Brady might be in the conversation by the end of the year, but right now he's not in the top 20. It's a season-long award, and over the first four games Tom Brady averaged just 5.8 yards per attempt with a passer rating under 80. That's atrocious. He's been En Fuego since then, but as of this very moment, those four atrocious games represent half of his season so far. You can't be in the MVP conversation if you were atrocious for half of the season.Brady is absolutely in the conversation. And if he has a great game this coming Sunday and beats Peyton, will be even more so.
For me, it's a combination of "RB is the least valuable position on offense" and "Murray has had four costly fumbles so far this season". He's the best choice among the RBs, but in my opinion the best choice among the RBs still doesn't enter the conversation unless it's a down year at QB.It's baffeling how little respect Murray is getting from some of you guys.
4 costly fumbles? How costly can they really be when his team has only lost 1 game? Gronk and Brown, while amazing in their own right aren't even the MVP of their own teams. Watt most certainly is but its a 4-4 team not even in the playoffs right now.For me, it's a combination of "RB is the least valuable position on offense" and "Murray has had four costly fumbles so far this season". He's the best choice among the RBs, but in my opinion the best choice among the RBs still doesn't enter the conversation unless it's a down year at QB.It's baffeling how little respect Murray is getting from some of you guys.
Even if we're just limiting ourselves to non-QB offensive players, I think Rob Gronkowski has probably been more valuable to the Patriots than Murray has been to the Cowboys. Although a lot of that is "he shows his value in his absence"- i.e. part of the reason he's so obviously valuable is because of how bad New England was on offense when he was working back into shape.
I'm also not sure I would take Murray over Antonio Brown. He's definitely on the non-QB shortlist, I just tend to think a non-QB has to essentially be J.J. Watt to force his way into the MVP conversation, and while Murray has been amazing, he hasn't been Watt-amazing.
If they are not the MVP of their team then who is? I can't imagine anyone more valuable then Gronk. That team was garbage without him. Brady couldn't do a thing. As far as Brown I guess you could argue Bell or Roethlesberger. They are at least closer.4 costly fumbles? How costly can they really be when his team has only lost 1 game? Gronk and Brown, while amazing in their own right aren't even the MVP of their own teams. Watt most certainly is but its a 4-4 team not even in the playoffs right now.For me, it's a combination of "RB is the least valuable position on offense" and "Murray has had four costly fumbles so far this season". He's the best choice among the RBs, but in my opinion the best choice among the RBs still doesn't enter the conversation unless it's a down year at QB.It's baffeling how little respect Murray is getting from some of you guys.
Even if we're just limiting ourselves to non-QB offensive players, I think Rob Gronkowski has probably been more valuable to the Patriots than Murray has been to the Cowboys. Although a lot of that is "he shows his value in his absence"- i.e. part of the reason he's so obviously valuable is because of how bad New England was on offense when he was working back into shape.
I'm also not sure I would take Murray over Antonio Brown. He's definitely on the non-QB shortlist, I just tend to think a non-QB has to essentially be J.J. Watt to force his way into the MVP conversation, and while Murray has been amazing, he hasn't been Watt-amazing.
Brady and Roeth are the MVPs.If they are not the MVP of their team then who is? I can't imagine anyone more valuable then Gronk. That team was garbage without him. Brady couldn't do a thing. As far as Brown I guess you could argue Bell or Roethlesberger. They are at least closer.4 costly fumbles? How costly can they really be when his team has only lost 1 game? Gronk and Brown, while amazing in their own right aren't even the MVP of their own teams. Watt most certainly is but its a 4-4 team not even in the playoffs right now.For me, it's a combination of "RB is the least valuable position on offense" and "Murray has had four costly fumbles so far this season". He's the best choice among the RBs, but in my opinion the best choice among the RBs still doesn't enter the conversation unless it's a down year at QB.It's baffeling how little respect Murray is getting from some of you guys.
Even if we're just limiting ourselves to non-QB offensive players, I think Rob Gronkowski has probably been more valuable to the Patriots than Murray has been to the Cowboys. Although a lot of that is "he shows his value in his absence"- i.e. part of the reason he's so obviously valuable is because of how bad New England was on offense when he was working back into shape.
