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10 interesting stats I have been playing with this week | Allen, Diggs, Cook, Defense


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Posted
11 minutes ago, Einstein said:

 

Prior to Collinsworth, only a few teams bought the data. A year after Collinsworth took over, 30 of 32 teams bought it. Now, all 32 do.

While I do not trust the data blindly, I do believe it is fairly accurate. 

 

"(PFF) has hired former NFL figures, including longtime assistant coach Gunther Cunningham, former Redskins lineman Will Montgomery, and former Redskins assistant Bobby Slowik, who since has returned to coaching. Analyses are checked and cross-checked and re-checked; Collinsworth said he has seen single plays debated for 15 minutes, and that “if there’s any ambiguity at all” on a particular play, analysts are told not to downgrade a player. Longtime Bengals offensive line coach Paul Alexander last season reviewed about 600 plays where PFF had downgraded one of his blockers; he told company founder Neil Hornsby that he disagreed with perhaps 12, “which is pretty remarkable,” Alexander said." (link)

🤙

Don't get me wrong, I think there's value in what they do 

 

I'm just saying I'm terms of that value, something more easily quantifiable for that kind of analysis like frequencies of personnel packages, down/distance tendencies...that data has value for sure. But discerning a QBS first reads or player grades I doubt have much value to teams. 

 

Teams can barely grade their own players properly😂😂

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Posted (edited)
5 hours ago, Einstein said:


Sure. 


But as long as the data uses the same methodology for all QB's, you can still make accurate comparisons. This is because the comparisons would be based on a standardized process, which is essential for understanding relative differences or similarities.

 


I submitted this question to them and will report back when I hear. If I were to guess i'd say PFF, simply because of their connection PFF.

That’d be disheartening… PGF outsources their grunt work to India which for most things isn’t an issue - but you’d like to have actual football people do the subjective stuff

Edited by HoofHearted
Posted
5 hours ago, Einstein said:

 

I think you may have a misunderstanding of how PFF grades. 

If this were the case, NFL and College teams wouldn't be paying PFF 6+ figures every year for their data.

 

The grading is not one-and-done.

 

It is first graded by an analyst, then it gets sent for review by a more knowledgeable analyst, and then it goes for final review by a senior analyst (I remember reading that Solomon Wilcots was a senior analyst).

The teams don’t pay for the grades. Those are useless to them. The teams pay for the raw data because they can manipulate it however they want to find tendencies.

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Posted
6 hours ago, HoofHearted said:

Any idea who’s doing the data mining?

 

No, but given the affiliation, presumably the data's coming from the NFL.  

 

It's not so much the data, it's what people do with it.  

 

 

Posted
7 hours ago, Einstein said:

 

I think you may have a misunderstanding of how PFF grades. 

If this were the case, NFL and College teams wouldn't be paying PFF 6+ figures every year for their data.

 

The grading is not one-and-done.

 

It is first graded by an analyst, then it gets sent for review by a more knowledgeable analyst, and then it goes for final review by a senior analyst (I remember reading that Solomon Wilcots was a senior analyst).

They pay for the data, not the grades. Solomon Wilcots is not going over all the grades for every player. It's moreso just QA. The grades are still garbage.

6 hours ago, BADOLBILZ said:

 

 

I think you are mistaken if they don't pay attention to grades or anything but vague "metadata".    You are giving the teams way too much credit.   Teams have about 24 hours to put together gameplans on Monday morning.   It's abundantly clear that there isn't a great deal of "metadata" being analyzed for some of this scouting and self-scouting.  Like most things NFL,  fans tend to give the team and players far too much credit for work they are doing individually.    

You are not giving teams enough credit. This is why coaches lose a lot of sleep during the season.

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Posted
22 hours ago, strive_for_five_guy said:

Allen’s read progression is this:  If Diggs is first read, throw it to him.  If Diggs is not first read, still throw it to him.

 

Some truth to this.

 

Alternative read progression: If Gabe is the first read deep, wait as long as you can to see if you can possibly throw to him.  Then throw to Diggs.

