JMC00
Pro Bowl Player
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2012
- Messages
- 16,935
- Reaction score
- 25,924
Registered Members experience this forum ad and noise-free.
CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.I sense a trend...
However, a question: how can Brady's QB rating be lower than Ryan's, if his ratings in every category are HIGHER than Ryan's?
"Riddle me THAT, Batman!"
Was Jimmy G omitted from this because of too few pass attempts?
There's an explanation and a name for it: the Yule-Simpson effect. It's based on the sizes of each sample. Since I don't know the numbers here, I'll use a related example.
For a long time, Pay-me-tons had a higher overall QB rating than Brady. This is despite the fact that Brady had a higher rating than Manning in games played outdoors, and a higher rating than Manning in games played indoors!
The issue is that Manning played a much higher proportion of his games indoors, and everyone plays better indoors, so the net result was that Pey-me-tons had a higher overall QB rating.
can u post the source for this?
There's an explanation and a name for it: the Yule-Simpson effect. It's based on the sizes of each sample. Since I don't know the numbers here, I'll use a related example.
For a long time, Pay-me-tons had a higher overall QB rating than Brady. This is despite the fact that Brady had a higher rating than Manning in games played outdoors, and a higher rating than Manning in games played indoors!
The issue is that Manning played a much higher proportion of his games indoors, and everyone plays better indoors, so the net result was that Pey-me-tons had a higher overall QB rating.
There's an explanation and a name for it: the Yule-Simpson effect.
| 0 | 128 |
| 74 | 3K |
| 108 | 7K |
From our archive - this week all-time:
April 8 - April 23 (Through 26yrs)











