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Fellow mods: Please do not merge with other TBC this is different than the "he's worth the contract/ no he isnt" thread
Pro Football Focus has great stats that show plays played as well as what the player did (ie defend run, defend pass, rush the QB) and includes #s on sacks, QB hits, QB pressures (I take these with a grain of salt because they are unofficial, and seem to vary widely from team to team even when their pass rushes seem similar, very arbitrary it seems) However they seem a good source to contribute to a discussion of how well TBC played last year.
TBC rushed the QB 355 times last season. He had 10 sacks 10 QB hits, 23 pressures and 2 blocked passes. I think the last 3 categories can be added together as they are similar but sacks are different. So TBC is 355/10/35 That is one sack about every 35 rushes and one other effective rush ever roughly 10.
Here are numbers on other selected pass rushers.
Peppers 446/10/44.....Interestingly he had the same # of sacks in 91 more pass rushes, and his other effective rush ratio is identical
Jason Taylor 341/8/27 similar snaps 2 fewer sacks and 8 fewer effective rushes
Joey Porter 354/9/16 same opportunities 1 less sack and less than half the effective rushes
(Note these 2 tend to counteract the idea that TBC nly had numbers because anyone could get them vs the Bills)
Dwight Freeney 469/15/61 Sack every 31 vs every 35 (works out to 2 more sacks on equal chances) and effective rush every 8 vs every 10, works out to about one more per game (based in equal rushes)
Personally I think the advantage of one gap with no run worries should make the gap wider.
Merriman 300/4/18 Not even close to TBCs production
Jared Allen 631/16/60 Interestingly while the overall numbers are much higher the ratio is one sack every 39 (worse than TBC) and one other good rush every 10.5 (worse than TBC)
Of course statistics can be twisted in many ways. TBCs #s would look better if he were out on the field actually rushing the passer more often, but by the same token ar elimited by the 2 gap D on 1st and 2nd down.
Looking at all of the OLB/DEs it looks as if TBC, playing every down, would have gotten about 100-110 more pass rush attempts. Thats about 30% more. So te question is, if TBC is now entrenched as a started who will play full time, year long and be the #1 pass rusher can he keep the ratios where they were in 2009, which would result in:
460 or so pass rush attempts
13 sacks
13 QB hits
30 QB pressures
2-3 Blocked passes and total numbers of
460/13/45 which are better than what Peppers did last year to earn himself 13 mill a season
FYI, Peppers 2008 and 2007 #s were:
2008 551/14/61 (sack every 40 eff rush every 9+) about same as TBC per rush
2007 326/2/18 /AWFUL
So 2009 seems to be very indicative of what he is being paid for
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Fellow mods: Please do not merge with other TBC this is different than the "he's worth the contract/ no he isnt" thread
Pro Football Focus has great stats that show plays played as well as what the player did (ie defend run, defend pass, rush the QB) and includes #s on sacks, QB hits, QB pressures (I take these with a grain of salt because they are unofficial, and seem to vary widely from team to team even when their pass rushes seem similar, very arbitrary it seems) However they seem a good source to contribute to a discussion of how well TBC played last year.
TBC rushed the QB 355 times last season. He had 10 sacks 10 QB hits, 23 pressures and 2 blocked passes. I think the last 3 categories can be added together as they are similar but sacks are different. So TBC is 355/10/35 That is one sack about every 35 rushes and one other effective rush ever roughly 10.
Here are numbers on other selected pass rushers.
Peppers 446/10/44.....Interestingly he had the same # of sacks in 91 more pass rushes, and his other effective rush ratio is identical
Jason Taylor 341/8/27 similar snaps 2 fewer sacks and 8 fewer effective rushes
Joey Porter 354/9/16 same opportunities 1 less sack and less than half the effective rushes
(Note these 2 tend to counteract the idea that TBC nly had numbers because anyone could get them vs the Bills)
Dwight Freeney 469/15/61 Sack every 31 vs every 35 (works out to 2 more sacks on equal chances) and effective rush every 8 vs every 10, works out to about one more per game (based in equal rushes)
Personally I think the advantage of one gap with no run worries should make the gap wider.
Merriman 300/4/18 Not even close to TBCs production
Jared Allen 631/16/60 Interestingly while the overall numbers are much higher the ratio is one sack every 39 (worse than TBC) and one other good rush every 10.5 (worse than TBC)
Of course statistics can be twisted in many ways. TBCs #s would look better if he were out on the field actually rushing the passer more often, but by the same token ar elimited by the 2 gap D on 1st and 2nd down.