I'm also not sure I would take Murray over Antonio Brown. He's definitely on the non-QB shortlist, I just tend to think a non-QB has to essentially be J.J. Watt to force his way into the MVP conversation, and while Murray has been amazing, he hasn't been Watt-amazing.
That is following the NFL award to the letter. You know the MVP (as long as they are a QB). However, I meant who is really the MVP. Please don't say Brady when he was lost without Gronk there.Brady and Roeth are the MVPs.If they are not the MVP of their team then who is? I can't imagine anyone more valuable then Gronk. That team was garbage without him. Brady couldn't do a thing. As far as Brown I guess you could argue Bell or Roethlesberger. They are at least closer.4 costly fumbles? How costly can they really be when his team has only lost 1 game? Gronk and Brown, while amazing in their own right aren't even the MVP of their own teams. Watt most certainly is but its a 4-4 team not even in the playoffs right now.For me, it's a combination of "RB is the least valuable position on offense" and "Murray has had four costly fumbles so far this season". He's the best choice among the RBs, but in my opinion the best choice among the RBs still doesn't enter the conversation unless it's a down year at QB.It's baffeling how little respect Murray is getting from some of you guys.
Even if we're just limiting ourselves to non-QB offensive players, I think Rob Gronkowski has probably been more valuable to the Patriots than Murray has been to the Cowboys. Although a lot of that is "he shows his value in his absence"- i.e. part of the reason he's so obviously valuable is because of how bad New England was on offense when he was working back into shape.
I'm also not sure I would take Murray over Antonio Brown. He's definitely on the non-QB shortlist, I just tend to think a non-QB has to essentially be J.J. Watt to force his way into the MVP conversation, and while Murray has been amazing, he hasn't been Watt-amazing.
So nothing is costly if it doesn't result in a loss? In week 1, Murray's fumble was returned for 7 points. That seems pretty costly- it cost Dallas seven points in a game they ultimately lost by 11. In week 2, Murray fumbled at mid-field of a 0-0 game. Seems like a potentially costly fumble, though luckily Tennessee is terrible. In week 3, Murray fumbled with the Cowboys trailing by 7, and St. Louis scored on the ensuing possession to take a 14-0 lead. Was that not a costly mistake? In week 5, Murray fumbled in the red-zone of a 0-0 game, costing Dallas at least 3 points and potentially 7 points. Dallas was taken to overtime in that game- don't you think those 3 lost points were pretty costly?4 costly fumbles? How costly can they really be when his team has only lost 1 game? Gronk and Brown, while amazing in their own right aren't even the MVP of their own teams. Watt most certainly is but its a 4-4 team not even in the playoffs right now.
Of course all turnovers are costly by some measure. You stated as if they were costly in a sense that was related to W/L, though. That's how I read it at least. Perhaps that wasn't the intent. Regardless, W/L are very critical to this conversation. It's directly impacting the MVP race like it or not. The fact that Murray has fumbled 4 times should not be erased but it is drowned out by the fact that his team is 6-1 ridding his back. I'd say his other accomplishments are far outweighing his fumbles. Gronk is a critical piece to the NE offense. I've never said otherwise. Again though, where would NE be without Brady? I'd say they are in worse shape than if they are minus Gronk.So nothing is costly if it doesn't result in a loss? In week 1, Murray's fumble was returned for 7 points. That seems pretty costly- it cost Dallas seven points in a game they ultimately lost by 11. In week 2, Murray fumbled at mid-field of a 0-0 game. Seems like a potentially costly fumble, though luckily Tennessee is terrible. In week 3, Murray fumbled with the Cowboys trailing by 7, and St. Louis scored on the ensuing possession to take a 14-0 lead. Was that not a costly mistake? In week 5, Murray fumbled in the red-zone of a 0-0 game, costing Dallas at least 3 points and potentially 7 points. Dallas was taken to overtime in that game- don't you think those 3 lost points were pretty costly?4 costly fumbles? How costly can they really be when his team has only lost 1 game? Gronk and Brown, while amazing in their own right aren't even the MVP of their own teams. Watt most certainly is but its a 4-4 team not even in the playoffs right now.
