Thank you for taking time to put this together. Any thoughts on what Hannable observed in his column. Do you agree with his conclusions:
The Falcons had eight games (including the playoffs) where they faced defenses better than 20th in points allowed per game, and in those games the Falcons scored 28.9 points per game. In the 10 games against defenses 20th or worse in the league, the Falcons scored 38.9 points per game. That is exactly a 10-point difference between good and bad competition, which is pretty telling.
On defense, the Falcons were one of the worst units in the league, allowing an average of 25.4 points a game in the regular season, good for 27th in the NFL. The overall numbers could have been even worse if not for having games against poor offenses. In six games against top 10 offenses, the Falcons allowed 32.9 points a game, which is compared to 20.8 points a game in 12 games against offenses not in the top 10. A 12-point difference. Not good.
It appears the Falcons thrive on bad competition and are a different team when facing the better teams in the league. The Patriots on the other hand are the same team no matter who they are going up against.
New England finished first in points allowed per game at 15.4. It played five games against top 10 offenses and allowed 19 points per game in those games, which is in comparison to allowing 14.5 points per game in the 13 games against offenses not in the top 10. A 4.5-point difference is something to take note of, but is not even close to the difference for Atlanta.
The Patriots finished fourth in points per game on offense, but the most impressive thing was it didn't matter who they played. They scored 28.5 points a game against defenses that finished in the top 11 in points allowed, and scored 28.2 points a game against defenses not in the top 11. No difference at all.
Bottom line, no matter who the Patriots played, they were the same team. It wasn't a case of looking better against bad teams, or playing bad against good teams.