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What do these QBs have in common (1 Viewer)

Chase Stuart

Footballguy
This isn't really a trivia question, but here's a group of players. Perhaps some of you will figure out what they all have in common (and this is a trait that no other QB drafted since 1990 has):

Carson Palmer

David Carr

Akili Smith

Trent Dilfer

Matt Leinart

Dan McGwire

Kyle Boller

J.P. Losman

Todd Marinovich

Aaron Rodgers

John Beck

Tony Banks

Troy Taylor

Jonathan Quinn

Trent Edwards

Rob Johnson

Seneca Wallace

Perry Klein

Mark Brunell

Dave Barr

Steve Stenstrom

Randy Fasani

J.T. O'Sullivan

Drew Henson

Gino Torretta

Craig Whelihan

Jay Walker

Tom Brady

Todd Husak

Matt Cassel

Gibran Hamdan

Moses Moreno

Ken Dorsey

Scott Covington

 
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This isn't really a trivia question, but here's a group of players. Perhaps some of you will figure out what they all have in common (and this is a trait that no other QB drafted since 1990 has):Carson PalmerDavid CarrAkili SmithTrent DilferMatt LeinartDan McGwireKyle BollerJ.P. LosmanTodd MarinovichAaron RodgersJohn BeckTony BanksTroy TaylorJonathan QuinnTrent EdwardsRob JohnsonSeneca WallacePerry KleinMark BrunellDave BarrSteve StenstromRandy FasaniJ.T. O'SullivanDrew HensonGino TorrettaCraig WhelihanJay WalkerTom BradyTodd HusakMatt CasselGibran HamdanMoses MorenoKen DorseyScott Covington
I did not check them all, but it does look like they all went to high school in California.
 
This isn't really a trivia question, but here's a group of players. Perhaps some of you will figure out what they all have in common (and this is a trait that no other QB drafted since 1990 has):Carson PalmerDavid CarrAkili SmithTrent DilferMatt LeinartDan McGwireKyle BollerJ.P. LosmanTodd MarinovichAaron RodgersJohn BeckTony BanksTroy TaylorJonathan QuinnTrent EdwardsRob JohnsonSeneca WallacePerry KleinMark BrunellDave BarrSteve StenstromRandy FasaniJ.T. O'SullivanDrew HensonGino TorrettaCraig WhelihanJay WalkerTom BradyTodd HusakMatt CasselGibran HamdanMoses MorenoKen DorseyScott Covington
I did not check them all, but it does look like they all went to high school in California.
Yep I think they all were born in California.
 
Here is a bonus football/geography question.

The object is to compile the best trio ever (QB/RB/WR) all from one state - feel free to mix high school attended or university attended to get the best trio. What state do you pick?

Here's a hint - Do not select Texas, Florida, California, Ohio, Pennsylvania or Michigan.

 
Here is a bonus football/geography question. The object is to compile the best trio ever (QB/RB/WR) all from one state - feel free to mix high school attended or university attended to get the best trio. What state do you pick?Here's a hint - Do not select Texas, Florida, California, Ohio, Pennsylvania or Michigan.
I'm trying to find a way to shoehorn both Peyton Manning and Jerry Rice into Mississippi or Louisiana, but it's just not happening.
 
Here is a bonus football/geography question. The object is to compile the best trio ever (QB/RB/WR) all from one state - feel free to mix high school attended or university attended to get the best trio. What state do you pick?Here's a hint - Do not select Texas, Florida, California, Ohio, Pennsylvania or Michigan.
Favre-Payton-Rice from Mississippi.
 
This isn't really a trivia question, but here's a group of players. Perhaps some of you will figure out what they all have in common (and this is a trait that no other QB drafted since 1990 has):Carson PalmerDavid CarrAkili SmithTrent DilferMatt LeinartDan McGwireKyle BollerJ.P. LosmanTodd MarinovichAaron RodgersJohn BeckTony BanksTroy TaylorJonathan QuinnTrent EdwardsRob JohnsonSeneca WallacePerry KleinMark BrunellDave BarrSteve StenstromRandy FasaniJ.T. O'SullivanDrew HensonGino TorrettaCraig WhelihanJay WalkerTom BradyTodd HusakMatt CasselGibran HamdanMoses MorenoKen DorseyScott Covington
I did not check them all, but it does look like they all went to high school in California.
Yep I think they all were born in California.
:thumbup: They were all born in California.It seems to me that there's an extraordinarily high bust rate there. Cecil and Bloom alluded to this on the audible, which prompted me to look this up. Judging by the first 100 picks....everyone up to Rob Johnson.... I see 10 busts and 6, at best, in the "not yet boom or bust" or "neutral" category. I see no one that's outplayed his draft position.As far as the whole list, outside of Brady and Brunell, who has outplayed their draft position? There are 34 QBs on there, and Tony freakin Banks looks like the third biggest overachiever. Rob Johnson -- yes, that Rob Johnson -- looks like the other biggest "overachiever". Those sort of sound laughable, but look at the list.So what's up with CA QBs? Or is this just random variation in a relatively small sample size? (After all, I did consciously start the year after Troy Aikman was drafted.)
 
