GimmedaBall
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Any QB coming out of high school with ambitions to play in the NFL would be well-served to pick a college that runs as close to a pro-style offense as possible. I know that is becoming almost impossible to find. If they want to get drafted high, they need to demonstrate pro-ball skills.
Instead, many college QBs play in a system that leaves NFL scouts/coaches/GMS/fans confused as to how the guy is going to translate into a NFL QB. Even Kurt Warner had to beg off on evaluating the QBs in this draft until he had more understanding as to what the play call required of the college QB. I agree with that as I watch college games---most plays, I don't have a clue what the QB was supposed to do with the ball as the play unfolds.
The more the QB plays in a college system different than a pro-style, the harder it is to anticipate the guy's success at the next level. Case in point in this draft is Lamar Jackson. By any standards at the college level LJ is one of the best QBs in his class. He is a dual threat to pass or run---not many realize he actually had 330 yards more pulling the ball down and running than RB Barkley had as a rusher. Yet this QB is pushed down the rankings. Simply stated---he is not playing the way he will be asked to play in the pros.
There is no way the pro-game can have a QB run the ball as much as LJ. Pro D players won't allow a QB to abuse them for long while running the ball---there will be some extra hard hits and gang tackling for any QB who shows them up on the field. Do it often enough and embarrass enough D players and they'll take the penalty and fine even as the QB surrenders with a slide to get that QB off the field. (See what happened to RGIII and Vick) So the running game---a third of LJ's production---is off the anticipated value of his play. Ditto his peculiar arm movement when throwing---it is more dart tossing than driving the ball. DBs that can blanket a receiver will make him pay since flicking the dart downfield is slower than driving the ball with power.
So, a guy who by any standards of college ball is a top QB gets pushed further and further down the rankings with some (HOF GM Bill Polian for example) even suggesting he switch to WR and not go into the draft as a QB.
By contrast, guys who play college ball closer to the pro-game earn higher ratings---even when they have not put near the college stats of someone like LJ (see Allen, deep ball arm strength but with relatively poor accuracy).
An older article and statistical analysis of the 'Quarterback Prediction Problem' still worth a read:
http://www.biostat.umn.edu/ftp/pub/2010/rr2010-022.pdf
A more recent look at the same problem:
http://duelingdata.blogspot.com/2017/04/predicting-qb-success-in-nfl.html
Here's the full paper for the second reference cited above (sorry for not posting earlier):
Instead, many college QBs play in a system that leaves NFL scouts/coaches/GMS/fans confused as to how the guy is going to translate into a NFL QB. Even Kurt Warner had to beg off on evaluating the QBs in this draft until he had more understanding as to what the play call required of the college QB. I agree with that as I watch college games---most plays, I don't have a clue what the QB was supposed to do with the ball as the play unfolds.
The more the QB plays in a college system different than a pro-style, the harder it is to anticipate the guy's success at the next level. Case in point in this draft is Lamar Jackson. By any standards at the college level LJ is one of the best QBs in his class. He is a dual threat to pass or run---not many realize he actually had 330 yards more pulling the ball down and running than RB Barkley had as a rusher. Yet this QB is pushed down the rankings. Simply stated---he is not playing the way he will be asked to play in the pros.
There is no way the pro-game can have a QB run the ball as much as LJ. Pro D players won't allow a QB to abuse them for long while running the ball---there will be some extra hard hits and gang tackling for any QB who shows them up on the field. Do it often enough and embarrass enough D players and they'll take the penalty and fine even as the QB surrenders with a slide to get that QB off the field. (See what happened to RGIII and Vick) So the running game---a third of LJ's production---is off the anticipated value of his play. Ditto his peculiar arm movement when throwing---it is more dart tossing than driving the ball. DBs that can blanket a receiver will make him pay since flicking the dart downfield is slower than driving the ball with power.
So, a guy who by any standards of college ball is a top QB gets pushed further and further down the rankings with some (HOF GM Bill Polian for example) even suggesting he switch to WR and not go into the draft as a QB.
By contrast, guys who play college ball closer to the pro-game earn higher ratings---even when they have not put near the college stats of someone like LJ (see Allen, deep ball arm strength but with relatively poor accuracy).
An older article and statistical analysis of the 'Quarterback Prediction Problem' still worth a read:
http://www.biostat.umn.edu/ftp/pub/2010/rr2010-022.pdf
A more recent look at the same problem:
http://duelingdata.blogspot.com/2017/04/predicting-qb-success-in-nfl.html
Here's the full paper for the second reference cited above (sorry for not posting earlier):
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