The goal is to come up with a receiver grade, that is not impacted by QB skill level.
There is a high degree of likelihood what I'm about to propose doesn't make any sense at all, as I am not a math guy and am attempting to bumblefVck my way through this. Feel free to shoot me down immediately, numbers people.
Here's a baseline:
[table="width: 800, class: grid"]
[tr]
[td]PlayerName[/td]
[td]Comp[/td]
[td]TD[/td]
[td]TD/Comp[/td]
[td]Yards[/td]
[td]Yards/Comp[/td]
[td]YAC[/td]
[td]YAC/Comp[/td]
[td]1stDn[/td]
[td]1stDn/Comp[/td]
[td]Fumbles[/td]
[td]Fum/Comp[/td]
[td]SCORE[/td]
[/tr]
[tr]
[td]J. Doe[/td]
[td]100[/td]
[td]10[/td]
[td]0.1000[/td]
[td]1000[/td]
[td]10.0000[/td]
[td]400[/td]
[td]4.0000[/td]
[td]75[/td]
[td].75[/td]
[td]0[/td]
[td].0000[/td]
[td][/td]
[/tr]
[tr]
[td][/td]
[td][/td]
[td][/td]
[td]4.0000[/td]
[td][/td]
[td]4.0000[/td]
[td][/td]
[td]4.0000[/td]
[td][/td]
[td]4.0000[/td]
[td]0[/td]
[td].0000[/td]
[td]16.00[/td]
[/tr]
[/table]
Here's Indy's top 2 receivers:
Wayne = 16.51
Hilton = 19.01
Here's Seattle's Top 2 receivers:
Rice = 15.81
Tate = 17.13
Now here's Miami's Top 2:
Hartline = 12.76
Bess = 10.05
The first thing that jumps out at me is that I should probably penalize the #2 WRs a bit more, since the score is basically grading how much does one receiver do with the ball, but I'm not really comparing #1 to #2 so I'm not worried about it. Take the scores from each team's wr's and compare by team. Don't compare a #1's score to a #2's score.
Also, I added a bonus to receivers who caught more than a 100 balls.
I chose Comp/TD/Yards/YAC/1st Dn/Fumbles because I feel like those are proof the WR did his job on a given completion. Drops, INTs, Attempts, etc are all at least the same responsibility as the QB or more.
The complaint has been that Tannehill doesn't have the same quality of WRs and that has hindered his play. If my stats show what I think they show (and they probably don't, again, I'm not a numbers guy) then that does seem like the case.
Here's the list of all the #1's
Over 100 Receptions Club:
C. Johnson 18.72
A. Johnson 18.11
B. Marshall 17.68
W. Welker 16.70
R. Wayne 16.51
Between 50-100 Receptions Club:
V. Jackson 20.92
D. Bryant 18.76
M. Crabtree 18.48
D. Thomas 18.41
P. Harvin 17.96
R. Cobb 17.54
M. Austin 17.47
M. Colston 16.92
V. Cruz 16.76
AJ Green 16.75
R. White 16.55
M. Wallace 16.51
M. Floyd 16.04
S. Smith 15.83
S. Rice 15.81
S. Johnson 15.78
A. Boldin 15.48
J. Maclin 15.43
J. Blackmon 15.37
D. Bowe 15.11
G. Little 14.62
J. Kerley 14.13
A. Roberts 14.06
K. Wright 13.89
L. Fitzgerald 13.77
B. Hartline 12.76
D. Amendola 12.57
Go ahead, flame away.
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Of course this doesn't address the argument that WRs are limited by their QBs so no way of telling if Hartline/Bess would have had the highest rating if Luck or Wilson were throwing to them. And I am not saying that Hartline/Bess are better than Wayne/Hilton or Tate/Rice.
If TDs play such a significant factor then how do you factor in a WR that gets a pass thrown to him 10 times in the end zone and another that only gets 2 opportunities? Using as an example, not citing an actual stat.shula_guy likes this. -
shula_guy Well-Known Member
I think you took a good try at quantifing a WRs value but I think your chart is incomplete. Im not sure how you would include the additional metrics that you would need. I think looking at if he was open on his routes and if he was being double covered would also speak to his value.
Something to consider about comparing Miamis WRs to other teams is the amount of total targets RT has to throw too compared to other teams. Miami does not really have 3 WRs or 2 TE that can be thrown too on any given play. Defenses have less weapons to cover because the offense's limitations. Im not sure of a good way to factor that into a WR metric.
I think you also need to factor in how many offensive plays the offense ran and how many were passing plays and then look at what percentage the WR was looked at to make plays. I think 3rd and long conversions and conversions made due to YAC. -
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I would also say ypt (yards per target) is better than ypc. Is the WR that runs deep routes and catches 50 of 100 balls thrown to him for 750 yards (15 ypc, 7.5 ypa) more valuable than the WR that runs shorter routes and catches 60 of 90 balls thrown to him for 750 yards (12.5 ypc, 8.33 ypa)?
