JimmyG":37u9wvek said:Also, RE: the original post.
Wilson's numbers are great, but, as I alluded to in my post above, he has the benefit of playing in the high-octane, modern NFL. Look at how devalued running backs have become. Sure, there are elite ones (Beast, Peterson, Charles, etc), but many teams view running backs as plug-and-play types and wouldn't even consider taking one in the first round anymore.
To put some perspective on this, chew on this:
- in the 1970's, there were only 11 quarterback seasons with a rating over 90 (~ 1.1 / season)
- in the 1980's, there were only 27 quarterback seasons with a rating over 90 (~2.7 / season)
- in the 1990's, there were only 33 quarterback seasons with a rating over 90 (~3.3 / season)
- in the 2000's, there were 58 quarterback seasons with a rating over 90 (~5.8 / season)
- in the current half decade, there have been 54 quarterback seasons with a rating over 90 (~5.4 / season)
- during Wilson's time in the league, there have been 39 quarterbacks with a rating over 90 (~13 / season)
- in the 1970's, there were only 2 quarterback seasons with a rating over 100 (~ 1 every 5 years)
- in the 1980's, there were only 4 quarterback seasons with a rating over 100 (~1 every other year)
- in the 1990's, there were only 10 quarterback seasons with a rating over 100 (~ 1 / season)
- in the 2000's, there were 18 quarterback seasons with a rating over 100 (~ 1.8 / season)
- in the current half decade, there have been 21 quarterback seasons with a rating over 100 (~2.1 / season)
- during Wilson's time in the league, there have been 16 QB seasons with a rating over 100 (~5.3 / season)
League Average QB stats by year:
1970: 62.5 passer rating ... 5.2 INT% ... 0.84:1 TD:INT ... 51.1 CMP% ... 16.4 pass TD (league: 427 TD passes, 510 INT)
1975: 62.8 passer rating ... 5.3 INT% ... 0.81:TD TD:INT ... 52.5 CMP% ... 16.7 pass TD
1980: 71.3 passer rating ... 4.6 INT% ... 0.97:1 TD:INT ... 56.2 CMP% ... 21.6 pass TD
1985: 70.7 passer rating ... 4.2 INT% ... 0.99:1 TD:INT ... 54.8 CMP% ... 21.4 pass TD
1990: 75.0 passer rating ... 3.6 INT% ... 1.19 TD:INT ... 56.0 CMP%... 20.5 pass TD
1995: 77.5 passer rating ... 3.1 INT% ... 1.29 TD:INT ... 58.2 CMP% ... 22.1 pass TD
2000: 76.2 passer rating ... 3.3 INT% ... 1.19 TD:INT ... 58.2 CMP% ... 20.5 pass TD
2005: 78.2 passer rating ... 3.1 INT% ... 1.27 TD:INT .... 59.9 CMP% ... 20.1 pass TD
2010: 82.2 passer rating ... 3.0 INT% ... 1.47 TD:INT ... 60.8 CMP% ... 23.5 pass TD
'12-'14: 85.0 passer rating ... 2.6 INT% ... 1.67 TD:INT ... 61.6 CMP% ... 24.6 pass TD
2014: 87.1 passer rating ... 2.5 INT% ... 1.79 TD:INT ... 62.6 CMP% ... 25.2 pass TD (league: 807 TD passes, 450 INT)
Wilson's efficiency stats are very good... but so is league-wide efficiency across the board. His numbers still compare favorably to league average, but I don't think it's fair to compare Wilson's numbers to Manning's first three years, or Marino's first three years, etc... we're talking about very different eras. We acknowledge change and inflation with money, so why not do it with stats?
I think Wilson is very good, and I think he has the potential to be elite. He's certainly on that trajectory. However, I think some of the stats thrown around are a bit disingenuous and overzealous. I love Wilson and I'm happy he's our quarterback, but I can't ignore this stuff when entering discussions about him. This is NOT an attack on Wilson or an attempt to take him down, it's just an honest look and something I think a lot of people are either oblivious to or choose to ignore.
so the league avg qb rating is 85 and you think 95 makes him avg. Wow
Enough said only QB to have 95+ QB rating first 3 year sin the league that includes the "modern" era enough said