Maelstrom787
Well-known member
The offensive production in the NFL since the beginning of 2020 has entered an era similar to what the Great Depression was to the American economy. Particularly for passing stats between 2022 and 2023.
Seriously. The average variety of passing stats in the league have almost overnight gone from gaudy video game numbers to Trent Dilfer level stats.
The average fan has not yet calibrated themselves with the new reality of the NFL, and that's that between 2020 and 2023, passing stats have declined by like 30%. Therefore, we as fans need to grade on a curve.
30 passing TDs in a season will become a rarity should this level of production we've seen since 2023 hold steady. 40 passing TDs in this era would be more impressive than 50 was in like 2017.
To use Geno Smith as an example - his 2023 decline from 2022 was not uncommon among other QBs. Everyone declined. The average QB was precipitously worse in 2023.
It's just harder to pass now. We're finally cycling back to a league that is going to become more run centric. Defenses, and the defensive personnel colleges are producing, have adapted to coverage.
Here's proof.
2023 was officially the worst offensive landscape in the NFL since 2006. 2006!

2020 hit a peak of offensive efficiency on a per play basis. It's fallen precipitously every year since and, if 2024 week 1 is any indication... it isn't about to get better.
We have officially regressed to the same offensive efficiency as the NFL saw in the year 2000. We have to adjust the severity with which we judge quarterbacks, receivers, and defenses accordingly.
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