pats1 said:
K.C. Joyner's stupid little Bill James, sabermetric system is about as bad as it gets.
Him saying Ben Watson is overrated - only because of what his spreadsheet crapped out - is nothing new.
I don't know. Statistics certainly are not a full picture in football by any means. But on the other hand, they are not meaningless either. You just have to be careful about what conclusions you might draw or wonder about.
K.C. Joyners' metrics are probably more meaningful than raw stats that you can get from the gamebooks. He really does try to create metrics that are more meaningful about player contributions with respect to contributing to team success. And he adds raw statistics that you can't find elsewhere that are of real value in reflecting on contribution.
In particular on the subject of Watson, for a TE, making successful blocks for a RB is obviously a very significant part of his contribution - I think we all probably agree to that. Whether Joyner's stat for TE blocking success is adequately compiled is a question. But if it is compiled reasonably well, it does paint a picture of how a TE is doing. He rates Watson as one of the poorest in blocking last year. If that's indeed the case, this is an important consideration for the Pats as to whether they have options when Watson is in. If he can't block adequately, then he can only be used for passing purposes and defenses can look at film and plan against this.
A microscopic example of Watson's blocking was in the Washington game 1st-13:01. Run was to strong side off right tackle. Koppen sliced thru and got a complete block against a safety/LB. Neal pulled really well and fast and executed his assignment blocking the outside DB/LB to the outside completely. Graham was at TE and executed his block on the DE completely. O'Callaghan did a perfect job of sealing the DGs toward the middle. Watson was backset TE. He took on his block but established it poorly and let him slide off towards the running lane taking away daylight. Mills was lead blocker from FB position and he slowed down to pick up part of Watson's guy which he should never have had to do and did not keep going to take out the safety coming up. Mills should have stuck with his assignment and hoped that Watson could still slow his guy down to allow a hole or depend on Dillon to bull thru - but he didn't. Result - safety made the tackle for a 1 yard gain. The ironic thing is that Washington had 9 men in the box with two off to the weak side - and even so if Watson and Mills had done their job, Dillon had only daylight ahead of him - which is the real danger with 9 men in the box with nobody back. It was a great play call and could have picked up big yards.
I have only looked at a few plays, so I don't have a meaningful sample.
At 1st-14:52, he was backset TE and had assignment on LB. His intial block was good but he didn't hold it and let the LB slide towards the runner. It didn't matter as it turned out, but I would rate it only a fair block. At 1st-9:30, I had Watson with a good block.
So I would have to wonder if Watson doesn't have some real work to do to bring his blocking up to par. A full analysis in first regular season game would have a far better chance of seeing where he is at.