So, I was playing around with the game charting data, and I
decided to check out some of the stats that we included in Pro Football
Prospectus 2006, to see if they stayed consistent this year. One of the biggest
things in the charting is yards after catch -- STATS Inc. keeps that, but they
really don't do a good job of making it public, so we wanted our own numbers.
We did those not just for wide receivers, but also for tight ends, running
backs -- and quarterbacks, to see who got the most extra yardage from hitting
receivers in stride, throwing screens, or having Santana Moss on their team.
Comparing the two seasons was pretty interesting. (Actually,
we're talking about the 2005 season compared to an incomplete sample from the
first 13 weeks of the 2006 season, but I digress.) It's surprising how few
quarterbacks played a significant amount of time on the same team, in the same
system, in both 2005 and 2006. 30 quarterbacks had at least 80 charted passes
in 2005 and at least 50 charted (so far) passes in 2006. But seven are now on
different teams, and five (counting Mark Brunell) are in new offensive systems
this year. Both of those could be big reasons why YAC would change.
At first glance, it doesn't look like quarterback YAC has a
lot of correlation from one year to the next, but actually, the correlation
coefficient is .33 for all the quarterbacks, and .41 for the quarterbacks who
are on the same team as last year (no matter if the coaching staff changed or
not). For the NFL, that's reasonably consistent.
Last year's top quarterback in YAC was Jake Delhomme, and
he's fallen to the middle of the pack this year. (No duh, since Steve Smith
hasn't been as explosive or used as much as last year.) But last year's number
two, Donovan McNabb, is this year's top quarterback in YAC, by far: 8.0 yards
per completion. Delhomme was at 6.1 last year, and nobody is above 6.7 in our incomplete
sample of 2006.
Here's the remarkable stat for people who think Jeff Garcia
is actually better than Donovan McNabb in that Philadelphia offense: Garcia is last this
year with just 3.8 yards after catch. In the same offense, with the same receivers.
It sure doesn't look like they're calling the plays differently -- the Eagles still
throw bombs and hit Westbrook on screens -- but something is clearly different.
The rest of this year's top five: Daunte Culpepper, David
Garrard, Mark Brunell, and Brett Favre. Brunell was third last year, but
Garrard was near the bottom of the YAC rankings last year. That's an overall
change in the Jacksonville
offense, I think -- Garrard went from 43rd to third, and Leftwich went from
33rd to eighth.
Tom Brady was one of last year's leaders, but he's middle of
the pack this year with the New England
"seriously, who are these guys" wide receiver plan.
Another same team, different offensive philosophy: Culpepper
was second this year and Joey Harrington is third from the bottom. The bottom
five: Garcia, Matt Hasselbeck, Joey Harrington, Peyton Manning, Steve McNair. All
of those guys were middle of the pack in 2005 except Hasselbeck -- with a lot
of specific routes to get first downs, and running backs who suck at receiving,
Hasselbeck is just not going to get YAC.
There are a lot of other guys who are near the bottom in YAC
both years, though -- they just aren't bottom FIVE this season. That includes
Charlie Frye, Carson Palmer (surprising, I think), and Michael Vick.
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