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Posted
22 hours ago, EmotionallyUnstable said:

Kincaid catches the rock. I’d love to see them just give him 1 or 2 opportunities down the field, in the seam, etc to make a play. Even if it’s a contested catch, as a fan, I want to see what we’re working with here

 

Agree, and this is kinda strange: Giants game, 2nd down/2nd series, Bills put Gilliam at slot, and he ran a deep out.

 

No split release, just up seam and to the boundary. Looked open.*

 

I don't recall a similar release for DK but I obviously could be wrong. If not, would very much like to see they/him hit this route.

 

*Apologies for repeating myself: I mentioned this in an earlier thread.

 

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Posted
On 10/20/2023 at 2:24 PM, Pine Barrens Mafia said:

I say no.

 

I want him to play like he always has. This version is...vanilla and beige.

 

LOTS of people here disagree with me about that because they're afraid. Give me the mad bomber melon farmer

I see where you are coming from and I somewhat agree, at least partially. But Allen needs to be able to play a boring, efficient game and stick with it for an entire game if that is what it takes for him to win that game.

 

Ideally, that would be 70% of the games you play in the regular season. That other 30%, though, and in the playoffs, the "mad bomber" Allen needs to be able to come out when he is called upon.

 

The perfect form of Allen is when he is able to turn it on and turn it off, sometimes in the same game, depending on what the situation calls for. This latest iteration of Allen is him learning how to play calmly and efficiently for full stretches of games, which is a super important step in his progression, even if it is boring sometimes.

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Posted (edited)
38 minutes ago, LeGOATski said:

You are not giving teams enough credit. This is why coaches lose a lot of sleep during the season.

 

First off, the teams don't put together game plans on Monday morning.  The position coaches stay up all night analyzing film and GPS data from Sunday's game.  They grade the players and do "corrections" with the players in a light practice on Monday.  These days with ipads, players may review their own film on the flight home or go home and watch it Sunday night. 

Then the players have Tuesday off, while the assistants and coaches work as hard as they can to put together a game plan from data and film that the assistants assigned to advance scouting have assembled on the next opponent, with whatever their most recent game plan added in.

 

Josh Allen said Daboll used to send out the game plan Tuesday afternoon which was considered early and helpful; more usual would be Weds morning, when position groups review it in meetings and then the team walks through it in practice.

 

 

Edited by Beck Water
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Posted
2 hours ago, HoofHearted said:

The teams don’t pay for the grades. Those are useless to them. The teams pay for the raw data because they can manipulate it however they want to find tendencies.

What raw data does PFF have, that is not available to the NFL already for free?

Posted
21 minutes ago, Chaos said:

What raw data does PFF have, that is not available to the NFL already for free?

I believe it's stuff like how many times X team runs certain personnel packages, or what frequency they're in shotgun vs under center, run/pass splits depending on down and distance and by what part of the game etc etc...stuff that PFF can aggregate in digestible form. You don't need a strong football background to count numbers on jerseys 

 

I would be wary of using anything they're presenting that relies on knowing playbooks or reads and player grades tho

Posted
50 minutes ago, Chaos said:

What raw data does PFF have, that is not available to the NFL already for free?

 

My understanding is PFF tracks all sorts of details like what plays a team runs with certain personnel on the field, what plays they run in specific down and distance situations, so forth and so on.

Posted
On 10/20/2023 at 3:39 PM, Charles Romes said:

How can you tell if it’s the first read. Doesn’t the QB normally look off the first read. That would make the second read the first read. 

 

They often do that by looking at DEFENDERS (safeties usually) they want to manipulate/freeze, rather than looking at a different target. 

Posted (edited)
9 hours ago, Einstein said:

I think you may have a misunderstanding of how PFF grades. 

If this were the case, NFL and College teams wouldn't be paying PFF 6+ figures every year for their data.

