Guest Masters Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 keep in mind the comp% is also in that formula as a stand alone stat. So yes using YPC along with comp% would be more reasonable. Using YPA with comp% favors short high percentage completions over longer lower percentage completions even if they produce higher overall offensive effectiveness. That is a flaw in the system. Comp % is 1 of 4 part factors. The factors are: completion percentage yards per attempt touchdowns per attempt interceptions per attempt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PlaygroundLegend Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 The Steelers own the Browns as if they purchased them on Ebay. The Browns are just 6-31 at Pittsburgh since 1970. The Steelers are 9-1 at Cleveland Browns Stadium, or as they like to call it, "Home Away From Home." The last time the Browns defeated Pittsburgh in Cleveland, Bill Clinton was the president. Ponder that for a second. those were the good ol days, I miss the clinton presidency. Dude, Quinn will come in at the half, and mop the steelers up Quinn has specifically been studying the steelers D for YEARS now, he was on a talk show before the superbowl and he spoke of some studied tactics to beat the steelers d, that larry fits post over the middle was one of them If Quinn can beat just one team in the league, its the Steelers, because that a game he cares about more than any other, because he isnt just a player, he is a browns fan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Greythan Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 I think the reason the passer rating resolves itself over time (i.e., good QB's have high ratings) is due to the reality that there are only so many mid to long range passes to be completed. I *think* Lum's argument is something like the following: 12/30 for 300 yards, 3 TD's and 0 INT's could be just as effective as 18/30 for 300 yards, 3 TD's and 0 INT's yet the first QB would have a lower rating. One could see the difference in those two stat lines: bigger plays by the first QB and probably a few more first downs by the second. However, can you really expect a large enough difference in YPC to justify a subpar completion rate? Stated another way, can you complete enough "big" passes week in and week out to maintain effectiveness? Maybe for a game here or there, but I'd argue you can't if for no other reason than you'll get game planned. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Masters Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 Why is a lame ass Steelers fan and his week ass smack radomly in this thread Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chip Banks Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 It doesn't favor completion percentages, if favors attempts and what is done with them. Hence how DA's QBR actually went up by throwing an incomplete pass. You did read my post right????? Campbell was 17-23 for 145 yds, 1 td to register a 104.4 rating last week. Sanchez was 12-24 for 172 yards and 1 td to register an 87.5 rating. So with Sanchez's one more pass (24 to Campbell's 23) Sanchez gained 27 yards. Campbell's yards per attempt equaled only 6.3 yards Meaning if he had one more pass what campbell would have done with it is throw a 6 yard pass to bring his total up to 151 yards. STILL 20 YARDS SHY OF SANCHEZ. Both QBs threw one TD and no picks. But because Campbell completed almost 74% (17-23) of his passes as opposed to Sanchez's 50% (12-24), the passer rating gods awarded him with with a passer rating almost 20 POINTS HIGHER THAN SANCHEZ'S. In case this is too much to follow, the simple breakdown is that Sanchez averaged 7.2 yards per attempt on Monday Night and Campbell averaged 6.3 yards per attempt on Sunday afternoon. With only one throw dividing them, they both threw for a single TD and no picks. Yet, despite the fact that Campbell DID LESS WITH HIS ATTEMPTS, he registered a passer rating that was nearly 20 points higher than Sanchez. So please rethink the logic of your statement that passer rating "doesn't favor completion percentages, if favors attempts and what is done with them". Sanchez got 27 more yards with his one extra attempt and the passer rating did him no favors! Nothing game by game about this -- Campbell versus Sanchez last week demonstrates that the passer rating formula puts an undue premium on completion percentage. I'm just comparing the raw numbers without regard to whether there was bad QB play or great QB play within those numbers. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Masters Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 You did read my post right????? Campbell was 17-23 for 145 yds, 1 td to register a 104.4 rating last week. Sanchez was 12-24 for 172 yards and 1 td to register an 87.5 rating. So with Sanchez's one more pass (24 to Campbell's 23) Sanchez gained 27 yards. Campbell's yards per attempt equaled only 6.3 yards Meaning if he had one more pass what campbell would have done with it is throw a 6 yard pass to bring his total up to 151 yards. STILL 20 YARDS SHY OF SANCHEZ. Both QBs threw one TD and no picks. But because Campbell completed almost 74% (17-23) of his passes as opposed to Sanchez's 50% (12-24), the passer rating gods awarded him with with a passer rating almost 20 POINTS HIGHER THAN SANCHEZ'S. In case this is too much to follow, the simple breakdown is that Sanchez averaged 7.2 yards per attempt on Monday Night Campbell averaged 6.3 yards per attempt. With only one throw dividing them, they both threw for a single TD and no picks. Yet Campbell registered a passer rating that was nearly 20 points higher than Sanchez. So please rethink the logic of your statement that passer rating "doesn't favor completion percentages, if favors attempts and what is done with them". Sanchez got 27 more yards with his one extra attempt and the passer rating did him no favor! I read it. Did you read mine? How does a stat that supposedly favors completion percentage, as you stated, when by throwing an INC pass your rating goes up? Yes, completions are a factor as is the percentage (obviously since comp factor in). But it is only one in 4 factors. Look at your stat lines, they are almost identical (20 yards is not that much in the scheme of the formula), except the # of completions. Thus Cambell gets the bump up on the QBR over Sanchez. It's only favoring completion percentage when you try to put identical numbers up with COMP being the only variable. Look at this one from last week: P. Manning 36/44 309 yards, 3 TDs, 1 INT 109QBR E. Manning 8/10 173 yards, 2 TDs, 0 INT 158.3 QBR Both guys completed 80%, but Eli's QBR is almost 50 points higher. So how is that favoring completion %? It remains about attempts and what is done with them. Hence why ATT factors into all 4 factors in QBR, and COMP is only in 1. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
.mz Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 Look at this one from last week: P. Manning 36/44 309 yards, 3 TDs, 1 INT 109QBR E. Manning 8/10 173 yards, 2 TDs, 0 INT 158.3 QBR Does anyone know anything regarding Cooper's availability? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Masters Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 Well put, Masters. *Thanks* Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pumpkin Eater Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 Not a bad statistic, but three playoff QBs and the SB winner sat in the bottom quarter of the league last year. 2008 Passer rating leaders. 1 Philip Rivers, 105.5 (Won AFC West) 2 Chad Pennington, 97.4 (Won AFC East) 3 Kurt Warner, QB 96.9 (Wild Card Super Bowl) 4 Drew Brees, QB 96.2 (Missed playoffs) 5 Peyton Manning, 95.0 (Wild Card) 6 Aaron Rodgers, 93.4 (Missed Playoffs) 7 Matt Schaub, 92.7 (Missed Playoffs) 8 Tony Romo, 91.4 (Missed Playoffs) 9 Jeff Garcia, 90.2 (Missed Playoffs) 10 Matt Cassel, 89.4 (Missed Playoffs) 11 Matt Ryan, 87.7 (Wild Card) 12 Shaun Hill, 87.5 (Missed Playoffs) 13 Seneca Wallace, 87.0 (Missed Playoffs) 14 Eli Manning, 86.4 (Won NFC East) 15 Donovan McNabb, 86.4 (Wild card) 16 Jay Cutler, 86.0 (Missed Playoffs) 17 Trent Edwards, 85.4 (Missed Playoffs) 18 Jake Delhomme, 84.7 (Missed Playoffs) 19 Jason Campbell, 84.3 (Missed Playoffs) 20 David Garrard, 81.7 (Missed Playoffs) 21 Brett Favre, 81.0 (Missed Playoffs) 22 Joe Flacco, 80.3 (Wild card) 23 Kerry Collins, 80.2 (Won AFC South) 24 Big Gay Ben 80.1 (Won Superbowl) 25 Kyle Orton, 79.6 (missed Playoffs) 26 JaMarcus Russell, 77.1 (Rapelisberger-like) uh.. Jake Delhomme and the Panthers won the NFC south last year. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bigplayerben7 Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 Six Super Bowls is the only stat. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pumpkin Eater Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 Not saying that good QB isn't crucial to winning football. I just have issues with the passer rating. It favors completion percentages and QBs who don't have RBs who can finish a drive. TDs and completion percentage can distort a good performance. How about Sanchez on Monday Night? Good game, right? 