This isn't really a trivia question, but here's a group of players. Perhaps some of you will figure out what they all have in common (and this is a trait that no other QB drafted since 1990 has):Carson PalmerDavid CarrAkili SmithTrent DilferMatt LeinartDan McGwireKyle BollerJ.P. LosmanTodd MarinovichAaron RodgersJohn BeckTony BanksTroy TaylorJonathan QuinnTrent EdwardsRob JohnsonSeneca WallacePerry KleinMark BrunellDave BarrSteve StenstromRandy FasaniJ.T. O'SullivanDrew HensonGino TorrettaCraig WhelihanJay WalkerTom BradyTodd HusakMatt CasselGibran HamdanMoses MorenoKen DorseyScott Covington
I did not check them all, but it does look like they all went to high school in California.
Yep I think they all were born in California.
:excited: They were all born in California.It seems to me that there's an extraordinarily high bust rate there. Cecil and Bloom alluded to this on the audible, which prompted me to look this up. Judging by the first 100 picks....everyone up to Rob Johnson.... I see 10 busts and 6, at best, in the "not yet boom or bust" or "neutral" category. I see no one that's outplayed his draft position.As far as the whole list, outside of Brady and Brunell, who has outplayed their draft position? There are 34 QBs on there, and Tony freakin Banks looks like the third biggest overachiever. Rob Johnson -- yes, that Rob Johnson -- looks like the other biggest "overachiever". Those sort of sound laughable, but look at the list.So what's up with CA QBs? Or is this just random variation in a relatively small sample size? (After all, I did consciously start the year after Troy Aikman was drafted.)
I think Aikman is from Henryetta, OK, the home of the Hens ... I think they have changed the mascot since.
 
Maybe this should be compared to a list from another state. Out of 34 guys, I wouldn't expect many more than the 2 legit franchise quarterbacks considering how rare those are. Then you have a few guys who managed to have several seasons as a starter (Dilfer, Banks, Brunell) and a few still with the opportunity to succeed (Leinart, Rodgers, Edwards). So that's 8 worthwhile QBs out of 34. Is that really horrible? What are the overall ratios of franchise QBs/total drafted, long-term starters/total drafted, and developing QBs/total drafted?

 
Maybe this should be compared to a list from another state. Out of 34 guys, I wouldn't expect many more than the 2 legit franchise quarterbacks considering how rare those are. Then you have a few guys who managed to have several seasons as a starter (Dilfer, Banks, Brunell) and a few still with the opportunity to succeed (Leinart, Rodgers, Edwards). So that's 8 worthwhile QBs out of 34. Is that really horrible? What are the overall ratios of franchise QBs/total drafted, long-term starters/total drafted, and developing QBs/total drafted?
Well I'm only focused on whether CA QBs fail to live up to their draft hype. So in that sense, 34 is a pretty significant number, and Dilfer is a bust, and Palmer is in the 'up in the air' category.
 
This isn't really a trivia question, but here's a group of players. Perhaps some of you will figure out what they all have in common (and this is a trait that no other QB drafted since 1990 has):...Drew Henson
I did not check them all, but it does look like they all went to high school in California.
Yep I think they all were born in California.
:goodposting: They were all born in California.It seems to me that there's an extraordinarily high bust rate there. Cecil and Bloom alluded to this on the audible, which prompted me to look this up. Judging by the first 100 picks....everyone up to Rob Johnson.... I see 10 busts and 6, at best, in the "not yet boom or bust" or "neutral" category. I see no one that's outplayed his draft position.As far as the whole list, outside of Brady and Brunell, who has outplayed their draft position? There are 34 QBs on there, and Tony freakin Banks looks like the third biggest overachiever. Rob Johnson -- yes, that Rob Johnson -- looks like the other biggest "overachiever". Those sort of sound laughable, but look at the list.So what's up with CA QBs? Or is this just random variation in a relatively small sample size? (After all, I did consciously start the year after Troy Aikman was drafted.)
Henson went to HS in Michigan, so is it really fair to try and blame the state he was born in? I don't know when he moved, but I'd guess it was early in his life.
 
Maybe this should be compared to a list from another state. Out of 34 guys, I wouldn't expect many more than the 2 legit franchise quarterbacks considering how rare those are. Then you have a few guys who managed to have several seasons as a starter (Dilfer, Banks, Brunell) and a few still with the opportunity to succeed (Leinart, Rodgers, Edwards). So that's 8 worthwhile QBs out of 34. Is that really horrible? What are the overall ratios of franchise QBs/total drafted, long-term starters/total drafted, and developing QBs/total drafted?
Well I'm only focused on whether CA QBs fail to live up to their draft hype. So in that sense, 34 is a pretty significant number, and Dilfer is a bust, and Palmer is in the 'up in the air' category.
Yeah, but shouldn't you of all people know that you need to do some statistical analysis to test your hypothesis? We have no idea if the bust rate is actually higher than expected without looking deeper. I strongly disagree with Palmer being 'up in the air'. 2 Pro Bowls in a competitive AFC field, high completion %, high YPA, and low int % up until this past year, which was a disaster for the whole team. You might point to his winning %, but this is the Bengals we're talking about. They've been poorly run for nearly two decades. His defenses the last 4 years have been ranked 19th, 28th, 30th, and 27th. That's a far cry from the defenses many other franchise quarterbacks have enjoyed in recent years (Brady, both Mannings, Favre, Roethlisberger, Rivers, etc.)
 
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Maybe this should be compared to a list from another state. Out of 34 guys, I wouldn't expect many more than the 2 legit franchise quarterbacks considering how rare those are. Then you have a few guys who managed to have several seasons as a starter (Dilfer, Banks, Brunell) and a few still with the opportunity to succeed (Leinart, Rodgers, Edwards). So that's 8 worthwhile QBs out of 34. Is that really horrible? What are the overall ratios of franchise QBs/total drafted, long-term starters/total drafted, and developing QBs/total drafted?
Well I'm only focused on whether CA QBs fail to live up to their draft hype. So in that sense, 34 is a pretty significant number, and Dilfer is a bust, and Palmer is in the 'up in the air' category.
Yeah, but shouldn't you of all people know that you need to do some statistical analysis to test your hypothesis? We have no idea if the bust rate is actually higher than expected without looking deeper. I strongly disagree with Palmer being 'up in the air'. 2 Pro Bowls in a competitive AFC field, high completion %, high YPA, and low int % up until this past year, which was a disaster for the whole team. You might point to his winning %, but this is the Bengals we're talking about. They've been poorly run for nearly two decades. His defenses the last 4 years have been ranked 19th, 28th, 30th, and 27th. That's a far cry from the defenses many other franchise quarterbacks have enjoyed in recent years (Brady, both Mannings, Favre, Roethlisberger, Rivers, etc.)
The default is the average player at that draft spot. So it's already built it when saying a player is a bust or not.I think the jury is still out on whether Palmer lives up to the expectations of a #1 pick.
 