Through the first four weeks of the season, Gronkowski played 50% of New England's snaps and did not look like himself. Tom Brady averaged 5.7 yards per attempt and had a passer rating under 80. Over the last four weeks, Gronkowski has played 75% of New England's snaps (really, more like 80% before he left yesterday's blowout win for dehydration), and has generally rounded into his typical form. Tom Brady has averaged 8.8 yards per attempt and had a passer rating of 129. Rob Gronkowski is the straw that stirs the Patriots' offensive drink.
Dallas' offense without Murray would be a heck of a lot better than New England's offense without Gronkowski.
I never mentioned wins or losses. I said he had four costly fumbles. All four of his fumbles have come with his team tied or trailing, one was returned for a touchdown, the other happened in the red zone in a game that went to overtime. I stand behind that- Demarco Murray had four costly fumbles. And yes, his other accomplishments are far outweighing his fumbles, which is why I said Murray is my top pick at RB. But those fumbles happened, and in an MVP race, they matter.Of course all turnovers are costly by some measure. You stated as if they were costly in a sense that was related to W/L, though. That's how I read it at least. Perhaps that wasn't the intent. Regardless, W/L are very critical to this conversation. It's directly impacting the MVP race like it or not. The fact that Murray has fumbled 4 times should not be erased but it is drowned out by the fact that his team is 6-1 ridding his back. I'd say his other accomplishments are far outweighing his fumbles.
When New Orleans gives Drew Brees three kneeldowns, they're undefeated. Like with your Murray example, the causal arrow runs the other way- winning teams tend to kneel down, and winning teams tend to run the ball to close out games.Coincidentally, Dal when giving Murray 20 or more carries the past 2 years is 10-1. When given less than 20 carries they are 4-7. Feed ing Murray the ball is directly related to Dal becoming a significantly better team. Not just offensively, as a whole. You think Murray tearing things up on the ground hasn't played a major role in Dal transforming from a historically bad D, 415.3 YPG ranking #32 to a better than average one, 343.9 YPG Ranking #13?
A couple of things. First, Dal oline is ranked 4th in run blocking, not 1st. Yes, their oline is good and yes they deserve credit as well. They rank 18 in pass blocking however. NE ranks 11 in pass blocking but we don't hear anyone talking about them or giving them any credit. Yes, sample size matters. I mean Wright is better per play than Gronk according to DVOA so let's not base things tiny sample sizes that mean basically nothing. The example of Brees kneeling is again, a terrible one. Why even bring these things up?When New Orleans gives Drew Brees three kneeldowns, they're undefeated. Like with your Murray example, the causal arrow runs the other way- winning teams tend to kneel down, and winning teams tend to run the ball to close out games.Coincidentally, Dal when giving Murray 20 or more carries the past 2 years is 10-1. When given less than 20 carries they are 4-7. Feed ing Murray the ball is directly related to Dal becoming a significantly better team. Not just offensively, as a whole. You think Murray tearing things up on the ground hasn't played a major role in Dal transforming from a historically bad D, 415.3 YPG ranking #32 to a better than average one, 343.9 YPG Ranking #13?
Just how valuable is Murray? Dallas' offensive line is the best in the league. Tony Romo and Dez Bryant are studs, and Williams is an up-and-comer. Witten's having a very down year, but he's a future Hall of Famer. I remain firmly convinced that you could replace Demarco Murray with Randle and Dunbar and that offense would still be great. Not as great, of course, but still great. You like pointing to DVOA to make your point, but on a per-play basis (and, yes, this is a ridiculously small sample size), Randle has been substantially more efficient than Murray running the ball and Dunbar has been substantially more efficient receiving the ball. Given a bunch more work those numbers would come back to the pack a bit, and there's a lot of value in having both options in a single player, but it's not like Dallas would magically fall apart without Murray. They'd still probably be a top-5 offense.
Meanwhile, we've seen Gronk's on/off splits over the last two years. New England does not have a top-5 offense when Gronk is not on the field. They don't even have a top-16 offense when Gronk is not on the field.
Edit: besides, the same reason you believe that Tom Brady is more valuable than Rob Gronkowski is why no running back will ever be more valuable than the most valuable quarterback in the NFL. So even by your best Murray argument, he shouldn't be in the running for MVP over Rivers, Manning, Luck, and Rodgers.
