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texaspackerbacker
12-09-2018, 05:58 PM
I'll address this mainly to the whiners and ingrates who have been bad-mouthing Aaron Rodgers in this forum and elsewhere and yammering about how he should change:

The GOAT QB just broke the record today held by possibly the second greatest QB of all time in what is IMO the most important stat of all: not throwing interceptions - 359 and more after the record breaker, and counting consecutive passes.

A lot has been said about getting rid of the ball quick - IMO a recipe for throwing more interceptions, as almost happened a couple of times today. Using mobility/moving around and throwing the ball downfield, as Rodgers does better than anybody else probably ever, not only gives you the chance for those big plays, but it lessens the prospect of getting picked off.

Rutnstrut
12-09-2018, 08:28 PM
I'll address this mainly to the whiners and ingrates who have been bad-mouthing Aaron Rodgers in this forum and elsewhere and yammering about how he should change:

The GOAT QB just broke the record today held by possibly the second greatest QB of all time in what is IMO the most important stat of all: not throwing interceptions - 359 and more after the record breaker, and counting consecutive passes.

A lot has been said about getting rid of the ball quick - IMO a recipe for throwing more interceptions, as almost happened a couple of times today. Using mobility/moving around and throwing the ball downfield, as Rodgers does better than anybody else probably ever, not only gives you the chance for those big plays, but it lessens the prospect of getting picked off.





That record will look awesome when he is sitting at home watching the superb owl.

Joemailman
12-09-2018, 08:43 PM
I'll address this mainly to the whiners and ingrates who have been bad-mouthing Aaron Rodgers in this forum and elsewhere and yammering about how he should change:

The GOAT QB just broke the record today held by possibly the second greatest QB of all time in what is IMO the most important stat of all: not throwing interceptions - 359 and more after the record breaker, and counting consecutive passes.

A lot has been said about getting rid of the ball quick - IMO a recipe for throwing more interceptions, as almost happened a couple of times today. Using mobility/moving around and throwing the ball downfield, as Rodgers does better than anybody else probably ever, not only gives you the chance for those big plays, but it lessens the prospect of getting picked off.

Rodgers is 11th in the NFL in TD passes, and Packers are 16th in points scored. If not throwing interceptions really was the most important stat, then those rankings would be better.

ThunderDan
12-09-2018, 09:14 PM
I will say this. Not throwing ints helps the team. But it is not be all and end all of important statistics.

pbmax
12-09-2018, 09:19 PM
I will say this. Not throwing ints helps the team. But it is not be all and end all of important statistics.

I suspect the actual best mix would be a few more INTs that would yield a good number of more TDs. But its easy to overstate this. Packers not overflowing with WR talent.

I do hope someone can get the offense back to some semblance of progressions.

mraynrand
12-10-2018, 07:04 AM
I do hope someone can get the offense back to some semblance of progressions.

+1. The current MO is to manipulate the defense into getting the primary read you want, seeing it pre-snap, and using other receivers as decoys. When the primary read breaks down, Rodgers does the EO, running around like chicken sans head and taking sacks or running the ball if someone doesn't juke open on the scramble drill. Gotta have better from the other WR patterns - maybe have actual patterns. And with that OPI that Graham picked up, you can see how rusty the team is in just carrying out basic rubs on crossing patterns.

mraynrand
12-10-2018, 07:06 AM
As for this stat, I'd much rather see north of 50% on third down conversions, especially since I know this team fails on third downs because their scheme puts them in too many third and longs. But yeah, fewer INTs is generally good.

call_me_ishmael
12-10-2018, 10:27 AM
The most important QB stat is obviously wins. The second most important one is some combination of completion percentage paired with yards per attempt and interception rate. To that end, you're like 20% right.

call_me_ishmael
12-10-2018, 10:50 AM
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DuEbX98X4AE347p.jpg so there ya go

call_me_ishmael
12-10-2018, 11:57 AM
We've gone from watching Favre throw into septuple coverage, and get picked off, to watching Rodgers throw it away, because there's a defender on the same field as the receiver. Surely we can find a happy medium, right?

LOL!!!

pbmax
12-10-2018, 01:51 PM
+1. The current MO is to manipulate the defense into getting the primary read you want, seeing it pre-snap, and using other receivers as decoys. When the primary read breaks down, Rodgers does the EO, running around like chicken sans head and taking sacks or running the ball if someone doesn't juke open on the scramble drill. Gotta have better from the other WR patterns - maybe have actual patterns. And with that OPI that Graham picked up, you can see how rusty the team is in just carrying out basic rubs on crossing patterns.