 

I get so tired of hearing this.  The NFL is not paying PFF for their player grades. There is a ton of stuff that PFF provides the NFL teams that isn't even available to the public.  I have posted a few times now everything the NFL gets for that money.  Player grades are a microscopic data point compared to what they receive for that money.  Just because player grades are part of the package, doesn't mean the NFL takes any stock into those grades.

 

For example, PFF provides NFL teams with things like how often a team runs each formation, what type of plays are run out of that formation and how often. What teams run on each down, etc. Things like that are what is valuable to an NFL team each week when a team only has a week or less to prepare for an opponent.  I doubt any team cares that PFF rates X player 84.5 or 24.3.  Thats small potatoes.

 

This is what teams pay for: https://media.pff.com/2018/08/PFF-Play-Data-Fields.pdf

 

 

Edited by Scott7975
Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Scott7975 said:

 

I get so tired of hearing this.  The NFL is not paying PFF for their player grades.

 

You may be tired of hearing it from others, but as for myself, I never said anything about the NFL paying for player grades.

 

I specifically noted that NFL teams pay for PFF’s “data”.

 

I think you perhaps got confused by the words “how PFF grades”. Meaning, how they map each play - everything from formation, to splits, to man/zone schemes, etc. Perhaps I should I have used a different word, though I thought my clarifying second sentence made it clear.

 

IMG-3899.jpg

Edited by Einstein
Posted
3 minutes ago, Einstein said:

 

You may be tired of hearing it from others, but as for myself, I never said anything about the NFL paying for player grades.

 

I specifically noted that NFL teams for PFF’s “data”.

 

I think you perhaps got confused by the words “how PFF grades”. Meaning, how they interpret a play - everything from formation, to splits, to man/zone schemes, etc. Perhaps I should I have used a different word, though none is coming to mind at the moment.

 

IMG-3899.jpg

 

 

Yeah they are just so caught up with their vendetta against player grades that they are denying that even the other data you mentioned is being used.   

 

 

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Posted
9 hours ago, Beck Water said:

 

My understanding is PFF tracks all sorts of details like what plays a team runs with certain personnel on the field, what plays they run in specific down and distance situations, so forth and so on.

This seems to require some level of analysis. Indicating a certain level of trust by teams for PFF to interpret what they are reviewing 

Posted
8 hours ago, BADOLBILZ said:

 

 

Yeah they are just so caught up with their vendetta against player grades that they are denying that even the other data you mentioned is being used.   

 

 


I have no vendetta against player grades. I don’t care about them at all because they are completely subjective. Considering I posted a link to the actual data being used and that was actually my argument that it was other data being used and not player grades, your statement is wrong. 

8 hours ago, Einstein said:

 

You may be tired of hearing it from others, but as for myself, I never said anything about the NFL paying for player grades.

 

I specifically noted that NFL teams pay for PFF’s “data”.

 

I think you perhaps got confused by the words “how PFF grades”. Meaning, how they map each play - everything from formation, to splits, to man/zone schemes, etc. Perhaps I should I have used a different word, though I thought my clarifying second sentence made it clear.

 

IMG-3899.jpg


then I misunderstood what you said but I have seen you say it in the past. 

Posted
11 hours ago, Chaos said:

What raw data does PFF have, that is not available to the NFL already for free?

All of the raw data that goes into film breakdown on a per play basis so things like Team, ODK, QTR, Time, Series, P&10, Series, Dn, Dist, Gain/Loss, Hash, Yd Ln, Play Type (Run or Pass), Result (Cmp, Inc, Rush, TD, etc.), PFF tracks the jersey number of every player on the field on a per play basis, Jersey number of players who touched the ball offensively on a given play (QB, RB, WR/TE), etc.

 

And then the teams will input their own data using their terminology for the football specific stuff. All of the base data that anyone can gather though is extremely time consuming to input manually.

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Posted
10 hours ago, BADOLBILZ said:

 

 

Yeah they are just so caught up with their vendetta against player grades that they are denying that even the other data you mentioned is being used.   

 

 


Bingo.

This topic is OLD. A NEW topic should be started unless there is a very specific reason to revive this one.

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