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Dak Prescott was above league average in all nine categories tracked by Pro Football Reference.
Yesterday, Bill Barnwell of ESPN wrote an article asking whether the Detroit Lions should pay the going rate for franchise quarterbacks to retain Matthew Stafford when he hits free agency next year. It’s an interesting question.
In the article, one of the stats he used was Pro Football Reference’s indexing data, which compares quarterbacks to the league average in a number of stats:
- Completion percentage
- TD percentage (passing TD)/(passing attempts)
- Interception percentage (interceptions)/(passing attempts)
- Quarterback rating (the traditional one, not QBR)
- Sack percentage (times sacked)/(passing attempts + times sacked)
In addition to these five, they also track several yards per attempt numbers:
- Yards per attempt
- Adjusted yards per attempt (Passing Yards + 20 * Passing TD - 45 * Interceptions) / (Passes Attempted) — Note: counts TDs and interceptions, but not sacks
- Net yards per attempt (pass yards - sack yards)/(passing attempts + sacks) — Note: doesn’t count TDs or interceptions, but does count sacks.
- Adjusted net yards per attempt (Passing Yards - Sack Yards + (20 * Passing TD) - (45 * Interceptions)) / (Passes Attempted + Times Sacked) — Note: counts everything.
Where did Matthew Stafford rank using these stats?
STAT
STAFFORD
INDEXED
RANK
Completion percentage
Completion percentage
61.5
99
19
Yds./att.
Yds./att.
7.1
99
17
Interception percentage
Interception percentage
2.5
102
13
Passer rating
Passer rating
86.8
100
16
Sack percentage
Sack percentage
5.3
107
10
ANY/A
ANY/A
6.1
102
16
This got me thinking. Where did Dak Prescott rank in these stats last year? We haven’t used this data set before. What does it tell us?
If you cut it off at more than 10 games, there are 31 quarterbacks who qualify, only one less than teams in the NFL. That leaves out only the Rams, who used Case Keenum and Jared Goff last year.
With 100 being league average, how many quarterbacks ranked above that number in all nine categories? Only four guys - Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Aaron Rodgers, and Dak Prescott. Matt Ryan, for all his brilliance last year, fell below average in sack percentage. And, of these, Dak came out with the second highest average across the board.
Name
Age
Tm
G
Cmp%+
Y/A+
TD%+
Int%+
Rate+
Sack%+
AY/A+
NY/A+
ANY/A+
Avg.
Tom Brady
Tom Brady
39
NWE
12
117
124
125
133
133
122
134
132
140
128.8888889
Dak Prescott
Dak Prescott
23
DAL
16
119
119
107
126
122
106
123
121
125
118.6666667
Drew Brees
Drew Brees
37
NOR
16
128
113
113
102
118
118
112
118
116
115.3333333
Aaron Rodgers
Aaron Rodgers
33
GNB
16
111
101
126
121
121
104
115
102
115
112.8888889
When you look at all the quarterbacks together, how do they compare? This chart includes the four above, and ranks them all by their average. On that score, Dak slips to third in the NFL, as Matt Ryan more than made up for his one below average ranking.
Name
Age
Tm
G
Cmp%+
Y/A+
TD%+
Int%+
Rate+
Sack%+
AY/A+
NY/A+
ANY/A+
Avg.