Maybe this should be compared to a list from another state. Out of 34 guys, I wouldn't expect many more than the 2 legit franchise quarterbacks considering how rare those are. Then you have a few guys who managed to have several seasons as a starter (Dilfer, Banks, Brunell) and a few still with the opportunity to succeed (Leinart, Rodgers, Edwards). So that's 8 worthwhile QBs out of 34. Is that really horrible? What are the overall ratios of franchise QBs/total drafted, long-term starters/total drafted, and developing QBs/total drafted?
Well I'm only focused on whether CA QBs fail to live up to their draft hype. So in that sense, 34 is a pretty significant number, and Dilfer is a bust, and Palmer is in the 'up in the air' category.
Yeah, but shouldn't you of all people know that you need to do some statistical analysis to test your hypothesis? We have no idea if the bust rate is actually higher than expected without looking deeper. I strongly disagree with Palmer being 'up in the air'. 2 Pro Bowls in a competitive AFC field, high completion %, high YPA, and low int % up until this past year, which was a disaster for the whole team. You might point to his winning %, but this is the Bengals we're talking about. They've been poorly run for nearly two decades. His defenses the last 4 years have been ranked 19th, 28th, 30th, and 27th. That's a far cry from the defenses many other franchise quarterbacks have enjoyed in recent years (Brady, both Mannings, Favre, Roethlisberger, Rivers, etc.)
The default is the average player at that draft spot. So it's already built it when saying a player is a bust or not.I think the jury is still out on whether Palmer lives up to the expectations of a #1 pick.
Huh? I still don't see any analysis. You're just assuming that they are busting more than others at their spot. I'm not sure what else you can expect from Palmer. His numbers the last three years are only surpassed by a select few guys like Manning, Brady, and Brees. And besides, using your own yardstick of draft position he's vastly outperformed every other QB taken at the top spot since Peyton. That's Couch, Vick, Carr, Eli, Smith, and Russell. Only Eli has accomplished anything meaningful, but his seasonal numbers are well below Palmer's. So clearly Carson has outperformed 6 contemporaries taken at the same draft spot. How does that not meet your criteria?
 
valhallan said:
Chase Stuart said:
valhallan said:
Maybe this should be compared to a list from another state. Out of 34 guys, I wouldn't expect many more than the 2 legit franchise quarterbacks considering how rare those are. Then you have a few guys who managed to have several seasons as a starter (Dilfer, Banks, Brunell) and a few still with the opportunity to succeed (Leinart, Rodgers, Edwards). So that's 8 worthwhile QBs out of 34. Is that really horrible? What are the overall ratios of franchise QBs/total drafted, long-term starters/total drafted, and developing QBs/total drafted?
Well I'm only focused on whether CA QBs fail to live up to their draft hype. So in that sense, 34 is a pretty significant number, and Dilfer is a bust, and Palmer is in the 'up in the air' category.
Yeah, but shouldn't you of all people know that you need to do some statistical analysis to test your hypothesis? We have no idea if the bust rate is actually higher than expected without looking deeper. I strongly disagree with Palmer being 'up in the air'. 2 Pro Bowls in a competitive AFC field, high completion %, high YPA, and low int % up until this past year, which was a disaster for the whole team. You might point to his winning %, but this is the Bengals we're talking about. They've been poorly run for nearly two decades. His defenses the last 4 years have been ranked 19th, 28th, 30th, and 27th. That's a far cry from the defenses many other franchise quarterbacks have enjoyed in recent years (Brady, both Mannings, Favre, Roethlisberger, Rivers, etc.)
The default is the average player at that draft spot. So it's already built it when saying a player is a bust or not.I think the jury is still out on whether Palmer lives up to the expectations of a #1 pick.
Huh? I still don't see any analysis. You're just assuming that they are busting more than others at their spot. I'm not sure what else you can expect from Palmer. His numbers the last three years are only surpassed by a select few guys like Manning, Brady, and Brees. And besides, using your own yardstick of draft position he's vastly outperformed every other QB taken at the top spot since Peyton. That's Couch, Vick, Carr, Eli, Smith, and Russell. Only Eli has accomplished anything meaningful, but his seasonal numbers are well below Palmer's. So clearly Carson has outperformed 6 contemporaries taken at the same draft spot. How does that not meet your criteria?
Let me be clear -- I don't have any analysis yet. I'm just throwing out a theory. That said, being a "bust" means you've underperformed your draft spot. So if I'm looking at all CA QBs, and I say that 30 of the 34 have been busts, that's bad -- because we know a default group of 34 QBs will have 17 busts and 17 booms. So to see a 30-4 ratio is pretty odd. I agree that you can't just look at the QBs and say this guy is good or this guy is bad, but when you compare his performance to what you'd expect from that draft slot, that gives you a default group. When we say CA QBs bust at their draft spot more than others, "others" is the default group. (It might have been confusing because I didn't explicitly state that I'll consider half of all draft picks "booms" and half of all draft picks "busts". My bad.)

As for Palmer, I simply mean we don't know. His career is far from finished. As it stands, he looks like a pretty good pick. And while he's not as good as the guys you mentioned, he hasn't been Aikman, or Bradshaw, or Manning, either. Who knows - by the end of his career we may think he's worse than Drew Bledsoe. Palmer had a down year last year, and who knows if things are going to get better anytime soon in Cincinnati. I certainly don't feel comfortable saying that Palmer has exceeded expectations just yet. Part of that isn't his fault, because he hasn't played for very wrong. But I'd prefer not to move people out of the bust or boom category once placed, so I guess I'll be more conservative than most w/r/t to saying a player's career is undecided.