Exactly. It’s an offense built on alerts. Favre did this too. He sometimes played from memory of previous routes rather than read the field.

gbgary
12-10-2018, 05:52 PM
comp %, yards/completion, td/int ratio. wins is not a qb stat. of his 53 t/a's i'd guess over half had someone open early and very often had someone open right where he threw it away. that's drive-killing, momentum-killing, inefficiency. at least he used the middle of the field a tad more yesterday.

texaspackerbacker
12-10-2018, 06:20 PM
+1. The current MO is to manipulate the defense into getting the primary read you want, seeing it pre-snap, and using other receivers as decoys. When the primary read breaks down, Rodgers does the EO, running around like chicken sans head and taking sacks or running the ball if someone doesn't juke open on the scramble drill. Gotta have better from the other WR patterns - maybe have actual patterns. And with that OPI that Graham picked up, you can see how rusty the team is in just carrying out basic rubs on crossing patterns.

I suppose that's a biased but fair description what the Packers do at times. It got us 34 points on not to bad a defense last Sunday before we took our foot off the gas. I'd much rather have that than a lot of wasted downs on running plays. The scramble drill that you describe is pretty much the best option when the O Line can't just play it straight up and stop the pass rush. As for that basic rub thing/legal picks, I'm fairly sure the Packers do that a lot as well as the quick screen to Adams or another WR.

The thing several people in here have advocated is getting rid of the ball quick as a means of compensating for the poor pass blocking. I say again, that is a recipe for interceptions - as we saw a couple of times against the Falcons when the streak was almost broken.

Rand, you also said you'd rather have a better percentage of 3rd down conversions than a lack of interceptions. We would all like that better percentage on 3rd down, but absolutely not at the risk of interceptions. Giving up possession 40 or so yards down field on a 4th down punt is not ideal, but it beats the hell out of giving up the ball and maybe a quick touchdown on an interception.

pbmax
12-10-2018, 09:41 PM
comp %, yards/completion, td/int ratio. wins is not a qb stat. of his 53 t/a's i'd guess over half had someone open early and very often had someone open right where he threw it away. that's drive-killing, momentum-killing, inefficiency. at least he used the middle of the field a tad more yesterday.

Except for that one drive featuring Jones, the offense looked a lot like the 4th quarter comeback offense.

A third of the throws went to Davante.

pbmax
12-10-2018, 09:42 PM
Packers were 7 for 13 on third down yesterday.

pbmax
12-10-2018, 09:49 PM
Mike Tanier @MikeTanier

DVOA and DYAR by @fboutsiders are the best metrics for ranking QBs, teams etc. Folks who don't want to use it should just use the raw rates without making a smoothie out of them: 65% complete, 9 YPA, etc.

DYAR QBs (Defense Adjusted Yards Above Replacement) -- Rodgers ranked 9th


Player Team DYAR
P.Mahomes KC 1,678
D.Brees NO 1,462
P.Rivers LAC 1,234
J.Goff LAR 1,080
M.Ryan ATL 976
B.Roethlisber PIT 898
T.Brady NE 721
R.Wilson SEA 666
A.Rodgers GB 589

pbmax
12-10-2018, 09:53 PM
Completion %, 25th ranked



Rk Player Tm Cmp% Y/A
1 Drew Brees NOR 75.7 8.3
2 Kirk Cousins MIN 71.3 7.1
3 Matt Ryan ATL 70.5 8.1
4 Carson Wentz PHI 69.6 7.7
5 Derek Carr OAK 69.4 7.5
6 Philip Rivers LAC 69.4 8.9
7 Marcus Mariota TEN 69.1 7.8
8 Cam Newton CAR 68.8 7.4
9 Dak Prescott DAL 68.2 7.5
10 Andrew Luck IND 67.7 7.1
11 Eli Manning NYG 67.7 7.6
12 Ben Roethlisberger PIT 67.0 7.7
13 Ryan Tannehill MIA 67.0 8.0
14 Deshaun Watson HOU 66.9 8.2
15 Patrick Mahomes KAN 66.8 8.9
16 Ryan Fitzpatrick TAM 66.7 9.6
17 Russell Wilson SEA 66.6 8.3
18 Matthew Stafford DET 66.5 6.9
19 Tom Brady NWE 65.6 7.8
20 Jameis Winston TAM 64.8 8.0
21 Jared Goff LAR 64.4 8.6
22 Baker Mayfield CLE 64.4 7.7
23 Mitchell Trubisky CHI 64.4 7.3
24 Alex Smith WAS 62.5 6.6
25 Aaron Rodgers GNB 62.0 7.5


Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com (https://www.sports-reference.com/sharing.html?utm_source=direct&utm_medium=Share&utm_campaign=ShareTool): View Original Table (https://www.pro-football-reference.com/years/2018/passing.htm?sr&utm_source=direct&utm_medium=Share&utm_campaign=ShareTool#passing)
Generated 12/10/2018.