12-24, 172 yds, 1 td 87.3. Say he tosses a hail mary that gets picked in the end zone in the last second of the half. It's a 69 all of a sudden. Say he hands the ball off to Thomas Jones instead of the 3 yard TD pass to Braylon? It's a 72.6. Say Braylon drops that pass as he's prone to do in the past? It's a 69. Say he drops the difficult 35 yard pass that Sachez threw too. Now he has a 60. Pretend instead that Edwards catches that beautiful pass right in his hands at the end of the game where he got the bail out interference call -- or they credit him with the TD on the ball marked at the one. Sanchez rockets from a "respectable" 87 to well over 100. Anybody impressed with Campbell's performance in a loss against Carolina? 17-23, 145 yds, 1 td that's a 104.4. Less yards. Same TD, but he completed a higher percentage of passes to get those fewer yards. Thank you. Perfect examples. Good work! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pumpkin Eater Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 those were the good ol days, I miss the clinton presidency. Dude, Quinn will come in at the half, and mop the steelers up Quinn has specifically been studying the steelers D for YEARS now, he was on a talk show before the superbowl and he spoke of some studied tactics to beat the steelers d, that larry fits post over the middle was one of them If Quinn can beat just one team in the league, its the Steelers, because that a game he cares about more than any other, because he isnt just a player, he is a browns fan Keep dreaming. Quinn ain't coming in after halftime. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sez.EJ Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 The four top rated passers in the NFL: Peyton, Eli, Drew, and Favre. Combined losses: 0 The four bottom rated passers: Delhomme, Johnson, Russell, DA. Combined wins: 2 (Meanwhile, the Titans and Rams have the 3rd and 4th leading rushers in the NFL, both very close to #1.) Shep.. WHAT A LOAD OF CRAP: 3 of those 4 top qb's have rushing games in the top 10 in the league.. it's called BALANCE.. ALSO 3 of those 4 unbeaten teams are in the top 6 in defense.. Give us a break.. we are not stupid enough to believe that the qb is doing this all on their own. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BUNSofSTEEL08 Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 Are those this years stats? Because Big Gay Ben isn't gonna get anywhere near the playoffs this year. and his penchant for the pick 6 is going to be one of the reasons. LOL... Ben is completing over 70% of his passes Almost 280 yrs a game... 8 TDs 5 picks (2 pick 6) One Pick six Bad route , one other INT on a Hail Mary. Dont sound like Ben will be our demise as much as perhaps a Struggling Defense. But its not over yet, we will see. (just read today that if the nine drops were completions his Comp % would be 79.1%) knock him if you want. But Ben is a Gamer. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Masters Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 I missed the post where I said a quarterback is doing it all on his own. God, it's laborious making points around here. So much fukcing hand holding. *thanks* People love to put spins on posts that were never their. I guess w/ this economy, some people can't afford common sense. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PlaygroundLegend Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 dude thats a sweet title, "hangs around with lebron" lol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chip Banks Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 I read it. Did you read mine? How does a stat that supposedly favors completion percentage, as you stated, when by throwing an INC pass your rating goes up? Yes, completions are a factor as is the percentage (obviously since comp factor in). But it is only one in 4 factors. Look at your stat lines, they are almost identical (20 yards is not that much in the scheme of the formula), except the # of completions. Thus Cambell gets the bump up on the QBR over Sanchez. It's only favoring completion percentage when you try to put identical numbers up with COMP being the only variable. Look at this one from last week: P. Manning 36/44 309 yards, 3 TDs, 1 INT 109QBR E. Manning 8/10 173 yards, 2 TDs, 0 INT 158.3 QBR Both guys completed 80%, but Eli's QBR is almost 50 points higher. So how is that favoring completion %? It remains about attempts and what is done with them. Hence why ATT factors