No one EVER said it was be all end all.
It IS the most important statistic of a defense, followed closely by takeaways.
How a defense played is judged by how many points they allowed, not as an absolute, but in conjunction with takeaways, and situation.
Passer rating is a stupid formula that tells you nothing.
If a QB is 20/30/250 and 3 TDs he has a 125.7 rating
If he is 19/29/249 and 2 TDs but runs the 3rd one in from the 1 he has a 115.4.
That is not a usable statistic.
I'm guessing you are not a math major.
The way you use statistics more closely follows how politician are using them. You are throwing passer rating numbers out of nowhere, and that's proof for you ? How about context ?
I will repeat myself, because I'm arguing with a toddler. After that, I'm done.
POINTS is the most important stat. As in the final score OF A GIVEN GAME.
Taking 16 different games and taking the average is irrelevant. First, a win is a win. Second, a 16 game sample is much too small to make anything of it. And since you refuse to take into consideration the strength of these 16 opponents and compare it to what other teams faced, it means even less.
Its called a coincidence. Correlation is not causation.
Coincidence ? You got to be kidding. A coincidence over 70 years, that's one crazy big coincidence...
Obviously correlation is not causation. We are talking about a prediction model. But that's the whole point of evaluating the importance of a given statistic.
Are you telling me that the stats that show 100 yard rushers win often is causation?
How about 300 yard passers?
You keep changing the subject. We are talking about the defensive PPG, remember ?
I said that it wasn't a relevant stat pertaining to postseason success. I gave you a better way of evaluating our postseason chances. What does this have to do with 100 yard rushers and 300 yard passers all of a sudden, I don't know, except that I have proven you wrong and you try to go in as many direction as possible to make a point that doesn't exist.