Nas wrote:
The Football Scientist, KC Joyner, is a Fifth Down contributor. Lab results from “Scientific Football 2009,” to be published in August, are available for those who order the book now.
Every Thursday at 4 p.m., I do a chat on ESPN.com’s SportsNation Web site. The chat format allows people to post any kind of question they want, so the topics tend to jump around a lot.
That wasn’t the case this past Thursday, or at least it wasn’t after Alex from Chicago asked how well I thought Jay Cutler would do with the Bears this year. I told him: “I’ve said it many times and I’ll say it again — Cutler will make Bears fans remember Rex Grossman. He’ll make just as many crazy passes but won’t suffer the Grossman fate because Chicago’s fan base is so in love with him that they will forgive the nutty throws he makes in ways that they never forgave Grossman.” Much of the rest of the chat was dominated by Bears fans wanting to give me a piece of their minds.
It didn’t stop there. Brad Biggs of the Inside The Bears blog on The Chicago Sun-Times posted my comments there, and many of his readers also took me to task (including one who said “I unemotionally state KC Joyner is an idiot”). That trend continued when Aaron Wilson of ProFootballTalk.com posted a comment about Brad’s story there on Saturday (and multiple Chicago followers threw both Brad and me under the bus).
Now I understand that fan scrutiny comes with the territory, so I don’t mind that, but what I don’t understand is why those fans are treating Cutler differently than they did either Grossman or Kyle Orton.
Grossman was on fire during the first part of Chicago’s Super Bowl season, and yet as soon as he had the bad game against Miami, it seemed the entire city turned on him. It didn’t go that much differently for Orton. He had a tremendous start to the 2008 season, but when he struggled down the stretch, the populace seemed to say goodbye and good riddance without much of a second thought.
I also don’t understand why there seems to be such excitement about Cutler. Yes, he threw for over 4,500 yards last year, but that was in large part because he put the ball up a whopping 616 times. His 9.8 vertical YPA was lower than that of 19 other QBs last season, and his 4.6% bad decision rate (a bad decision being a mistake by the QB that leads to a turnover or a near turnover) was easily the worst of any QB. He was also the offensive leader for a team that blew a three-game division lead with three games to go.
Another way to look at this is that Cutler’s overall record is 17-20 versus Orton’s overall record of 21-12 and Grossman’s 19-12. I know there are those who will defend this by saying that Cutler worked with a horrible defense last year, but when he took over the Broncos in 2006, they were less than a full season removed from hosting the AFC championship game.
The only reason I can come up with as to why Bears fans are reacting like this is that the quarterback position has been such a headache for them over the years that they will do just about anything to make it go away. If that means ignoring Cutler’s shortcomings so that at least one off-season goes by without having to wonder if their quarterback’s play will measure up, they’ll do it just for the temporary peace of mind. I do admire that kind of team passion and loyalty, but I’d admire it a bit more if it were done by hoping that Cutler could improve his game rather than by backing his mixed bag of performance history.
http://fifthdown.blogs.nytimes.com/2009 ... he-answer/I would be happy to debate "The Football Scientist" on these issues.
1. Arguing that yardage is merely a product of attempts is pretty stupid, isn't it? After all, the top 3 yardage producers consisting of Drew Brees, Jay Cutler, and Kurt Warner, were coincidentally the top 3 QB's in number of attempts. Seems logical, doesn't it? They also all went to the Pro Bowl. Actually, Phillip Rivers is the only QB to have thrown for over 4,000 yards last year that didn't finish in the top 6 in the league in attempts, adding Aaron Rodgers and Peyton Manning onto that list. Seems more logical to suggest that the only way you are going to throw for 4,000 yards in a single season is to throw the ball a lot. Also, coincidentally, everyone of those QB's went to the Pro Bowl, except for maybe Rodgers, who may have gone, but I don't remember that being the case. Is it also safe to say that if you throw a crapload of passes and you are a good QB, you will make it to the Pro Bowl? Or that perhaps they threw the ball 616 times because they had a pair of stud WR's and an outstanding QB? Especially considering they had a great system running the football in Denver under Shanahan? Weak argument from someone who considers himself a "Football Scientist", isn't it?
2. For Cutler, from a Yards/Attempt standpoint, Cutler's 7.34 yards per attempt beat out Peyton Manning's 7.21 yards per attempt. It was also very close to Aaron Rodgers (7.53) and Kurt Warner (7.66). Is this truly a measure of concern? Yards per attempt? And what does the "vertical" have to do with anything considering the Bears primary weapons are a pair of TE's and a pass receiving RB? Its not like we have Larry Fitzgerald, Anquan Boldin, and Steve Breaston lining up at WR, is it?
3. And what the hell is a "near turnover"? 4.6% of what in the bad decision rate? Cutler had 23 interceptions or fumbles on 616 attempts dropping back. That's 3.7% rate of INT or putting the ball on the turf relative to attempts. Drew Brees was 3.6%, Warner was 4.2%, Rodgers was 4.3%, Rivers was 4.0%, and Manning was 2.3%. I would say the only person who either puts the ball on the turf or throws an INT a lot less than Cutler per pass attempt is Peyton Manning. He beats everyone else in that category and is essentially even with Brees. Another ridiculous "how far can I dig" attempt by this stroke.
4. Let's review that record of 17-20, as well. If you don't want to blame that on his team, then explain to me why he's 12-1 when his Defense gives up less than 21 points? Sounds like its his Defense to me. And I'm not sure you can blame him for the last three games of the year they blew to make the playoffs. Cutler averaged 282 yards passing and accounted for 4 TD's to 4 TO's during that stretch. His Defense gave up an average of 37 points a game in those three games. Is he supposed to play MLB, too? I wonder what Tom Brady's record is when his Defense gives up 37 points? Drew Brees was 0-5 last year when his Defense gave up 30+ points. He must be garbage too, right? Why would anyone be excited to have Drew Brees on their team? His yardage was just a product of a lot of attempts. His yards per attempt is solid, but his near turnover ratio is on par with Cutler's, which we've already established as crap. Plus, he has a horrible record when his team gives up 30 points and his record in New Orleans is barely above .500 at 25-23.
What the hell is a "Football Scientist" anyway? Apparently its not what the name implies.