OLine stats are whatever. Football Outsiders measures OLine quality indirectly, and indirect measurements are necessarily imperfect measurements. Their Pass Blocking measurement is, in particular, a terrible way to measure OL quality. FO assigns a pass blocking grade based on sacks allowed, adjusted for strength of schedule... despite the fact that FO itself acknowledges that QBs bear 50% of the responsibility for sacks allowed. Peyton Manning has never finished outside of the top 10 in sack%. Has Peyton Manning had a top 10 offensive line every year for his entire career? That seems like a remarkable run of good fortune, if true. This year's Pats are another great example- sure, they haven't given up a lot of sacks, but that's because Tom Brady is great at avoiding them. People who watch their line will tell you it's the worst line they've had during the entire Belichick era, and the unit has fallen apart after their long-standing coach retired.A couple of things. First, Dal oline is ranked 4th in run blocking, not 1st. Yes, their oline is good and yes they deserve credit as well. They rank 18 in pass blocking however. NE ranks 11 in pass blocking but we don't hear anyone talking about them or giving them any credit.
Yes, sample size matters. I said as much. But bringing up Gronk's season-long stats again and again is kind of irrelevant when I already acknowledged that (A) Gronk was ineffective and playing into game shape over the first four weeks, and (B) the fact that New England's offense was terrible when Gronk was ineffective and playing into game shape demonstrates how valuable Gronkowski is to that offense.Yes, sample size matters. I mean Wright is better per play than Gronk according to DVOA so let's not base things tiny sample sizes that mean basically nothing. The example of Brees kneeling is again, a terrible one. Why even bring these things up?
8-8 is a bottom dweller? We must have very different definitions of "bottom dweller".Romo is a stud, huh? Strange that this team was a perennial bottom dweller the past few seasons while he was the primary focus of the offense then. We've seen what this team is when Dal relies heavily on Romo. It's average or bellow average. Dal has finally come to their senses and realized they have to play to their strength with icy is Murray, the oline and running the ball. Dal has run 52% of the time this year and is 6-1. Last year they ran 36%, 8-8. The year prior to that they ran 35%, 8-8. I'd argue that this year is Romo's best as a QB, though not fantasy, because of the change in philosophy and Murray's impact. Not the other way around.
The last time Brady missed a season, New England went 11-5 and still had a top-10 offense. Contrast that with how New England has done when Gronk wasn't at full strength over the last three years.It's kind of funny that the question about Brady keeps getting dodged. You bring up the supporting caste in Dal as a means to diminish Murray yet refuse to talk about the guy who is the largest catalyst in the conversation, Brady. You know the guy who is a sure HOF player and perhaps top 5 at his position, the most important position in football, of all time? Brady skews the deck. Also worth noting is that NE has a pretty darn good oline themselves. It's ranked 11 in pass blocking. It ranked 1st last year and 3rd the year prior.
Dal is 6-1 because they've finally pulled their heads out of there butts and starting running the ball 52% of the time. I along with many others on this board pointed out last year that this was a playoff team if they did this. The rebuttal was pretty much Murray cant handle the load. It's their change in philosophy that has altered the results. From 36% run to 52%. I'm not sure how you look at those numbers and not recognize the impact. The last time Brady missed a season was 7 years ago. Gronk wasn't even on the team and neither was about half their roster. They had Moss in his prime,Welker in his prime and many other highly effective players they simply don't have now. I'm not sure why you are even going here. It was SEVEN years ago. It has almost nothing to do with today.OLine stats are whatever. Football Outsiders measures OLine quality indirectly, and indirect measurements are necessarily imperfect measurements. Their Pass Blocking measurement is, in particular, a terrible way to measure OL quality. FO assigns a pass blocking grade based on sacks allowed, adjusted for strength of schedule... despite the fact that FO itself acknowledges that QBs bear 50% of the responsibility for sacks allowed. Peyton Manning has never finished outside of the top 10 in sack%. Has Peyton Manning had a top 10 offensive line every year for his entire career? That seems like a remarkable run of good fortune, if true. This year's Pats are another great example- sure, they haven't given up a lot of sacks, but that's because Tom Brady is great at avoiding them. People who watch their line will tell you it's the worst line they've had during the entire Belichick era, and the unit has fallen apart after their long-standing coach retired.PFF has Dallas 8th in pass blocking and 6th in run blocking, but there are known biases in PFF's grading system, too. I'm not talking about statistics, though- I'm talking about, if I could have any offensive line in the NFL today, I would want Dallas'. In my mind, they are the best offensive line in the league.A couple of things. First, Dal oline is ranked 4th in run blocking, not 1st. Yes, their oline is good and yes they deserve credit as well. They rank 18 in pass blocking however. NE ranks 11 in pass blocking but we don't hear anyone talking about them or giving them any credit.
