https://www.nfl.com/news/next-gen-s...ers-of-2022-geno-smith-tua-tagovailoa-excel-a
Just sick stats.
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Can he flick a ball 60 yards off his back foot though? Didn't think so.
Irishman and OwesOwn614 like this. -
Geno Smith is #1, that's how you know this is a great and meaningful stat.
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I notice you didn't mention that Josh Allen, Mahomes, Burrow, and Hurts were also on the list.
The fact is that Geno Smith had a great year throwing deep passes and a very good year overall. Smith finished the year 5th in passer rating, 6th in QBR, 1st in completion %, 8th in yards, 7th in TD %, 11th in INT %, and 8th in YPA. The fact that you would attempt to dismiss Tua and this stat because Geno Smith finished 1st just displays your ignorance. The fact that he hadn't performed at that level before has no impact on what he did last season.Last edited: Jun 3, 2023Fin-O, Silverphin, firedan and 2 others like this. -
dolphin25, FinFaninBuffalo, Pauly and 1 other person like this.
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Sceeto and vmarcilfan75 like this.
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Having said that, the claim that because Geno Smith is #1 those are not good stats is meritless. The stats are fine, and they give you the best (objective) estimate of how good those QBs were last year at the deep ball. It's just that you need multiple seasons to conclude anything reliable because QBs don't throw that many deep balls.Last edited: Jun 3, 2023Csonka Marino, FinFaninBuffalo and Silverphin like this. -
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Sceeto likes this. -
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If his point was only Geno Smith, he would have tried to downplay his stats with all the usual tactics.... it was his receivers, he had a ton of 'almost INTs", receivers were wide open, etc, etc, etc. Always the same things and NEVER supported by any evidence whatsoever. That is his MO.Silverphin and djphinfan like this. -
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FinFaninBuffalo likes this.
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He's Nich Foles.StaleTacos likes this. -
But that's just me.Sceeto likes this. -
Your concern is COVERED by the statistical analysis around metrics being used. They LITERALLY attempt to isolate the QB play from the rest of the team and take into account EXACTLY your concern. From an article on Passing Score (https://www.nfl.com/news/next-gen-stats-intro-to-passing-score-metric):
All of these statistical endeavors share a common goal: to isolate the contributions of a quarterback from the team's collective passing production and efficiency. No matter the difficulty of a throw, traditional box score statistics (like yards and touchdowns) will treat a 72-yard touchdown pass the same whether it was thrown 40 yards in the air (and hits the receiver in stride) or if it was thrown to a wide-open receiver 6 yards downfield (who outruns the entire defense). The NGS Passing Score, like other metrics before it, seeks to improve on the limitations of the traditional box score.
BTW the same is true of xComp (expected completion %) and CPOE.
Your concern is completely misplaced. The metrics that were used to compile the list used context. They are ABSOLUTELY an attempt to inform us of the deep ball success was a result of the QB.
It is almost like you didn't read the article and simply raised a concern because Tua was 2nd on the list.....djphinfan likes this. -
djphinfan and Silverphin like this.
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Its utterly amazing to me how polarizing of a figure Tua Tagovailoa is to fans. I completely understand the injury concerns. I get that. I'm not oblivious to his injury history. Put that aside for a moment...just set it way over there for right now.
After the Dolphins moved on from Fitzpatrick and handed the reigns over to Tua his second season in the league, his OVERALL PERFORMANCE was met with mixed reviews, everything from him being weaked armed, couldn't throw the long ball, only threw short passes, yada yada yada...and this doesn't even take into account the drama surrounding the rumors of Miami possibly pursuing Deshaun Watson and Flores' leaked admission he wanted Herbert and not Tagovailoa.
Well, following the 2021 Days of our Lives soap opera of a season, the Dolphins moved on from Flores, brought in Mike McDaniel and it was said all throughout the off-season that this was Tua's MAKE OR BREAK season...that he had to demonstrate he was the quarterback the Dolphins thought he was going to be when they drafted him.
So what does Tua do? He did EVERYTHING everyone said he needed to do. He led (or nearly led) the league in every significant and relevant quarterback stat and evaluation. He did what "you" and everyone else said he needed to do and instead of acknowledging his elevated game and demonstrated ability to perform on the field as everyone said he needed to do, what do we get?
The same old, "yea but..."
