I've been giving it some thought, and I'm really starting to think, the top 3 QBs should be ordered differently. After assessing the 2022 season as a whole as a slightly down year for QBs, it helped me realize that perhaps the dominance that Hurts/Allen/Mahomes had over the field, wasn't because they were good, it's because everyone else was... worse.
On the surface those seem like the same thing, but when it comes to analyzing data, statistically, we're trying to assess what's most likely to happen next.
So, lets just start with the 3 top QBs and challenge the order of them simply with 2022 in mind. (Yahoo scoring for this part)
Mahomes averaged 24.8 points per game, threw 5,250 yards, 41 TDs and another 4TDs on the ground. So, 5,600 total yards and 45 total TDs. To average 24.8ppg.
Allen 5000 total yards, 42 total TDs, to average 25.3ppg.
Hurts 4400 total yards, 35 total TDs, to average 25.3ppg.
If we just look at those 3 stat lines, and I asked you who has the most room to grow, or the easiest path to duplicate their '22 season fantasy stats, who would you pick?
For me... even though I think Mahomes is very likely to repeat his season year over year, if we're being realistic, the chances of 5600/45 is not very high. But, obviously we've seen him have the 50TD season, so it's not out of the realm of possibility. But keep in mind, that even in Mahomes' 5300/52 TD season... he only averaged 26.7ppg. I'm not downplaying this at all, just illustrating that the 'upside' we know Mahomes has, doesn't translate to a notable jump in fantasy production. 1.9ppg is good, but we're talking about absolute ceilings here essentially.
Allen's 5,000/42 seems well within reason, with potential to grow with Gabe healthy, Cook fully integrated, and the addition of Kincaid.
To support that, take note that since Diggs has showed up, Allen over the past 3 years has averaged 24.9, 24.2, and 25.2. His rushing help's modulate his production from year to year, whereas Mahomes has a bit more fluctuation in his production due to being reliant on his passing TD total. Over the past 5 years, Mahomes has has an every other year dip, starting in 2018 it looks like so: 26.7, 20.7, 25.0, 21.8, 24.8. Because of this, I actually think Allen offers the safest floor for year over year production between these 2, and if you were predicting which one hasn't hit their ceiling yet, it seems like Allen is a better bet.
Hurts on the other hand, obviously has the shortest track record, making him the riskiest of these 3 in my opinion. But with that risk, you get the upside, and I actually think we started seeing it last year, and perhaps many didn't notice. Let's not forget that it was AJB's first season with Hurts after being traded, it was only D.Smith's 2nd year, and now they have swapped Sanders for Swift, a premier pass catching back.
Regardless, from his '22 stats totaling only 4400 yards and 35TDs, its interesting to think about what his ceiling could be, in the event he were able to approach the 40-45TD range. These figures are slightly skewed, because Hurts missed 2 games last year, full disclosure there, but I'm really just trying to think about this from the perspective of... if I'm investing a 3rd round pick in one of these guys, not only which one is most likely to repeat, but which one is the least likely to regress, and which one has the most room to grow, to potentially rival the 28.1ppg 2018 Lamar Jackson season. I'm not predicting 1200 rushing yards for Hurts, but if Hurts can hit that 43TD mark, suddenly a guy who was already the best QB in PPG for 2022, now jumps into a tier ahead of the other 2.
I mentioned this might have happened when we weren't noticing last year, because of Hurts' missed games, it doesn't show up as clearly when stat diving, but I want you to consider this, from week 10 to week 18, Jalen Hurts was averaging 26.5PPG, a full 2.5 more than Mahomes was over the 2nd half of the season, and this also includes the game where Hurts failed to break double digits against the Giants in week 18. Because both of these QBs went to the superbowl, our data pool gets even bigger. From week 10 through the SB, Mahomes averaged 23.0ppg. Basically, Mahomes was just a machine from the start of the season to the end of the season, there appear to be no flukes, fluctuations, waves, just consistent performance every single week. From week 10 through the SB, Hurts was averaging 26.3ppg. A full 3.3ppg advantage over Mahomes. Allen from week 10, to the DP, averaged 22.5ppg for what it's worth.
When I break down the games and see how Hurts seemed to steadily progress upward as the season went on, combined with his room for growth, his upside at the QB position (among this tier) is the most appealing to me. It's easy to create a narrative that it was the development of Smith, or the chemistry with AJB. It's also easy to point to a 3 game stretch from week 13-15 where Hurts put up 34, 30, 34, and perhaps it's just coincidence. 13 rushing TDs is unlikely to repeat, but as long as they come through the air, it won't be a massive loss, but if they go to a RB on the ground (Penny) then it could be detrimental, but you're still just chasing a 17 week pace of 40TD.
For what it's worth his week 10-SB pace would extrapolate to 341/523 3804/22 + 190/980/20. 4800 total yards, 42 total TDs, 447 fantasy points. I went back to 2010 and no QB has ever scored that many points before. Lamar Jackson only played 15 games in 2019 and scored 421. Mahomes was at 427 in 2018.
I was curious if maybe splitting games was personal bias, or skewing the data, so I just went back and took the average of his entire season out of curiosity.
Week 1 through the SuperBowl. 18 games. He averaged 20/30/237/1.38 + 11/50/1 25.4ppg
17 week long season would equate to: 342/515/4032/23 + 187/855/17 for 432 fantasy points. Eclipsing both Lamar and Mahomes as listed above, the highest season I can find in my data, which goes back to 2001.
I think I'm changing my 1st tier of QBs to Hurts, Allen, Mahomes. Unless I draft Kelce, then I'm probably stacking. As always, we rank in a vacuum, but we do not draft in one.
The bigger question is... if we acknowledge that the point gap from QB1,2,3 to the field was inflated last year, and likely not indicative of what we can expect this year, how much are we over valuing the top 3 QBs at the moment, or more importantly, which of the QB in the next tier, is most likely to close that gap, for a noticeable discount. My guess is Herbert and Lamar, these would be the 2 QBs I try to target the hardest this year. Unfortunately draft position tends to dictate strategy in my opinion, due to the nature of cliffs, tiers, and dead zones. If I'm in the early-mid section of the 3rd round, I'm probably not drafting the top 3 QBs unless the WR/RB gap really hits me. However if I'm in the back half of the 3rd/4th, it's probably an easy decision. The early part of the draft has a good chance to land Herbert/Lamar at the 4/5 wrap, but I do not think the same is true for the 5/6 wrap for the people at the back half of the draft. Because of that, if I'm in spots 1-6, I'm more inclined to gamble on Herbert/Lamar falling to me in the 4/5 wrap. But if I'm in spots 7-12, I'm probably just taking one of those elite 3, and not risking missing the next tier at the 5/6 wrap.
Just my .02 and outlook on the board... as of today.
Via GoHawks:
"Allen played half the season with a partially torn UCL. It impacted his ability to throw and even altered his mechanics to an extent. You bring up what Hurts did later in the season, but Allen suffered the injury in week 9. In week 1-8 he averaged 28.1 PPG. 447-point pace is a lot. Allen was on pace for 478 points before his injury. That's just absolutely bonkers. "