pbmax
12-10-2018, 09:55 PM
Yards Per Attempt -- Rodgers ranked 17th



Rk Player Tm Y/A
1 Ryan Fitzpatrick TAM 9.6
2 Patrick Mahomes KAN 8.9
3 Philip Rivers LAC 8.9
4 Jared Goff LAR 8.6
5 Drew Brees NOR 8.3
6 Russell Wilson SEA 8.3
7 Deshaun Watson HOU 8.2
8 Matt Ryan ATL 8.1
9 Jameis Winston TAM 8.0
10 Ryan Tannehill MIA 8.0
11 Tom Brady NWE 7.8
12 Marcus Mariota TEN 7.8
13 Ben Roethlisberger PIT 7.7
14 Carson Wentz PHI 7.7
15 Baker Mayfield CLE 7.7
16 Eli Manning NYG 7.6
17 Aaron Rodgers GNB 7.5
18 Derek Carr OAK 7.5
19 Dak Prescott DAL 7.5
20 Cam Newton CAR 7.4
21 Mitchell Trubisky CHI 7.3
22 Andrew Luck IND 7.1
23 Kirk Cousins MIN 7.1
24 Blake Bortles JAX 7.0
25 Andy Dalton CIN 7.0
26 Matthew Stafford DET 6.9
27 Case Keenum DEN 6.9
28 Sam Darnold NYJ 6.7
29 Alex Smith WAS 6.6
30 Joe Flacco BAL 6.5
31 Josh Allen BUF 6.3
32 Josh Rosen ARI 6.1


Provided by Pro-Football-Reference.com (https://www.sports-reference.com/sharing.html?utm_source=direct&utm_medium=Share&utm_campaign=ShareTool): View Original Table (https://www.pro-football-reference.com/years/2018/passing.htm?sr&utm_source=direct&utm_medium=Share&utm_campaign=ShareTool&utm_source=direct&utm_medium=Share&utm_campaign=ShareTool#passing)
Generated 12/10/2018.

gbgary
12-10-2018, 11:00 PM
pb's stats above

man...not the kind of stuff you want to see from the highest paid guy in the league. sure hope things are better next year. i don't want to say i told you so.

mraynrand
12-10-2018, 11:11 PM
I suppose that's a biased but fair description what the Packers do at times. It got us 34 points on not to bad a defense last Sunday before we took our foot off the gas. I'd much rather have that than a lot of wasted downs on running plays. The scramble drill that you describe is pretty much the best option when the O Line can't just play it straight up and stop the pass rush. As for that basic rub thing/legal picks, I'm fairly sure the Packers do that a lot as well as the quick screen to Adams or another WR.

The thing several people in here have advocated is getting rid of the ball quick as a means of compensating for the poor pass blocking. I say again, that is a recipe for interceptions - as we saw a couple of times against the Falcons when the streak was almost broken.

Rand, you also said you'd rather have a better percentage of 3rd down conversions than a lack of interceptions. We would all like that better percentage on 3rd down, but absolutely not at the risk of interceptions. Giving up possession 40 or so yards down field on a 4th down punt is not ideal, but it beats the hell out of giving up the ball and maybe a quick touchdown on an interception.

I don't know that the offense Sunday was the EO offense. Have to look it over again.

I also don't know what trade off will lead to better third down conversions a the expense of lower INT rate. Maybe throwing high to Graham over the middle instead of at his knees where he can't catch it easily nor run with it even if he does catch it. Or slants - you throw too many, and the LB drops back and snags one - look for Mack to get one just like this on Sunday if they go short passing all game long.

But honestly, taking the sack or throwing it away is mostly better than INTs. But getting in lots of third and longs is a special failure of the offense (and I don't know how frequent it is compared to earlier ion the year).

Still, this is all blowing smoke. The Packers are failing on offense because their QB was hurt/less efficient, their O-line is a mess, they don't have an effective balance of running/short passes on early downs to create higher percentage 3rd downs, and they have personnel problems at WR as well. Generally, their offense is a collection of 'meh' at various positions, leaving you with an overall 'meh' offense. It's hard to see how that will dramatically improve here on the stretch run, especially against Chicago. Their last two games should be highly winnable (but so was AZ). Chicago should be a very difficult game to win given the team's personnel shortcomings. (in the Chicago thread, maybe talk about the best strategy to win will be working the edges with four wideouts).

Tony Oday
12-11-2018, 06:16 AM
Wins are all that matter, the rest get you paid see Cousins.

mraynrand
12-11-2018, 06:31 AM
Wins ar ed all that matter, the test get you paid see Cousins.

it's a little early to start drinking, no?

Tony Oday
12-11-2018, 07:32 AM
it's a little early to start drinking, no?

