Quote:
Originally Posted by sdskinsfan2001
From one, PFF. Sounds familiar.
The case for building around Washington Redskins QB Dwayne Haskins:
https://www.pff.com/news/nfl-the-cas...dwayne-haskins
Its a premium article, which I don't have myself. But you can read a good chunk of it before it cuts off.
"He had just seven touchdowns to seven picks, but he actually had fewer turnover-worthy plays than interceptions."
Case of some bad luck it would seem.
|
Sam is great at his job, he's a writing wiz..
Great article , if you didn't get to read it all he I'll post a couple passages here:
He had just seven touchdowns to seven picks, but he actually had fewer turnover-worthy plays than interceptions. Typically, those numbers work in reverse (defenders drop a lot of would-be picks, so the number of interceptions is usually lower than the number of plays that should have been turnovers). Daniel Jones, for example, had 31 turnover-worthy plays compared to just 12 interceptions. Murray had six more, and Minshew had 12 more. Haskins, in fact, was the only rookie passer to end up with more turnovers than turnover-worthy plays, and that skews the narrative.
Haskins actually had by far the lowest turnover-worthy play rate (2.3%) of any of those rookie passers. But of course, mistakes are only one part of the story. Avoiding mistakes but rarely making any big plays on the other side consigns a passer to life as a “game manager,” which in today’s league might as well be synonymous with “career backup.”
Haskins was definitely too conservative at the start of his playing time, and overall, he ended the year with just seven touchdowns and eight big-time throws, but what’s interesting was how he opened up as the season wore on. Indeed, while it had been Terry McLaurin that had been looking like a star all year despite the quarterback play, suddenly he couldn’t haul in a couple of Haskins’ best throws.