 
... because we know a default group of 34 QBs will have 17 busts and 17 booms.
The NFL drafts enough QBs to replace every starter and a few of the backups about every 3 years. Seeing that good QBs often are starters for a decade and won't be replaced that fast, I would expect 2/3 of QBs to not be worthwhile NFL players before I'd expect only 1/2 would be. That's even before I take issue with your use of boom or bust. You're relegating everyone who doesn't outperform his position to being a bust. What about guys who performed at the level of their position? Shouldn't this be a sizeable percentage? How is Carson Palmer a bust? At worst he's playing at a level that someone of his draft position should play. Most teams with the #1 overall pick if you told them they could have a rookie Carson Palmer with it, would jump at the opportunity. So how is that a bust if teams would take him there when they already know with hindsight what it is they would get?How is it that a 5th, 6th, or 7th round QB who was never expected to be an NFL starter is a bust if he never became one? Sounds like he met his expectations to me.
 
... because we know a default group of 34 QBs will have 17 busts and 17 booms.
The NFL drafts enough QBs to replace every starter and a few of the backups about every 3 years. Seeing that good QBs often are starters for a decade and won't be replaced that fast, I would expect 2/3 of QBs to not be worthwhile NFL players before I'd expect only 1/2 would be. That's even before I take issue with your use of boom or bust. You're relegating everyone who doesn't outperform his position to being a bust. What about guys who performed at the level of their position? Shouldn't this be a sizeable percentage? How is Carson Palmer a bust? At worst he's playing at a level that someone of his draft position should play. Most teams with the #1 overall pick if you told them they could have a rookie Carson Palmer with it, would jump at the opportunity. So how is that a bust if teams would take him there when they already know with hindsight what it is they would get?How is it that a 5th, 6th, or 7th round QB who was never expected to be an NFL starter is a bust if he never became one? Sounds like he met his expectations to me.
Let me address your last point, first.It's an ambiguous matter, to be sure. But the "average" 6th round pick is 1/100 Tom Brady, 1/100 Trent Green, etc, and a ton of busts. On average, the 6th round QB will at least throw a few TDs and have a few starts. So take Randy Fasani. Yes, he was only a fifth round pick, but you expect more than 0 TDs and 4 INTs for his career from your average 5th round pick. So he falls in the bust category, even though he's obviously not nearly as big a bust as many other QBs.I'm not using boom and bust in the colloquial sense; it's just shorthand for "performing above average" or "performing below average". I could also take all QBs that say, fell within 10% on either side of their expectations, as neither boom nor bust. I haven't come up with the exact methodology yet. Honestly, though, I think under almost any standard you use, the majority of CA QBs over the last 15 or so years are going to look a lot worse than the default group. I could -- and one day may -- come up with a complicated and precise formula to measure this effect, but I wanted to wade into the pool here first for some theories. I thought you could pretty much go by gut and see that there are way more overachievers than underachievers on here.My question is why.(I think I've made my stance clear on Palmer. He's good. But I'm not ready to grade his career after four seasons. I don't find it clear that in 20 years, we're going to say Palmer was clearly better than Jeff George, Vinny Testaverde, Drew Bledsoe or Eli Manning. He's obviously got some work to do to pass Manning, Bradshaw and Elway. Even Mike Vick made 3 Pro Bowls in his career. It certainly wouldn't floor me if Palmer ended his career in the middle tier of all QBs selected first overall, or if he ended up being a relative underachiever for being the first pick. Do I expect that? No. But I wouldn't be shocked. And that's not even taking into consideration the stud WRs he's been fortunate enough to play with so far in his career.)
 
(I think I've made my stance clear on Palmer. He's good. But I'm not ready to grade his career after four seasons. I don't find it clear that in 20 years, we're going to say Palmer was clearly better than Jeff George, Vinny Testaverde, Drew Bledsoe or Eli Manning. He's obviously got some work to do to pass Manning, Bradshaw and Elway. Even Mike Vick made 3 Pro Bowls in his career. It certainly wouldn't floor me if Palmer ended his career in the middle tier of all QBs selected first overall, or if he ended up being a relative underachiever for being the first pick. Do I expect that? No. But I wouldn't be shocked. And that's not even taking into consideration the stud WRs he's been fortunate enough to play with so far in his career.)
Wow. I have absolutley no idea how you can even remotely think George => Palmer.George (note all the Pro Bowls & awards):

http://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/G/GeorJe00.htm

Palmer:

http://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/P/PalmCa00.htm

 
... because we know a default group of 34 QBs will have 17 busts and 17 booms.
The NFL drafts enough QBs to replace every starter and a few of the backups about every 3 years. Seeing that good QBs often are starters for a decade and won't be replaced that fast, I would expect 2/3 of QBs to not be worthwhile NFL players before I'd expect only 1/2 would be. That's even before I take issue with your use of boom or bust. You're relegating everyone who doesn't outperform his position to being a bust. What about guys who performed at the level of their position? Shouldn't this be a sizeable percentage? How is Carson Palmer a bust? At worst he's playing at a level that someone of his draft position should play. Most teams with the #1 overall pick if you told them they could have a rookie Carson Palmer with it, would jump at the opportunity. So how is that a bust if teams would take him there when they already know with hindsight what it is they would get?How is it that a 5th, 6th, or 7th round QB who was never expected to be an NFL starter is a bust if he never became one? Sounds like he met his expectations to me.
That's kind of what I was thinking. There are very, very few successful NFL QBs, so how can we be so sure this perceived number of "busts" for California is somehow inordinate?
Let me address your last point, first.It's an ambiguous matter, to be sure. But the "average" 6th round pick is 1/100 Tom Brady, 1/100 Trent Green, etc, and a ton of busts. On average, the 6th round QB will at least throw a few TDs and have a few starts. So take Randy Fasani. Yes, he was only a fifth round pick, but you expect more than 0 TDs and 4 INTs for his career from your average 5th round pick. So he falls in the bust category, even though he's obviously not nearly as big a bust as many other QBs.I'm not using boom and bust in the colloquial sense; it's just shorthand for "performing above average" or "performing below average". I could also take all QBs that say, fell within 10% on either side of their expectations, as neither boom nor bust. I haven't come up with the exact methodology yet. Honestly, though, I think under almost any standard you use, the majority of CA QBs over the last 15 or so years are going to look a lot worse than the default group. I could -- and one day may -- come up with a complicated and precise formula to measure this effect, but I wanted to wade into the pool here first for some theories. I thought you could pretty much go by gut and see that there are way more overachievers than underachievers on here.My question is why.
Well in order for anyone to answer your question, we'd have to agree to your premise. Right now my "gut" isn't telling me that there are an unexpected number of busts or underperformers on this list. My educated but unresearched guess would be roughly 1/3 of first round quarterbacks go on to have very successful NFL careers, 1/3 of first rounders have solid but unspectacular careers, and the other 1/3 vastly underperform. Then of all non-first round guys, I'd suspect maybe 1 out of 20 perform well, 3 or 4 out of 20 perform OK, and the rest stink. Glancing at that list, I don't see anything truly out of the ordinary except maybe more first round busts than expected.
(I think I've made my stance clear on Palmer. He's good. But I'm not ready to grade his career after four seasons. I don't find it clear that in 20 years, we're going to say Palmer was clearly better than Jeff George, Vinny Testaverde, Drew Bledsoe or Eli Manning. He's obviously got some work to do to pass Manning, Bradshaw and Elway. Even Mike Vick made 3 Pro Bowls in his career. It certainly wouldn't floor me if Palmer ended his career in the middle tier of all QBs selected first overall, or if he ended up being a relative underachiever for being the first pick. Do I expect that? No. But I wouldn't be shocked. And that's not even taking into consideration the stud WRs he's been fortunate enough to play with so far in his career.)
I can accept that you don't wish to judge Palmer's career after four seasons, but the rest of your argument here is tough to swallow. Palmer's numbers are clearly superior to those of George, Testeverde, and Bledsoe in each players' first four seasons and are actually comparable to Peyton Manning's:
Code:
Comp  Att   %	Yards  YPA  TD  IntManning 1357 2226 61.0%  16418  7.4  111  81Palmer  1305 2036 64.1%  14899  7.3  104  63
I'd venture to say Palmer may have the best first 4 seasons as a starter in NFL history outside of Hall-of-Famers like Manning, Favre, and Marino. How can you say that you wouldn't be surprised to see him flounder after a start like this? As for the receivers comment, I'll give you Chad but who was TJ Houshmandzadeh before Carson Palmer? A 7th round pick who amassed 62 catches, 720 yards, and 1 score in 3 NFL seasons. Let's not sit here and pretend TJ was some kind of stud just waiting for a QB to get him the ball. He's a reception monster with a poor YPC that's benefited from having a true blue chip talent on the other side and a top QB feeding him the ball.
 
That said, being a "bust" means you've underperformed your draft spot. So if I'm looking at all CA QBs, and I say that 30 of the 34 have been busts, that's bad -- because we know a default group of 34 QBs will have 17 busts and 17 booms. So to see a 30-4 ratio is pretty odd. I agree that you can't just look at the QBs and say this guy is good or this guy is bad, but when you compare his performance to what you'd expect from that draft slot, that gives you a default group. When we say CA QBs bust at their draft spot more than others, "others" is the default group. (It might have been confusing because I didn't explicitly state that I'll consider half of all draft picks "booms" and half of all draft picks "busts". My bad.)
I'm a little shuked about the bolded parts.Why is this 50/50 split a given? What's the reasoning behind the numbers? It certainly doesn't jive with what I previously perceived (apparently GregR, and now valhallan, agree).

 
That said, being a "bust" means you've underperformed your draft spot. So if I'm looking at all CA QBs, and I say that 30 of the 34 have been busts, that's bad -- because we know a default group of 34 QBs will have 17 busts and 17 booms. So to see a 30-4 ratio is pretty odd. I agree that you can't just look at the QBs and say this guy is good or this guy is bad, but when you compare his performance to what you'd expect from that draft slot, that gives you a default group. When we say CA QBs bust at their draft spot more than others, "others" is the default group. (It might have been confusing because I didn't explicitly state that I'll consider half of all draft picks "booms" and half of all draft picks "busts". My bad.)
I'm a little shuked about the bolded parts.Why is this 50/50 split a given? What's the reasoning behind the numbers? It certainly doesn't jive with what I previously perceived (apparently GregR, and now valhallan, agree).
Think of it this way.Say we've got 200 players drafted every year, for 40 years. That's 8000 players.

We can run a regression analysis using draft pick value and "NFL value" once give a draft value and NFL value to each player. That can tell us what we'd expect each draft pick to produce, and it would be the best equation to fit the data. We could then compare how each player actually did relative to his expected production, based on his draft value. Then we would expect, roughly, half the players to exceed their production, and half to underwhelm.

I posted on this topic here, but it doesn't even have to be that scientific. As a factual proposition, I think you should work from the assumption that roughly half of all players are in the black in career value, and half are in the red. Once you do that, if you see that 30 out of 34 guys fitting some criteria are in the red, that would make you think twice.

I haven't actually done that yet, because I'm not positive how I want to measure the QBs and how I want to handle the still active QBs. But I thought looking at the list, the QBs from CA seemed to really underperform. That's all. I was looking for a theory to support the data.

 
As a factual proposition, I think you should work from the assumption that roughly half of all players are in the black in career value, and half are in the red. Once you do that, if you see that 30 out of 34 guys fitting some criteria are in the red, that would make you think twice.
The problem here is that we don't agree with you. I would never expect half of the QBs drafted in any single year to be "in the black", let alone half of the QBs from an entire decade. Of 34, I'd expect maybe 6 to be "in the black".
I haven't actually done that yet, because I'm not positive how I want to measure the QBs and how I want to handle the still active QBs. But I thought looking at the list, the QBs from CA seemed to really underperform. That's all. I was looking for a theory to support the data.
I'd love to tell you CA QBs underperform because they're all surfers who smoke too much reefer, but again, I don't see a unexpected set of data that would necessitate a theory to explain it. I'll let the others have at this now.
 
