dgreen
Footballguy
Inspiration
I often hear, "RBs and TEs should get more receptions with a rookie QB."
Data source
Seasons file from pfr.
Methodology
First, I found all rookie QBs with 300+ pass attempts since 1978. (Note I used "minimum year" to determine rookies. Carson Palmer's second year, for example, is included in this data because he didn't play his rookie year.) This resulted in 25 QBs. Next, I gathered all RB, TE, and WR receptions for those teams in those years. Then, I summed receptions by position and calculated the percentage of receptions by position in years a rookie QB threw 300+ passes. (An obvious flaw here is that there could be other QBs on these teams who threw passes to the RBs, TEs, and WRs.) Then, I found the total receptions by position in the NFL for each year from 1978-2006.
Results
RB receptions for rookies: 29.6%
RB receptions for NFL: 30.4%
TE receptions for rookies: 16.8%
TE receptions for NFL: 17.0%
WR receptions for rookies: 53.6%
WR receptions for NFL: 52.5%
Distribution of QB differences in WR receptions in given year:
(Example: In 1993, Drew Bledsoe's WRs had 43.9% of the team's receptions. WR receptions for the NFL in 1993 was 54.1%. So, the difference is -10.2.)
Drew Bledsoe -10.2Jim Kelly -7.7Tim Couch -7.2Bruce Gradkowski -7.1David Woodley -6.4David Carr -6.4Jeff Garcia -5.6Joey Harrington -5.6Peyton Manning -5.0Chris Weinke -4.7Steve Deberg -3.3Dieter Brock 0.4Vince Young 0.7Warren Moon 1.2Jeff George 1.3Byron Leftwich 1.4Rick Mirer 1.8Kerry Collins 5.0Kyle Orton 6.4Jack Trudeau 6.9Jeff Komlo 7.7Tony Banks 9.4Carson Palmer 12.0Matt Leinart 13.3Charlie Batch 15.5Average is 0.5 percentage points, or 0.005. Standard deviation is 0.07. So, one standard deviation will be between -6.8 percentage points and 7.9 percentage points of the league average. That's a fairly big range, IMO.Maybe more detailed data without my current flaws would yield more interesting conclusions. But, as of now, I'm not sure I buy the theory that an inexperienced QB is more likely to lean on his RBs and TEs in the passing game than an experienced QB. These 25 rookies as a whole do not significantly differ from the NFL as a whole and these rookies range from 10 percentage points less than the NFL to 15 percentage points more than the NFL.
I often hear, "RBs and TEs should get more receptions with a rookie QB."
Data source
Seasons file from pfr.
Methodology
First, I found all rookie QBs with 300+ pass attempts since 1978. (Note I used "minimum year" to determine rookies. Carson Palmer's second year, for example, is included in this data because he didn't play his rookie year.) This resulted in 25 QBs. Next, I gathered all RB, TE, and WR receptions for those teams in those years. Then, I summed receptions by position and calculated the percentage of receptions by position in years a rookie QB threw 300+ passes. (An obvious flaw here is that there could be other QBs on these teams who threw passes to the RBs, TEs, and WRs.) Then, I found the total receptions by position in the NFL for each year from 1978-2006.
Results
RB receptions for rookies: 29.6%
RB receptions for NFL: 30.4%
TE receptions for rookies: 16.8%
TE receptions for NFL: 17.0%
WR receptions for rookies: 53.6%
WR receptions for NFL: 52.5%
Distribution of QB differences in WR receptions in given year:
(Example: In 1993, Drew Bledsoe's WRs had 43.9% of the team's receptions. WR receptions for the NFL in 1993 was 54.1%. So, the difference is -10.2.)
Drew Bledsoe -10.2Jim Kelly -7.7Tim Couch -7.2Bruce Gradkowski -7.1David Woodley -6.4David Carr -6.4Jeff Garcia -5.6Joey Harrington -5.6Peyton Manning -5.0Chris Weinke -4.7Steve Deberg -3.3Dieter Brock 0.4Vince Young 0.7Warren Moon 1.2Jeff George 1.3Byron Leftwich 1.4Rick Mirer 1.8Kerry Collins 5.0Kyle Orton 6.4Jack Trudeau 6.9Jeff Komlo 7.7Tony Banks 9.4Carson Palmer 12.0Matt Leinart 13.3Charlie Batch 15.5Average is 0.5 percentage points, or 0.005. Standard deviation is 0.07. So, one standard deviation will be between -6.8 percentage points and 7.9 percentage points of the league average. That's a fairly big range, IMO.Maybe more detailed data without my current flaws would yield more interesting conclusions. But, as of now, I'm not sure I buy the theory that an inexperienced QB is more likely to lean on his RBs and TEs in the passing game than an experienced QB. These 25 rookies as a whole do not significantly differ from the NFL as a whole and these rookies range from 10 percentage points less than the NFL to 15 percentage points more than the NFL.
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