Typed too fast, damn phone.

mraynrand
12-11-2018, 07:42 AM
Typed too fast, damn phone.

:)

smuggler
12-11-2018, 07:11 PM
DYAR being so heavily slanted to favor Mahomes over Rodgers leads me to believe that the statistic is not yet refined enough (in its ability to separate the ability of a QB from the ability of his offensive teammates). I say this in spite of the fact that I admit Mahomes has been the better QB this season - just not in that magnitude.

pbmax
12-12-2018, 08:55 AM
DYAR being so heavily slanted to favor Mahomes over Rodgers leads me to believe that the statistic is not yet refined enough (in its ability to separate the ability of a QB from the ability of his offensive teammates). I say this in spite of the fact that I admit Mahomes has been the better QB this season - just not in that magnitude.

No doubt. But I think the overall thrust of those three numbers (DYAR, YPA and comp%) suggest Rodgers and the offense aren't bottom of the barrel , but they are decidedly average these days. And that is quite a different year for them.

The best stat I know of to track the kind of year a QB is having alone is Air Yards. Distance the actual throw traveled before the receiver added YAC. Brian Burke used to do it but he doesn't update his own site since he started work with ESPN. But it may be elsewhere.

Patler
12-12-2018, 09:12 AM
…. and the most important stat for a running back is fumbles. :roll:

Fritz
12-12-2018, 09:22 AM
…. and the most important stat for a running back is fumbles. :roll:

Jamaal Williams is an All Pro.

pbmax
12-12-2018, 10:31 AM
Jamaal Williams is an All Pro.

I still think Williams and Jones in the backfield and being under center would unlock a LOT of good things for the Packers. Both those guys can catch the ball so you can match Jones on a LB and still get protection. Williams can run screens and check downs.

You get play action to open up the middle of the field.

beveaux1
12-12-2018, 11:56 AM
I still think Williams and Jones in the backfield and being under center would unlock a LOT of good things for the Packers. Both those guys can catch the ball so you can match Jones on a LB and still get protection. Williams can run screens and check downs.

You get play action to open up the middle of the field.

I really agree with this. Williams is a willing blocker and on short yardage he might be a better option. At the very least, there could be confusion from the defense about who to key on.

Fritz
12-12-2018, 12:53 PM
I still think Williams and Jones in the backfield and being under center would unlock a LOT of good things for the Packers. Both those guys can catch the ball so you can match Jones on a LB and still get protection. Williams can run screens and check downs.

You get play action to open up the middle of the field.

You know, I like this. It could open up some things. Two backs in the backfield, a tight end, and two wide receivers. You could run, you could even run a draw, you could keep both in to block, send one out - lots of possibilities.

I don't know how big Williams is, but he seems a capable blocker. And he never fumbles!

run pMc
12-12-2018, 01:13 PM
Williams is a better pass blocker, and arguably a better receiver. Jones is far more dynamic.

I'd be amused by an old school 2-2-1 pro set. Could bring back the Bill Walsh "WCO" a la Craig and Rathman. Dunno if defenses have evolved to shut that down (Cover 2 etc.) and thus nobody does that, or if it's just more fun to have 3WR's with how the game is officiated now.

Patler
12-12-2018, 01:30 PM
You know, I like this. It could open up some things. Two backs in the backfield, a tight end, and two wide receivers. You could run, you could even run a draw, you could keep both in to block, send one out - lots of possibilities.

I think I have seen that before......now I remember...Paul Hornung, Jim Taylor, Marv Flemming, Boyd Dowler and Carrol Dale. Standard in the '60s. :-)

Tony Oday
12-12-2018, 01:55 PM
William's is not even close to Jones.

pbmax
12-12-2018, 05:47 PM
Problem is that I am not sure how much 2 back the Packers playbook has in it. It would be a package they have to add.

mraynrand
12-13-2018, 12:08 AM
Problem is that I am not sure how much 2 back the Packers playbook has in it. It would be a package they have to add.

Get that Northwestern fullback up to speed! Go Throwback West Coast this Sunday.

Anti-Polar Bear
12-13-2018, 02:42 AM
Bring black the Pro Set!

texaspackerbacker
12-13-2018, 08:53 AM
Absolutely. I doubt it would happen, but for years, make that decades, I have thought having two stud RBs in the back field, both capable of running or blocking or receiving, is far superior to the I-formation.

pbmax
12-13-2018, 09:00 AM
Absolutely. I doubt it would happen, but for years, make that decades, I have thought having two stud RBs in the back field, both capable of running or blocking or receiving, is far superior to the I-formation.

Don't you say that to Tank or Mike Sherman!


#would leave an Ahman tag here but you know he'd be in court for violence five minutes later