into all 4 factors in QBR, and COMP is only in 1. You are still missing it. Sanchez had one more attempt than Campbell and with that one attempt the difference was 27 yards. Over four times Campbell's average per attempt. Both had 1 TD and no Picks. Go to the calculation you posted. The devil is in the details. "C" is the factor for completion percentage. When you factor it out, Campbell gets a 2.1 for that one of four statistics for his 74% completion percentage. Sanchez gets a 1.0. "Y" is the factor for yards per attempt. When you factor it out, Campbell gets a .82, while Sanchez gets a 1.04. So for his superior completion percentage, Campbell gets 1.1 points more than Sanchez in one of the 4 "equal" categories for passer rating. Despite enjoying almost an extra yard per attempt versus Campbell, Sanchez only picks up two tenths of a point over in the second of four "equal" categories. So after these two categories are calculated, Campbell has three points and Sanchez has only two. Campbell gets a .86 for the "T" factor for his 1 TD in 23 attempts, while Sanchez gets .83 for his 1 TD in 23 attempts. They both get the whole 2.375 for the I factor because neither threw an interception. That's all four factors that are added up, divided by 6 and then multiplied by 100. Again, Campbell gained a whole point over Sanchez for his markedly better completion percentage, while Sanchez gained only two tenths of a point over Campbell for his markedly better yards per attempt. This shows the bias in the formula for completion percentage. For the life of me I can't fathom what point you are trying to make with two QBs who have the SAME or nearly the same completion percentage. In that case, the "C" factor is completely cancelled out. We all know that the formula measures other things. It's the WEIGHT given to completion percentage that causes the problem. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PlaygroundLegend Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 great post chip, I understand your point, but I must disagree... If you complete 5/15 for 240 yards you are not as good as the guy who completed 12/15 for 240 If you look at those 10 passes the first guy didn't complete, some of those were bound to be innacurate, overthrown, underthrown, or thrown too hard at a close distance*(DA). Completion percentage isnt perfect, but it is a fair judge of accuracy, generally a QB with better touch and situational throwing skills and ball placement is going to have a higher completion percentage, therefore he is the better QB than the guy who chucks it, gets the same yardage result, but is horribly innacurate Another reaosn why QBR is great is because the really good QB's are both accurate AND have a high YPA with a high comp %. So I agree with shep in the statement that it is the most accurate depiction of a QB Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Masters Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 For the life of me I can't fathom what point you are trying to make with two QBs who have the SAME or nearly the same completion percentage. In that case, the "C" factor is completely cancelled out. We all know that the formula measures other things. It's the WEIGHT given to completion percentage that causes the problem. And for the life of me I can't see how you miss the point in that. If weight is so heavily in favor of completion %, why in the Manning brother comparison is the guy with more yards, more TDs, and technically a slightly higher completion % rated 50 points lower than the QB w/ less yards, less TDs, and a slightly lower completion %. Or why a QBs QBR actually went up from 4.9 to 15.1 (that 10 points+) by throwing an incomplete pass (which you have avoided now twice). Both go agaisnt the notion that comp% is favored. It's the sum of all, not most of one and a little of the others. You gave two QBs with nearly the same stats for yards, attempts, and TDs (all bascially canceling each other out against one another), who have the only significant difference between the two being the completions. 1 extra yard per attempt is not as meaningful as doing something more with your attempts. Cambell has 1 less attempt, yet 5 times did more w/ his attempt than Sanchez did (logically 5 completions more is likely going to net a teams O more than 1 extra yard per attempt). When Y, T, and I are all almost the same, of course C is going to be a deciding factor. Again, it's all about the attempts and the results of those attempts. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Masters Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 I wish I had a photographic memory, but any of us who thinks he invented this conversation is nuts. There's a reason completion percentage is included (not just YPA and TD/INT), and it's really logical. It proved that 12 of 15 for 150 is indeed better than 6 of 15 for 155, given that both have, say, 1/0. The first team would almost always beat the second based on converting first downs. There's a similar stat for RBs, and it was used to show how Emmitt Smith (fewer big runs but fewer loses and no gains) was better than Barry Sanders (more losses and no gains but bigger runs). Of course there is a reason completion % factors in, just as there is a reason yards, YPA, TD, and INT factor in. They are all meaningful to the net results of a QBs play. I just don't see how anyone can think comp% is weighted heavier in the grand scheme of the formula, or an unfair item. Like I keep saying, if Comp % was so heavily weighted a guys QBR wouldn't go up by throwing an incomplete pass. I am iffy about that RB formula. Because anyone who watched both of those guys carriers knows Sanders was the far better back in all areas. He was just saddled with a shitty team/franchise. You put Sanders on the Cowboys and Emmit on the Lions, Sanders would have obliterated every rushing record and we'd probably be saying Emmit who? Oh yeah, I kind of remember that guy for the Lions. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mario Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 shep is the master of word play. He will manipulate anything he can to fit his argument. Just say it shep. If the QB doesn't look good in a loin cloth drenched in baby oil you don't like them. QB Rating is nice, but really? Lets see if Shep starts another thread since not everybody is agreeing with this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Masters Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 On the Manning brothers example, I could make a case that QBR to heavily favors Y/A or Yards. A QB gets credit in his stat sheets yards line for YAC of a WR. But those yards can often be the result of a WR breaking a tackle and gaining a bunch more yards, which the QB had no influence on. The reality is QBR factors in all 4 items pretty much evenly and as I have said, it's all about the ATT and what was done w/ them. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WPB Dawg Fan Posted October 14, 2009 Report Share Posted October 14, 2009 Last two Super Bowl winners: Big Gay Ben #24 Eli Manning #25 Zombo both of which relied HEAVILY on their defense for those wins Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chip Banks Posted October 15, 2009 Report Share Posted October 15, 2009 Again, it's all about the attempts and the results of those attempts. Look, I'm not saying that completion percentage should count for nothing. But in my Campbell/Sanchez comparison you would have to bump up Sanchez's 12/24 yardage to 270 yards to equal out the 17/23 for 145 that Campbell put up. You'd need a 11 YPA to get "Y" to the same 1 point advantage that Campbell got for the "C" for having going 17/23 to Sanchez's 12/24. Run it through a passer rating calculator. http://www.primecomputing.com/ Campbell's 17/23 for 145 and 1 TD/0 INT is a 104.4 passer rating. With his 12/24 day, with 1 TD and 0 INT, Sanchez would have needed 270 yards passing and an astounding 11 YPA (Manning leads the NFL at 9 YPA) to register the same 104.4 passer rating. 17 for 23 for 145 or 12/24 for 270? I'll take the latter EVERY DAY. Any sensible football fan would. Too much weight is given to the completion percentage. Simple as that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
roach Posted October 15, 2009 Report Share Posted October 15, 2009 Here are three that i just looked up. Otto Graham had a career rating of 87. Sonny Jurgensen was 83. Bart Starr was 80. What level is considered good? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chip Banks Posted October 15, 2009 Report Share Posted October 15, 2009 Look at this one from last week: P. Manning 36/44 309 yards, 3 TDs, 1 INT 109QBR E. Manning 8/10 173 yards, 2 TDs, 0 INT 158.3 QBR Break this down. First, you CANT TELL ANYTHING as to how completion percentage disproportionately skews the Passer Rating where both QB have the same completion percentage. Because both completed 80% of their passes, Peyton and Eli get the same score for "C" and it can totally be taken out of the equation. They both get the maximum 2.375 for that one of the four "equally weighted" factors With that out of the equation, Eli's numbers all are better following the formula. He has 17 yards per attempt to Peyton's 7. Eli has a TD for every 5 throws as compared to Petyon's one TD for every 14 throws and Peyton's one pick means that, unlike Eli, he does not get the full 2.375 points that any QB gets under "I" when he does not throw a pick (regardless of passes thrown*). [EDITED: The formula actually does have a quirk in it as you suggest that when completion percentage dips below a certain point you can actually improve by throwing incomplete passes. That's because you reach a point where you get no points for "C" and are not penalized for going lower. For instance, when Anderson was 2/12 he was completing 17% of his passes. Under the formula for "C" anything under 30% completion percentage earns you 0 points out of the possible 2.375. But the same throws are reducing the interceptions PER Attempt. When Anderson had 12 throws and 1 pick, he was getting only .292 points for the "I" portion of the formula. When he got up to 17 throws and the same 1 pick, he was now entitled to .9 points under the "I" portion of the formula. So he was increasing his passer rating with incomplete passes, but only because he couldn't go lower than 0 with respect to "C" and you hit 0 at 30% completion percentage. I guess the theory is "at least it wasn't an interception". Another smaller flaw in the passer rating formula.] * A QB that throws three passes for two yards without a pick gets the same number of points for the "I" portion of the passer rating formula as a guy who throws 50 passes for 500 yards without a pick? -- 2.375. Just think through it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Drunkandstoopid Posted October 15, 2009 Report Share Posted October 15, 2009 I think somebody's struggling with the notion of statistical significance. It's real, guys, and part of the reason the cliche is so true: It's a quarterback league. When they line up all the playoff teams, the vast majority of those 12 quarterbacks will be at the top of the passer rating, year after year. Sometimes it's freakish, other times it's just really obvious. We've covered it here a lot. Chicken or Egg. Are the teams good because the QBs good, or are the QBs good because they're surrounded by a good team? The reality is it's probably a little bit of both.... but realistically Shep, how good do you think the Browns would be this year, and how good would those 4 QBs be doing, if they were the Browns QB right now rather than BQ or DA? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
damajuki Posted October 15, 2009 Report Share Posted October 15, 2009 Great thread, guys. One thing to throw in here that's being overlooked in the mathematical sorcery and the attempts vs. completions debate: It very well could be that the formula works so well because it takes into account the very things you are arguing about. It rewards BOTH completions and attempts and though I can see Lum and Chip's point about it being skewed towards completions, I'm not sure that I can buy the argument that's a bad thing. It is called passer rating, after all, as in, "one who throws the ball". Is it unreasonable to reward passers whose passes ACTUALLY COUNT, i.e., are completed? We do want the passes to be caught, right? Seems to me that high completion % for a QB is the same as a high first-pitch strike % for a pitcher: neither GUARANTEES success (lots of other variables impact the end result in both cases) but both are highly correlated with success and in both cases you'd much rather have a high degree of success in that area than take your chances with the alternative (low completion/low strike rate). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
InsideNation Posted October 15, 2009 Report Share Posted October 15, 2009 definitely Shepwrite, no big or small stats can win a ball game, its the end scores that matters most Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PlaygroundLegend Posted October 15, 2009 Report Share Posted October 15, 2009 definitely Shepwrite, no big or small stats can win a ball game, its the end scores that matters most I disagree to an extent... If your QB goes 2/17 with a pick and 22 yards, they did absolutely nothing to help you win the game. Yes, the W was the outcome, but that player did nothing to warrant that outcome. We could have won by MORE if we had a different QB in, a QB who wouldve done better than 2/17 with 1 int and 22yds Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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