Looking at all of the OLB/DEs it looks as if TBC, playing every down, would have gotten about 100-110 more pass rush attempts. Thats about 30% more. So te question is, if TBC is now entrenched as a started who will play full time, year long and be the #1 pass rusher can he keep the ratios where they were in 2009, which would result in:
460 or so pass rush attempts
13 sacks
13 QB hits
30 QB pressures
2-3 Blocked passes and total numbers of
460/13/45 which are better than what Peppers did last year to earn himself 13 mill a season
FYI, Peppers 2008 and 2007 #s were:
2008 551/14/61 (sack every 40 eff rush every 9+) about same as TBC per rush
2007 326/2/18 /AWFUL
So 2009 seems to be very indicative of what he is being paid for
Honestly, I think that TBC is a product of the system. Much like the year when Vrabel got 12.5 sacks, this season TBC got 10 sacks. I wouldn't get overexcited.
TBC was not a full time starter but he was inserted at what BB felt were the most appropriate times to take advantage of his talents. So there really is no guarantee with another 100 snaps that he would produce at that same level since there's a good chance that if he plays more, he'd have to play during running downs, which means he won't be padding his pass rushing numbers on those plays.
TBC fits the Patriots system, he knows it well, he's a good fit for us, and he is worth the contract he was given imo, but that does not make him a better player than Peppers, Merriman, Jared Allen, etc.
Just look at Deion Branch, after being taken out of the Pats system, has he ever come even close to the numbers he put up in New England after he moved to Seattle?
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Last edited by VJCPatriot; 03-07-2010 at 12:52 PM..
Honestly, I think that TBC is a product of the system. Much like the year when Vrabel got 12.5 sacks, this season TBC got 10 sacks. I wouldn't get overexcited.
TBC was not a full time starter but he was inserted at what BB felt were the most appropriate times to take advantage of his talents. So there really is no guarantee with another 100 snaps that he would produce at that same level since there's a good chance that if he plays more, he'd have to play during running downs, which means he won't be padding his pass rushing numbers on those plays.
TBC fits the Patriots system, he knows it well, he's a good fit for us, and he is worth the contract he was given imo, but that does not make him a better player than Peppers, Merriman, Jared Allen, etc.
Just look at Deion Branch, after being taken out of the Pats system, has he ever come even close to the numbers he put up in New England after he moved to Seattle?
Then you could say Freeny and Taylor are a "product of the system",
whatever that means.
He may not be better than top rushers in the league but if he is used the
right way he is right up there with the best of them and I think these stats
support that idea. And his cost is a lot less!
I agree with Patspsycho, upgrade the end of the Dline and watch what
happens.
Honestly, I think that TBC is a product of the system. Much like the year when Vrabel got 12.5 sacks, this season TBC got 10 sacks. I wouldn't get overexcited.
TBC was not a full time starter but he was inserted at what BB felt were the most appropriate times to take advantage of his talents. So there really is no guarantee with another 100 snaps that he would produce at that same level since there's a good chance that if he plays more, he'd have to play during running downs, which means he won't be padding his pass rushing numbers on those plays.
TBC fits the Patriots system, he knows it well, he's a good fit for us, and he is worth the contract he was given imo, but that does not make him a better player than Peppers, Merriman, Jared Allen, etc.
Just look at Deion Branch, after being taken out of the Pats system, has he ever come even close to the numbers he put up in New England after he moved to Seattle?
I think you misunderstood. It isnt 100 fewer plays, its 100 fewer times RUSHING THE PASSER, which basically equates to 100 pass plays he was on the sidelines for.
The question isnt whether he is better than those players.
The exercise was to show how he compares in all of the cases where he rushed the passer to the production of those players.
He compares very favorably.
In essence, he played about equally as well as Peppers as a pass rusher, given 80% of the opportunities.
The question is whether the 20% he didn't play would be as effective.
What I think you are missing is the fact that he had as many sacks as Peppers in 91 fewer chances to try and get one, and in those 91 chances Peppers 'rushed effectively' 9 times, which is the exact ratio TBC had in his 355 attempts.
There is absolutely no doubt that TBC was equally as effective a pass rusher as Julius Peppers in 2009.
What is debatable is whether he can accept the larger role.
Regardless of the levels of talent, they produced the same thing, and that really is all that matters, with the exception of course of snaps played.
My point was simply that if Peppers is considered a dominant pass rusher, then TBC had a great season as a pass rusher, and we should expect that he will help us a lot in 2010.
AJ, always love your posts, but wanted to ask, Isn't Pro Football Focus the site that listed Brady behind Garrard as a QB, and Mayo behind Guyton? Even taking into account the fact that the stats are based on productivity/effectiveness THIS season, that makes me question their methods and math. That said, I do think what you've posted here is fairly hard to argue with, so maybe some of their stuff, like this, is worth looking at. Seems to be.
AJ, always love your posts, but wanted to ask, Isn't Pro Football Focus the site that listed Brady behind Garrard as a QB, and Mayo behind Guyton? Even taking into account the fact that the stats are based on productivity/effectiveness THIS season, that makes me question their methods and math. That said, I do think what you've posted here is fairly hard to argue with, so maybe some of their stuff, like this, is worth looking at. Seems to be.
I'm using their raw stats, not their opinions.
I did note that looking the 'pressure' category, it should be taken with a grain of salt because it is unofficial and could be applied arbitrarily.