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Based on the way you're doing this: ALMOST EVERY late round QB is going to be in the red - they aren't up to the snuff of Green, Brady, etc. It isn't like a position where multiple players get snaps every game regularly, so you need to be careful.

It's more likely that the QB's from almost all states underperform - yes there need to be some states that come out ahead, but the majority of your long-term QB value is concentrated in fewer players than any other position - except maybe kicker & punter.

You need to have 3 groups:

Roughly on value

Over achieved

Under achieved

A 6th round pick who essentially does nothing is basically spot on.

 
As a factual proposition, I think you should work from the assumption that roughly half of all players are in the black in career value, and half are in the red. Once you do that, if you see that 30 out of 34 guys fitting some criteria are in the red, that would make you think twice.
The problem here is that we don't agree with you. I would never expect half of the QBs drafted in any single year to be "in the black", let alone half of the QBs from an entire decade. [
:cry: The problem is that you are taking a property - "half will be above average value" - of the entire sample - "all drafted NFL players" (technically it's not the population with UDFA's) and assigning it to a subset of the sample - "all drafted QB's" without seeing if it holds true.

 
As a factual proposition, I think you should work from the assumption that roughly half of all players are in the black in career value, and half are in the red. Once you do that, if you see that 30 out of 34 guys fitting some criteria are in the red, that would make you think twice.
The problem here is that we don't agree with you. I would never expect half of the QBs drafted in any single year to be "in the black", let alone half of the QBs from an entire decade. [
:confused: The problem is that you are taking a property - "half will be above average value" - of the entire sample - "all drafted NFL players" (technically it's not the population with UDFA's) and assigning it to a subset of the sample - "all drafted QB's" without seeing if it holds true.
Are you saying that QBs in general underperform relative to non-QBs? I don't really follow this.
 
As a factual proposition, I think you should work from the assumption that roughly half of all players are in the black in career value, and half are in the red. Once you do that, if you see that 30 out of 34 guys fitting some criteria are in the red, that would make you think twice.
The problem here is that we don't agree with you. I would never expect half of the QBs drafted in any single year to be "in the black", let alone half of the QBs from an entire decade. Of 34, I'd expect maybe 6 to be "in the black".
I haven't actually done that yet, because I'm not positive how I want to measure the QBs and how I want to handle the still active QBs. But I thought looking at the list, the QBs from CA seemed to really underperform. That's all. I was looking for a theory to support the data.
I'd love to tell you CA QBs underperform because they're all surfers who smoke too much reefer, but again, I don't see a unexpected set of data that would necessitate a theory to explain it. I'll let the others have at this now.
Once again, maybe it's me, but if you're saying that you expect only 6 of 34 QBs to exceed expectations, then you need to re-tune your expectations. As a simple matter of logical probability, you should expect about half of all drafted players to exceed their draft value, and half to fall below it. And when I say draft value, I mean historical draft value, not the "RB X in the third round reminds me of Eric Dickerson" perceived value.
 
Based on the way you're doing this: ALMOST EVERY late round QB is going to be in the red - they aren't up to the snuff of Green, Brady, etc. It isn't like a position where multiple players get snaps every game regularly, so you need to be careful. It's more likely that the QB's from almost all states underperform - yes there need to be some states that come out ahead, but the majority of your long-term QB value is concentrated in fewer players than any other position - except maybe kicker & punter.You need to have 3 groups:Roughly on valueOver achievedUnder achievedA 6th round pick who essentially does nothing is basically spot on.
I think the 3 groups is probably the way to go. I agree that if almost every late round QB is in the red, that's a problem.That being said, I suspect the CA QBs will still have way more under achievers than over achievers. Do you disagree with that?
 
As a factual proposition, I think you should work from the assumption that roughly half of all players are in the black in career value, and half are in the red. Once you do that, if you see that 30 out of 34 guys fitting some criteria are in the red, that would make you think twice.
The problem here is that we don't agree with you. I would never expect half of the QBs drafted in any single year to be "in the black", let alone half of the QBs from an entire decade. [
:coffee: The problem is that you are taking a property - "half will be above average value" - of the entire sample - "all drafted NFL players" (technically it's not the population with UDFA's) and assigning it to a subset of the sample - "all drafted QB's" without seeing if it holds true.
Are you saying that QBs in general underperform relative to non-QBs? I don't really follow this.
Essentially, I'm saying that there are more QB's taken every year in the draft than have a reasonable chance to do anything in the NFL. You may get 12-18 QB's drafted a year. There are essentially 32 weekly jobs available - slightly more due to garbage time & injury. That would replace ALL starters every 2-3 years - that doesn't happen, and guys who aren't starters produce squat at QB. The number coming in is too great for team rosters to hold them all for any length of time - this may be true for other positions - teams add over 7 players a year now through the draft with compensatory picks, plus UDFA's. However, there are less QB spots than anything except P & K - and few of those are drafted.

QB's who have long careers will skew the numbers, and lets take a further subset: Brady round QB's. So you end up averaging Brady, some who saw some PT due to injuries or got a brief shot, and a bunch of nothing from that round. Half of those guys won't be above average for the round. You're doing the same thing by assuming all QB's are split 50-50.

 
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As a factual proposition, I think you should work from the assumption that roughly half of all players are in the black in career value, and half are in the red. Once you do that, if you see that 30 out of 34 guys fitting some criteria are in the red, that would make you think twice.
The problem here is that we don't agree with you. I would never expect half of the QBs drafted in any single year to be "in the black", let alone half of the QBs from an entire decade. [
:unsure: The problem is that you are taking a property - "half will be above average value" - of the entire sample - "all drafted NFL players" (technically it's not the population with UDFA's) and assigning it to a subset of the sample - "all drafted QB's" without seeing if it holds true.
Are you saying that QBs in general underperform relative to non-QBs? I don't really follow this.
Essentially, I'm saying that there are more QB's taken every year in the draft than have a reasonable chance to do anything in the NFL. You may get 12-18 QB's drafted a year. There are essentially 32 weekly jobs available - slightly more due to garbage time & injury. That would replace ALL starters every 2-3 years - that doesn't happen, and guys who aren't starters produce squat at QB. The number coming in is too great for team rosters to hold them all for any length of time - this may be true for other positions - teams add over 7 players a year now through the draft with compensatory picks, plus UDFA's. However, there are less QB spots than anything except P & K - and few of those are drafted.