Yes, sample size matters. I said as much. But bringing up Gronk's season-long stats again and again is kind of irrelevant when I already acknowledged that (A) Gronk was ineffective and playing into game shape over the first four weeks, and (B) the fact that New England's offense was terrible when Gronk was ineffective and playing into game shape demonstrates how valuable Gronkowski is to that offense.Yes, sample size matters. I mean Wright is better per play than Gronk according to DVOA so let's not base things tiny sample sizes that mean basically nothing. The example of Brees kneeling is again, a terrible one. Why even bring these things up?
I brought up the example of Brees and kneeldowns to illustrate the difference between correlation and causation. You mentioned Dallas' winning percentage when Murray gets 20 carries. You didn't seem to realize that the causal arrow runs in exactly the opposite direction from the way you were suggesting.
8-8 is a bottom dweller? We must have very different definitions of "bottom dweller".Romo is a stud, huh? Strange that this team was a perennial bottom dweller the past few seasons while he was the primary focus of the offense then. We've seen what this team is when Dal relies heavily on Romo. It's average or bellow average. Dal has finally come to their senses and realized they have to play to their strength with icy is Murray, the oline and running the ball. Dal has run 52% of the time this year and is 6-1. Last year they ran 36%, 8-8. The year prior to that they ran 35%, 8-8. I'd argue that this year is Romo's best as a QB, though not fantasy, because of the change in philosophy and Murray's impact. Not the other way around.
Dallas is 6-1 because their defense has taken a huge step forward, their offensive line has become the best in the NFL, and Demarco Murray is playing out of his mind- in that order. Murray has been playing fantastic, but I'm only about 70% sure that he's the most valuable running back in the state of Texas, let alone the most valuable player in the entire country. I would much, much rather watch the Cowboys sans Murray than the Texans sans Foster.
The last time Brady missed a season, New England went 11-5 and still had a top-10 offense. Contrast that with how New England has done when Gronk wasn't at full strength over the last three years.It's kind of funny that the question about Brady keeps getting dodged. You bring up the supporting caste in Dal as a means to diminish Murray yet refuse to talk about the guy who is the largest catalyst in the conversation, Brady. You know the guy who is a sure HOF player and perhaps top 5 at his position, the most important position in football, of all time? Brady skews the deck. Also worth noting is that NE has a pretty darn good oline themselves. It's ranked 11 in pass blocking. It ranked 1st last year and 3rd the year prior.
New England's offensive line is pants, and any NE homer could tell you that. They rank 25th in pass blocking and 24th in run blocking according to PFF. Again, Football Outsiders' O-Line stats are indirect measures and therefore extremely unreliable, especially with respect to the pass protection.
I'm not dodging the Brady question, I just fail to see how it helps your point. Either you want to say that elite quarterbacks are always more valuable than any other offensive player, in which case... okay, sure. I concede the point. Now tell me again how Demarco Murray should be in the MVP discussion.
Or else you want to say that non-quarterbacks can mean as much to an offense as elite quarterbacks, in which case... okay, sure. I concede the point. Now let's talk again about how New England's offense has looked with a fully healthy Gronk vs. how it has looked with an injured-or-out Gronk. Dallas has consistently had an above-average without Berserko Murray on the field. New England hasn't had an above-average without Rob Gronkowski on the field in years. Take away Murray, and Dallas' offense is still pretty good. Take away Gronk, and New England's offense is suddenly pretty bad.
Again, maybe you want to make that argument for Tom Brady, too- if you take away Brady, New England's offense will be even worse. Like I said, they were just fine with Matt Cassel. But if we're using your "quarterbacks are more important than any other position", then there's definitely no room for Murray in the MVP discussion. San Diego would drop a lot more if you took away Rivers, Denver would drop a lot more if you took away Manning, Green Bay would drop a lot more if you took away Rodgers, and Indy would drop a lot more if you took away Luck.