I don't get it. I really don't! I swear I honestly believe there are those here who would still, "yea but..." if the Dolphins won the Super Bowl with Tua as our quarterback.Fin-O, Springveldt, OwesOwn614 and 3 others like this. -
Oh, Bridgewater and Thompson had zero touchdowns to Hill or Waddle.FinFaninBuffalo likes this. -
L
I'm simply responding to posts. I was not responding to YOUR post and the article you linked to. If a post makes me think something, I write it, that's how forums work.
Really not sure why you are seemingly allergic to discussing things. I rarely post because I'm tired of you nit picking everything I say. Regardless of what I say, you repeatedly twist everything into an anti-Tua stance.
I'm not saying Geno is or isn't elite as an attempt to denigrate Tua. But you don't actually want to talk about Geno because you KNOW he's not an elite QB, yet he's ranked above the guy you believe is, or will be, elite. -
Since the 1970 merger:
Brody in 1970 (14th year starting)
Morrall in 1972 (17th year starting)
Sipe in 1980 (7th year starting)
Bartkowski in 1983 (9th year starting)
Kramer in 1986 (10th year starting)
Harbaugh in 1995 (8th year starting)
Cunnningham in 1998 (13th year starting)
Griese in 2000 (2nd year starting)
McNair in 2003 (9th year starting)
Foles in 2013 (2nd year starting)
Smith in 2017 (12th year starting)
Tannehill in 2019 (7th year starting)
In contrast, when you look at "great" QBs, or QB who either have many great seasons or played solidly well above average over a long period of time, they usually do it more than once, and most do it for the first time by year 5 starting: Staubach, Anderson, Marino, Warner, Manning, Rodgers, Rivers and Wilson all did it within year 5 starting. Key exceptions are guys like Montana, Young, Brady and Brees. But the majority of the better QBs do it early in their careers for the first time, not late.
So it's really more likely just based on historical data that Tua is NOT the next Foles or (Brian) Griese, and is instead more likely to be end up well above average over a career (i.e., someone you can consider a franchise QB), if he can stay healthy of course. -
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The top 5 QBs in completion % over 15+ yard passes last season:
Tua, Heinecke, Geno, Matt Ryan, Sam Darnold.
What a group!
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dolphin25 likes this. -
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Suggesting that we need to know if his deep throws (and Geno's) came against the same types of defenses is a red herring because they both played against several types of defenses last season. Tua played against the same defenses as Josh Allen and Tua's downfield accuracy outranked his. It'd be different if they played one game each.
I dunno, man. When it goes from he can't do it to he can do it, but others do it better to maybe statistically he had a superior season but he still doesn't pass the eye test with me, I'm honestly thinking his detractors should simply say I don't like him and leave it at that. No context is needed; we like what we like and we know it when we see it. No justification is necessary. But arguing that you can't objectively rank players in spite of numbers to do so is hard for me to buy.FinFaninBuffalo likes this. -
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My prediction is that this will continue next year even if Tua does well again. I don't see any inkling of a serious attempt by anti-Tua posters to evaluate Tua independent of their pre-draft evaluations.
It might even be worse next year if we have a good defense. My prediction is we'll hear something like: "See!! Tua did worse in 2023 even with a much better defense!.. proves he's not much better than average and that 2022 was a fluke". Of course it's extremely difficult to repeat at #1, but that's beside the point.
And regarding the deep ball specifically, you'll never get past the "he doesn't have a strong arm, so his stats don't matter".FinFaninBuffalo and OwesOwn614 like this. -
It's like (for example):
"Our guy threw more runners out at first without errors than any other shortstop."
"That doesn't mean he's more accurate because we don't know how many of those throws came closer to second than third. Other shortstops might have been better, but we'll never know if they had to throw the ball 20 feet further than McGinty did."
All we know is what we know. Some fans' motto should be "Every time you think you know the answer, I change the question". -
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If Tua does that (and keeps doing that most of the time), there's really no argument he's not good enough. -
And, why do you keep brining up completion percentage only? Why ignore all the other metrics in the article? The article includes expected completion percentage and CPOE, which is a more complete picture. -
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FinFaninBuffalo likes this.
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dolphin25 likes this.
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Tua's ability to throw accurately with anticipation is what allows him to overcome his lack of elite arm strength, not the scheme, not the receivers.
The metrics used in the article measure the QB's contribution to deep pass success. In other words, they control for your unsupported claim that his success was based on Hill and Waddle being wide open. What you are asserting is simply not true.
Finally, the number of passes attempted per season of greater than 55 air yards can probably be counted on one hand for the QBs you mention. OTOH, Tua's superior ability to throw with anticipation make him more effective than other QBs on hundreds of throws per year.djphinfan likes this. -
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