QB's who have long careers will skew the numbers, and lets take a further subset: Brady round QB's. So you end up averaging Brady, some who saw some PT due to injuries or got a brief shot, and a bunch of nothing from that round. Half of those guys won't be above average for the round. You're doing the same thing by assuming all QB's are split 50-50.
I see your point. But that's not a problem if you use a regression analysis instead of strict division.I understand most QBs in the draft won't do much. That's why my expected career value for most QBs will be really low.

Do you agree with that?

 
Once again, maybe it's me, but if you're saying that you expect only 6 of 34 QBs to exceed expectations, then you need to re-tune your expectations. As a simple matter of logical probability, you should expect about half of all drafted players to exceed their draft value, and half to fall below it. And when I say draft value, I mean historical draft value, not the "RB X in the third round reminds me of Eric Dickerson" perceived value.
My expectations <> "a simple matter of logical probability"Yes, it could easily be just you considering you have the time to map out historical draft value. But are you saying here that if the 4th pick of the 5th round is worth 200 value points historically, then a guy that provides 150 value points is an underperformer while a guy who provides 250 points outperformed his draft position? How could you possibly expect us to gauge 34 players based on some contrived set of historical draft pick values like that?When I look at that list, I see several first round guys and a heap of later round picks. As expected, there are some first round successes, some busts, and some guys who we don't know about yet, as well as two or three successful late round guys. It just doesn't seem very divergent from my expectations. I've always assumed only first round quarterbacks and the rare late round guy will ever perform at an adequate level in the NFL. There have even been articles on this very site detailing the failures of 2nd round QBs.
 
Once again, maybe it's me, but if you're saying that you expect only 6 of 34 QBs to exceed expectations, then you need to re-tune your expectations. As a simple matter of logical probability, you should expect about half of all drafted players to exceed their draft value, and half to fall below it. And when I say draft value, I mean historical draft value, not the "RB X in the third round reminds me of Eric Dickerson" perceived value.
My expectations <> "a simple matter of logical probability"Yes, it could easily be just you considering you have the time to map out historical draft value. But are you saying here that if the 4th pick of the 5th round is worth 200 value points historically, then a guy that provides 150 value points is an underperformer while a guy who provides 250 points outperformed his draft position? How could you possibly expect us to gauge 34 players based on some contrived set of historical draft pick values like that?When I look at that list, I see several first round guys and a heap of later round picks. As expected, there are some first round successes, some busts, and some guys who we don't know about yet, as well as two or three successful late round guys. It just doesn't seem very divergent from my expectations. I've always assumed only first round quarterbacks and the rare late round guy will ever perform at an adequate level in the NFL. There have even been articles on this very site detailing the failures of 2nd round QBs.
Your 150/250 example is correct, actually. I'm not sure if you were being sarcastic or not :unsure: .I haven't run the numbers yet, though, for a couple of reasons already explained in the thread. It just seemed to me that when I went through the guys, it was mostly busts.Carson Palmer -- i'll cave to popular demand and say good pickDavid Carr -- awful pickAkili Smith -- awful pick Trent Dilfer -- bad pickMatt Leinart -- looks bad so far, but too early to sayDan McGwire -- badKyle Boller -- badJ.P. Losman -- badTodd Marinovich -- historically badAaron Rodgers -- no clueJohn Beck -- no clueTony Banks -- mehTroy Taylor -- badJonathan Quinn -- badTrent Edwards -- too earlyRob Johnson -- mehJust not very impressive. I'd expect, given the number of first and second rounders, some better production. To have that many QBs and to have none of them blow you away, and maybe only one of them live up to the hype seems pretty high. Maybe you're right, though, and I'm being too hard on California.
 
Once again, maybe it's me, but if you're saying that you expect only 6 of 34 QBs to exceed expectations, then you need to re-tune your expectations. As a simple matter of logical probability, you should expect about half of all drafted players to exceed their draft value, and half to fall below it. And when I say draft value, I mean historical draft value, not the "RB X in the third round reminds me of Eric Dickerson" perceived value.
My expectations <> "a simple matter of logical probability"Yes, it could easily be just you considering you have the time to map out historical draft value. But are you saying here that if the 4th pick of the 5th round is worth 200 value points historically, then a guy that provides 150 value points is an underperformer while a guy who provides 250 points outperformed his draft position? How could you possibly expect us to gauge 34 players based on some contrived set of historical draft pick values like that?When I look at that list, I see several first round guys and a heap of later round picks. As expected, there are some first round successes, some busts, and some guys who we don't know about yet, as well as two or three successful late round guys. It just doesn't seem very divergent from my expectations. I've always assumed only first round quarterbacks and the rare late round guy will ever perform at an adequate level in the NFL. There have even been articles on this very site detailing the failures of 2nd round QBs.
Your 150/250 example is correct, actually. I'm not sure if you were being sarcastic or not :goodposting: .I haven't run the numbers yet, though, for a couple of reasons already explained in the thread. It just seemed to me that when I went through the guys, it was mostly busts.Carson Palmer -- i'll cave to popular demand and say good pickDavid Carr -- awful pickAkili Smith -- awful pick Trent Dilfer -- bad pickMatt Leinart -- looks bad so far, but too early to sayDan McGwire -- badKyle Boller -- badJ.P. Losman -- badTodd Marinovich -- historically badAaron Rodgers -- no clueJohn Beck -- no clueTony Banks -- mehTroy Taylor -- badJonathan Quinn -- badTrent Edwards -- too earlyRob Johnson -- mehJust not very impressive. I'd expect, given the number of first and second rounders, some better production. To have that many QBs and to have none of them blow you away, and maybe only one of them live up to the hype seems pretty high. Maybe you're right, though, and I'm being too hard on California.
I did say earlier that there appeared to be more first round busts than expected, so we agree on that. The rest of the of the list, though, looks like any other set of late round QBs. I expect at least one of Leinart, Rodgers, and Edwards to have a good career and Boller and Losman to get second chances (Carr did), but certainly there's not much to write home about with these guys.I think the rub came from having all of those late rounders in the mix. Most of us only formulate expectations for players in the top 2 or 3 rounds.
 