I agree with what was said above that RBs should not be in the MVP discussion because of their importance level. Foster is the one RB that I would actually put in the conversation. He is basically doing what AP did for a few years in Minny.Give me Arian Foster for MVP-- dude is single handily keeping Houstons offense afloat.
So Foster ahead of Watt now?I agree with what was said above that RBs should not be in the MVP discussion because of their importance level. Foster is the one RB that I would actually put in the conversation. He is basically doing what AP did for a few years in Minny.Give me Arian Foster for MVP-- dude is single handily keeping Houstons offense afloat.
Can you prove that DVOA is more reliable than PFF rankings?jurb26 said:You choose to look at the Pro Focus oline rankings as justification that NE is poor in that area but also acknowledge it's a very unreliable measure. Well, why not use a more reliable one like DVOA which I have already referenced?
It's not like I don't recognize the impact. Dallas is a top-5 offense with Demarco Murray playing this well. In previous years, Dallas' offense ranked more in the 8-12 range. Top-5 is better than 8-12, which is the impact that Demarco Murray has had on this offense. But it's not like the Houston Texans, where without Arian Foster they'd be the New York Jets. Murray turned an above-average offense into an elite offense. That's awesome. Other players have had bigger impacts.jurb26 said:Dal is 6-1 because they've finally pulled their heads out of there butts and starting running the ball 52% of the time. I along with many others on this board pointed out last year that this was a playoff team if they did this. The rebuttal was pretty much Murray cant handle the load. It's their change in philosophy that has altered the results. From 36% run to 52%. I'm not sure how you look at those numbers and not recognize the impact.
Yeah, it was a long time ago. We don't have a ton of evidence about how much New England would suffer without Brady. We do, however, have plenty of evidence about how much they'd suffer without Gronkowski.jurb26 said:The last time Brady missed a season was 7 years ago. Gronk wasn't even on the team and neither was about half their roster. They had Moss in his prime,Welker in his prime and many other highly effective players they simply don't have now. I'm not sure why you are even going here. It was SEVEN years ago. It has almost nothing to do with today.
First and most importantly, I use Pro Football Focus as evidence, not as justification.jurb26 said:You choose to look at the Pro Focus oline rankings as justification that NE is poor in that area but also acknowledge it's a very unreliable measure. Well, why not use a more reliable one like DVOA which I have already referenced? It paints a much different picture. The Dal oline is good but it seems to be your preconceived notion that they are the best. The numbers don't reflect that. Either way, the oline as good as we want to argue it is doesn't change the fact that Murray leads all RBs in yards after contact averaging 2.86 and has created 42 missed tackles, 13 more than the next best RB. He has clearly been the best RB in the NFL to date. It's not even close.
If a guy doesn't even have an argument for winning, then he does not belong "in the conversation". The conversation is guys we think deserve to win. In my mind, there are arguments for Peyton, Rodgers, Rivers, Luck, and Watt. I would pick Peyton from that group, but I think each of those five can present compelling arguments as to why they are #1. Please note that I didn't even include Gronk in that group, even though I think Gronk is more valuable than Murray.jurb26 said:In the conversation is not the same as winning. I don't think Murray wins or should win given current QB performances by guys like Manning, Luck and Rivers. He is in the conversation, though. He is above Gronk and every other non-QB as well.
You're losing me here. Murray has turned an above average oline into an elite one and other players have had bigger impacts? That's a bold statement. Not even one I'd make as a proponent of Murray's success this year. Turning an average group into elite is just about the definition of MVP, no? Especially on a team that is 6-1.It's not like I don't recognize the impact. Dallas is a top-5 offense with Demarco Murray playing this well. In previous years, Dallas' offense ranked more in the 8-12 range. Top-5 is better than 8-12, which is the impact that Demarco Murray has had on this offense. But it's not like the Houston Texans, where without Arian Foster they'd be the New York Jets. Murray turned an above-average offense into an elite offense. That's awesome. Other players have had bigger impacts.jurb26 said:Dal is 6-1 because they've finally pulled their heads out of there butts and starting running the ball 52% of the time. I along with many others on this board pointed out last year that this was a playoff team if they did this. The rebuttal was pretty much Murray cant handle the load. It's their change in philosophy that has altered the results. From 36% run to 52%. I'm not sure how you look at those numbers and not recognize the impact.