I think interceptions need to be factored in as well. When I think of WR I think in terms of how effective is the team offensively when the WR is being thrown to. If a QB throws 10 TD passes, but also throws 12 interceptions trying to get him the ball, I think that WR is less effective to his team than the WR that catches 7 TDs, but the QB only throws 4 interceptions trying to get him the ball.
Interceptions + fumbles makes sense to me. -
shula_guy Well-Known Member
Just an example say its 3rd and 5 and RT throws it to bess for a 5yrd gain but misses that Hartline was wide open with a clean path to the endzone. Wouldnt that be something that Hartline should be given credit for?
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shula_guy Well-Known Member
What about if using the same example I used above but only this time Hartline drew double covered and it allowed Bess to get open for the completion. Do you think that could be considered a value to his team even though he did not catch the pass? -
Not saying those are the actually stats...IDK what they are.
Kind of like saying the FB that gets the ball from the 2 yard line in and scores 10 TDs while rushing for less than 100 yards is better than the RB that doesn't get the ball inside the 10 so only scores 4 TDs, but ran for 1,200 yards 4 TDs.
Opportunities = TD...case in point Thomas/Decker went from 12 TDs in 2011 to 23 TDs this year with Manning throwing to them.
I don't want to screw up the numbers and I assume you know the formula inside-out so could you run the numbers on Thomas/Decker last year and this year to see if, at all, QB makes a difference? -
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2011:
Dekcer: 44 catches, 612 yards, 8 TD
Thomas: 32 catches, 551 yards, 4 TD
2012:
Decker: 85 catches, 1,065 yards, 13 TD
Thomas: 94 catches, 1,434 yards, 10 TDshula_guy likes this. -
shula_guy Well-Known Member
The QBR sort of covers that because the play always starts in the QBs hand so what he decides to do with it dictates the results to a big extent. A WR is at the mercy of the QB choosing to target him. I do think you can get a rough measurement of a WR using your chart. -
Decker's stats about double with about double his receptions. Thomas' stats about triple with about triple his receptions. That tells me they are producing at the same ratio. -
shula_guy Well-Known Member
I dont want to speak for Adam but I think your making his point for him. It absolutely does not tell you how good of a reciever he is or isnt because his numbers are being affected by who is tossing him the ball. This is really the opposite side of the same coin that you and I argued with Shou about in his QBR thread. It takes two people to make a completetion so the QB has a direct influence on the WR's stats and vice a versa. -
shula_guy Well-Known Member
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As for Thomas:
2011 = 19.32
2012 = 18.41
Again, that shows Thomas' skill is the same regardless of who is throwing to him. Manning gave him more opportunities, but he used the opportunities at pretty constant rate. For what you're implying, his score would have to be significantly higher with manning then with Tebow. And if I used the two stats you want me to, they would be because then they are going to be partially based on QB talent, and manning is considerably better than Tebow. -
2011:
Dekcer: 44 catches, 95 targets, 46.3%, 612 yards, 6.44 ypa, 8 TD
Thomas: 32 catches, 70 targets, 45.7%, 551 yards, 7.87 ypa, 4 TD
2012:
Decker: 85 catches, 123 targets, 69.1%, 1,065 yards, 8.66 ypa, 13 TD
Thomas: 94 catches, 141 targets, 66.7%, 1,434 yards, 10.17 ypa, 10 TD
So if you adjust for TARGETS and each QB threw to them 100 times and rounding up:
2011:
Decker: 46 catches, 644 yards, 8 TD
Thomas: 46 catches, 787 yards, 6 TD
2012:
Decker: 69 catches, 866 yards, 11 TD
Thomas: 67 catches, 1,017 yards, 7 TD
Decker/Thomas combined based on 100 throws to each WR:
2011: 92 catches 1,431 yards, 14 TD
2012: 136 catches, 1,883 yards, 18 TD
Da 'Fins likes this. -
Targets is more about the QB then WR or at the very least, they have equal responsibility in that stat. You cannot factor targets into a WR score without the quality of the QB affecting the outcome. Your Denver example proves that. They caught a higher percentage of balls from the superior QB. Does that make sense? -
Fin D likes this.
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What doesn't make sense to me is that Decker who got the opportunity to work with Manning became 13% worse in his 3rd year than he was working with Orton/Tebow in his 2nd year. And Thomas' play also decreased this year working with P. Manning...now that I find interesting.Fin D likes this. -
Under Manning, the offence is more conventional, and more opportunities with shorter passes and less explosive plays.
Just IMO. -
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I'd have to bake in a stop against this, like a minimum number of catches or something. Off the top of my head, I wanna say 30 catches should be the cutoff.AdamC13 likes this. -
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