Once again, maybe it's me, but if you're saying that you expect only 6 of 34 QBs to exceed expectations, then you need to re-tune your expectations. As a simple matter of logical probability, you should expect about half of all drafted players to exceed their draft value, and half to fall below it. And when I say draft value, I mean historical draft value, not the "RB X in the third round reminds me of Eric Dickerson" perceived value.
My expectations <> "a simple matter of logical probability"Yes, it could easily be just you considering you have the time to map out historical draft value. But are you saying here that if the 4th pick of the 5th round is worth 200 value points historically, then a guy that provides 150 value points is an underperformer while a guy who provides 250 points outperformed his draft position? How could you possibly expect us to gauge 34 players based on some contrived set of historical draft pick values like that?When I look at that list, I see several first round guys and a heap of later round picks. As expected, there are some first round successes, some busts, and some guys who we don't know about yet, as well as two or three successful late round guys. It just doesn't seem very divergent from my expectations. I've always assumed only first round quarterbacks and the rare late round guy will ever perform at an adequate level in the NFL. There have even been articles on this very site detailing the failures of 2nd round QBs.
Your 150/250 example is correct, actually. I'm not sure if you were being sarcastic or not :confused: .I haven't run the numbers yet, though, for a couple of reasons already explained in the thread. It just seemed to me that when I went through the guys, it was mostly busts.Carson Palmer -- i'll cave to popular demand and say good pickDavid Carr -- awful pickAkili Smith -- awful pick Trent Dilfer -- bad pickMatt Leinart -- looks bad so far, but too early to sayDan McGwire -- badKyle Boller -- badJ.P. Losman -- badTodd Marinovich -- historically badAaron Rodgers -- no clueJohn Beck -- no clueTony Banks -- mehTroy Taylor -- badJonathan Quinn -- badTrent Edwards -- too earlyRob Johnson -- mehJust not very impressive. I'd expect, given the number of first and second rounders, some better production. To have that many QBs and to have none of them blow you away, and maybe only one of them live up to the hype seems pretty high. Maybe you're right, though, and I'm being too hard on California.
I did say earlier that there appeared to be more first round busts than expected, so we agree on that. The rest of the of the list, though, looks like any other set of late round QBs. I expect at least one of Leinart, Rodgers, and Edwards to have a good career and Boller and Losman to get second chances (Carr did), but certainly there's not much to write home about with these guys.I think the rub came from having all of those late rounders in the mix. Most of us only formulate expectations for players in the top 2 or 3 rounds.
:goodposting:I mainly threw them in so someone didn't think I forgot about Brady and was biasing the results, but it seems like their inclusion did more harm than good.
 
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stevegamer said:
Chase Stuart said:
stevegamer said:
valhallan said:
Chase Stuart said:
As a factual proposition, I think you should work from the assumption that roughly half of all players are in the black in career value, and half are in the red. Once you do that, if you see that 30 out of 34 guys fitting some criteria are in the red, that would make you think twice.
The problem here is that we don't agree with you. I would never expect half of the QBs drafted in any single year to be "in the black", let alone half of the QBs from an entire decade. [
:popcorn: The problem is that you are taking a property - "half will be above average value" - of the entire sample - "all drafted NFL players" (technically it's not the population with UDFA's) and assigning it to a subset of the sample - "all drafted QB's" without seeing if it holds true.
Are you saying that QBs in general underperform relative to non-QBs? I don't really follow this.
Essentially, I'm saying that there are more QB's taken every year in the draft than have a reasonable chance to do anything in the NFL. You may get 12-18 QB's drafted a year. There are essentially 32 weekly jobs available - slightly more due to garbage time & injury. That would replace ALL starters every 2-3 years - that doesn't happen, and guys who aren't starters produce squat at QB. The number coming in is too great for team rosters to hold them all for any length of time - this may be true for other positions - teams add over 7 players a year now through the draft with compensatory picks, plus UDFA's. However, there are less QB spots than anything except P & K - and few of those are drafted.

QB's who have long careers will skew the numbers, and lets take a further subset: Brady round QB's. So you end up averaging Brady, some who saw some PT due to injuries or got a brief shot, and a bunch of nothing from that round. Half of those guys won't be above average for the round. You're doing the same thing by assuming all QB's are split 50-50.
:popcorn: there were 64 QBs drafted in the last 5 years - with 29 in the first 3 rounds. 133 since Peyton Manning. There is no statistical way that 50% will succeed.I realize Chase probably isn't defining success as all-pro for each player, but they can't even all be backups unless the QBs were to turn over completely every 5 years.

 
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Chase Stuart said:
We can run a regression analysis using draft pick value and "NFL value" once give a draft value and NFL value to each player. That can tell us what we'd expect each draft pick to produce, and it would be the best equation to fit the data. We could then compare how each player actually did relative to his expected production, based on his draft value. Then we would expect, roughly, half the players to exceed their production, and half to underwhelm.
That's completely untrue.You said it yourself earlier in the thread -- a 6th round QB averages 1/100 Brady, 1/100 Trent Green, and 98/100 everyone else. So a least-squares regression is going to show 2% being (a lot) above average, and 98% being (a little) below average. Not 50-50.
 
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