It doesn't. It's a statistic. It measures what it measures, and you just have to keep in mind what that is. As I understand it, it works on a simple +/- system- good plays get graded with a +, bad plays get a -. Guys who are consistently good will grade well. Guys who show flashes of true brilliance mixed in among stretches of mediocrity might not grade as well, even if they might be more productive. Their goal isn't to perfectly encapsulate player skill or value, it's to give some sort of objective, consistent, and repeatable measure of a player's play to date, ideally independent of the play of his teammates, (although not even PFF escapes totally from the NFL's entanglement effects).SSOG, you flat out prove that the PFF stats need some tweaking.
Drew Brees led the league in passing yards and TDs in 2008, 2011, and 2012. Brees did not receive a single vote in 2008, finishing behind Peyton Manning... and Chad Pennington, Michael Turner, Adrian Peterson, James Harrison, Philip Rivers, Chris Johnson, and Kurt Warner. That's right, in 2008 Drew Brees became the second player in history to top 5,000 yards and he finished with four fewer MVP votes than Chad Pennington, who threw for under 4,000 yards and under 20 TDs.If you think a QB leading the NFL in yardage and touchdowns will be rated less than any other QB in an MVP race....
This is not take the ol' QB rating system and make a new one. No one votes on some rating point system.
Cmon' now with Luck. I know you're averaging 341 yards per game, but your shoes were untied so I'm only gonna rank you fifth. Cmon.
1) Why do we grade?
The goal of our detailed grading process is to gauge how players execute their roles over the course of a game by looking at the performance of each individual on each play... We examine not just the statistical result of a play, but the context of that statistic...
2) What Do We Grade?
Throughout the course of the season (regular season and playoffs) we grade every single offensive, defensive and special teams snap...
3) How Do We Grade?
Each grade given is between +2 and -2, with 0.5 increments and an average of 0. A positive intervention in the game rates a positive grading and vice-versa. Very (very) few performances draw a +/-2 rating...
4) The “Rules” of Grading
Because of the nature of the roles, each position is graded in a slightly different way and the definitions for each run on for many pages. Although we’re not going to publish our 30+ page document on how we do this, not least because that’s our IP, below are a few of the key principles in our grading methodology:.
• DON’T GUESS — If you’re not 95 percent sure what’s gone on then don’t grade the player for that play. The grades must stand up to scrutiny and criticism, and it’s far better to say you’re not sure than be wrong. It is, however, crucial that this is not seen as an excuse to shy away from making a judgement...
• WE ARE NOT SCOUTS — We aren’t looking for (or grading) style or technique, merely the result of the play. We aren’t looking for promise and potential that can be coached up... We are looking for the result of that poor technique, not the poor technique itself. If poor technique results in a positive play, that is graded at the same level as good technique yielding a positive play.
• YOU DO NOT HAVE TO APPORTION BLAME ON EVERY PLAY — On each play there is often a “winner.” One unit, be it the offense or the defense, will usually get the better of a play by varying degrees. This, however, does not entail that one or more individuals on the losing unit are to blame....
• GREAT PLAYERS SCREW UP TOO — Blame is apportioned according to who is at fault on the play, not according to seniority....
• ZERO (0.0) IS THE AVERAGE GRADE — If a player does something you would normally expect, then this scores a 0...
He should be the front runner for DROY at this point.Anthony Barr’s stats through the first half of the NFL season:8 games played
54 combined tackles
43 solo tackles
11 assisted tackles
3 sacks
3 passes defended
1 forced fumble
3 fumble recoveries
1 fumble recovery TD
Said it before the draft and still believe it now. No player outside of a Clowney has more raw talent than Barr this guy is going to be a force.He should be the front runner for DROY at this point.Anthony Barr’s stats through the first half of the NFL season:
8 games played
54 combined tackles
43 solo tackles
11 assisted tackles
3 sacks
3 passes defended
1 forced fumble
3 fumble recoveries
1 fumble recovery TD
Yes, offensive lines can also dramatically impact quarterback performance. Which of my MVP candidates plays with a fantastic offensive line?SSOG you're arguing how a line's effectiveness aids a runner and using that to minimize the success of Murray. Don't linemen block for QBs too? I don't see any mention of the time each guy had to throw and how if you give a QB "all day" anyone can complete a pass.
