offenses that can sustain drives then we should consider that many of them probably take advantage of broken plays as well. Or for example, a key factor of the Packers offense is trying to keep the opponent from substituting and then getting them with twelve men on the field if they do. As long as you are sustaining drives I don't think there's a 'best' approach out there, and importantly anytime you come up with a statistic it needs to be the same for everybody or it's giving false info.hawk45":2m3g4m8h said:I think if we're analyzing Russ's ability to lead a pass-heavy offense, and discussing sustainable offense, it's not outlandish to opine that a broken coverage touchdown shouldn't weigh heavily in that conversation.
Part of the complexity here is that the deep ball is clearly Wilson's strength, and being really opportunistic is also a great strength to have. If we sustain drives by being really opportunistic then they are still sustained. We want Russ to take the check down more often, but I hope nobody actually wants him to take it all of the time and eliminate his best tool.