Since you asked, here's where Manning's, Rivers', Rodgers', and Luck's OLs rank according to a variety of metrics:SSOG you're arguing how a line's effectiveness aids a runner and using that to minimize the success of Murray. Don't linemen block for QBs too? I don't see any mention of the time each guy had to throw and how if you give a QB "all day" anyone can complete a pass.
So you are convinced that if they gave him exactly 20 carries they would have won? What if those carries were in place of his receptions?Adam, Dal got away from running the ball again last night and Murray was again less than 20 carries. They lost to a team playing their 3rd string QB and last in the division. You still think their winning has nothing to do with feeding Murray?
Yes, I'm convinced with 2 more carries they win that game. I'll bet you can guess when those carries should have come. Regardless of that particular instance had they given more carries throughout the game it doesn't make it to OT and Dal wins. Murray is the catalyst for winning football in Dal right now.So you are convinced that if they gave him exactly 20 carries they would have won? What if those carries were in place of his receptions?Adam, Dal got away from running the ball again last night and Murray was again less than 20 carries. They lost to a team playing their 3rd string QB and last in the division. You still think their winning has nothing to do with feeding Murray?
Did you think Murray's fumble was important this time?
How do you think his fumble inside the Washington 10 yard line impacted this game?jurb26 said:Yes, I'm convinced with 2 more carries they win that game. I'll bet you can guess when those carries should have come. Regardless of that particular instance had they given more carries throughout the game it doesn't make it to OT and Dal wins. Murray is the catalyst for winning football in Dal right now.Just Win Baby said:So you are convinced that if they gave him exactly 20 carries they would have won? What if those carries were in place of his receptions?jurb26 said:Adam, Dal got away from running the ball again last night and Murray was again less than 20 carries. They lost to a team playing their 3rd string QB and last in the division. You still think their winning has nothing to do with feeding Murray?
Did you think Murray's fumble was important this time?
further evidence that this is the best QB award.Edit: This handy chart pretty clearly shows the current leaders.
Stafford would almost certainly be picked in a startup before Watt. It's a QB-driven league.further evidence that this is the best QB award.Edit: This handy chart pretty clearly shows the current leaders.
Am I reading this wrong or is it really saying Stafford and Palmer are more valuable than Watt?
They should be, but Manning will get votes because he is Peyton. Forget the stats. Forget any advance metrics. Manning has the reputation of being the greatest QB ever and Denver will have a round 1 bye. As long as Mannings numbers are in the top 5 for a QB, he will get the most MVP votes. Sorry.I think Manning has taken the lead, but to suggest no one else is in the conversation is silly. Rivers, Luck, Rodgers, and Watt should all be very much in the conversation.It will be Manning. No one else is in the conversation.
I actually think the opposite is true. Manning's 2014 isn't going to be compared to the rest of the field, it will be compared to Manning's 2013. I also think "voter fatigue" is a real thing- sort of like how in basketball in the '90s they tried giving MVPs to guys like Charles Barkley just because all of the voters were sick of giving it to Jordan every year.They should be, but Manning will get votes because he is Peyton. Forget the stats. Forget any advance metrics. Manning has the reputation of being the greatest QB ever and Denver will have a round 1 bye. As long as Mannings numbers are in the top 5 for a QB, he will get the most MVP votes. Sorry.I think Manning has taken the lead, but to suggest no one else is in the conversation is silly. Rivers, Luck, Rodgers, and Watt should all be very much in the conversation.It will be Manning. No one else is in the conversation.
It's saying that Stafford has more WPA than J.J. Watt, though WPA is highly context dependent. WPA stands for "win probability added", and it measures exactly that. If Houston gets to a huge lead early and has a 90% chance of winning the game, then J.J. Watt could have infinitybillion sacks the rest of the way and he'd only get 0.10 WPA out of it (because the best he can do is increase the chances of winning from 90% to 100%).further evidence that this is the best QB award.Edit: This handy chart pretty clearly shows the current leaders.
Am I reading this wrong or is it really saying Stafford and Palmer are more valuable than Watt?