Matt Ryan
Matt Ryan
31
ATL
16
127
149
133
118
140
95
145
144
143
132.6666667
Tom Brady
Tom Brady
39
NWE
12
117
124
125
133
133
122
134
132
140
128.8888889
Dak Prescott
Dak Prescott
23
DAL
16
119
119
107
126
122
106
123
121
125
118.6666667
Drew Brees
Drew Brees
37
NOR
16
128
113
113
102
118
118
112
118
116
115.3333333
Kirk Cousins
Kirk Cousins
28
WAS
16
116
122
96
106
111
120
115
126
119
114.5555556
Aaron Rodgers
Aaron Rodgers
33
GNB
16
111
101
126
121
121
104
115
102
115
112.8888889
Derek Carr
Derek Carr
25
OAK
15
103
96
107
122
110
127
107
107
115
110.4444444
Ben Roethlisberger
Ben Roethlisberger
34
PIT
14
106
107
115
96
108
123
107
114
111
109.6666667
Marcus Mariota
Marcus Mariota
23
TEN
15
93
109
116
106
109
109
112
112
114
108.8888889
Andrew Luck
Andrew Luck
27
IND
15
102
114
115
99
110
91
112
109
109
106.7777778
Sam Bradford
Sam Bradford
29
MIN
15
134
96
90
125
114
97
104
93
103
106.2222222
Matthew Stafford
Matthew Stafford
28
DET
16
109
102
95
111
105
101
104
103
105
103.8888889
Russell Wilson
Russell Wilson
28
SEA
16
106
112
93
106
104
91
108
107
105
103.5555556
Ryan Tannehill
Ryan Tannehill
28
MIA
13
116
112
105
86
106
91
104
106
100
102.8888889
Andy Dalton
Andy Dalton
29
CIN
16
106
106
85
116
103
92
106
103
104
102.3333333
Alex Smith
Alex Smith
32
KAN
15
116
99
83
112
102
104
100
103
102
102.3333333
Philip Rivers
Philip Rivers
35
SDG
16
90
109
116
76
97
101
101
110
102
100.2222222
Eli Manning
Eli Manning
35
NYG
16
100
89
99
94
95
122
90
97
96
98
Carson Palmer
Carson Palmer
37
ARI
15
92
97
99
99
96
97
98
96
97
96.77777778
Jameis Winston
Jameis Winston
22
TAM
16
91
100
106
85
95
101
96
100
96
96.66666667
Tyrod Taylor
Tyrod Taylor
27
BUF
15
95
94
94
117
100
75
101
89
97
95.77777778
Trevor Siemian
Trevor Siemian
25
DEN
14
86
95
91
105
92
99
97
96
97
95.33333333
Colin Kaepernick
Colin Kaepernick
29
SFO
12
85
90
105
120
101
66
102
80
95
93.77777778
Joe Flacco
Joe Flacco
31
BAL
16
107
81
82
102
91
111
85
86
87
92.44444444
Carson Wentz
Carson Wentz
24
PHI
16
98
77
78
100
85
107
80
81
82
87.55555556
Blake Bortles
Blake Bortles
24
JAX
16
84
77
91
96
84
107
82
82
84
87.44444444
Cam Newton
Cam Newton
27
CAR
15
60
92
91
92
79
94
90
89
88
86.11111111
Ryan Fitzpatrick
Ryan Fitzpatrick
34
NYJ
14
74
89
82
66
70
112
76
96
81
82.88888889
Brock Osweiler
Brock Osweiler
26
HOU
15
84
66
82
85
74
108
69
70
71
78.77777778
One thing you notice from these numbers is the ANY/A column is almost an exact mirror of the overall average ranking. There is some variation, but less than any other column, which suggests it’s a good proxy for evaluating a quarterback’s overall value.
Another thing to notice is that only Kirk Cousins, along with Dak, is an above average quarterback in the NFC East. Eli Manning comes in with an overall 98 score, and Carson Wentz brings up the rear with an 87.5.
Is Dak Prescott a top 5 NFL quarterback?
This question was debated extensively this offseason. Whenever it comes up and someone claims he isn’t, I always wonder - on what facts are you basing that conclusion?
The NFL 100 ranked Dak Prescott 14th overall, and 5th among quarterbacks, behind Tom Brady, Aaron Rodgers, Matt Ryan, and Derek Carr. This is a vote among players, who can use whatever method of evaluation they want. (A Field Gulls writer absolutely destroyed the idea that Derek Carr was better than Dak.)
Pro Football Focus ranked him eighth among quarterbacks, just ahead of Matthew Stafford. Not sure what numbers they were looking at to arrive at this, and makes you wonder about PFF’s evaluation skills.
Cris Carter tried to explain why Dak Prescott is not a top-five quarterback. Nick Wright, in the same article, destroys Carter’s reasoning.
If Dak were not a rookie, if he was a four-year vet who had made a couple Pro Bowls, he would have won the damn MVP. And because he’s a rookie and was judged, initially, on a curve that benefited him, and [later] on a curve that hurt him because we’re like ‘a rookie can’t be this good,’ we ignore the fact that he threw 6.5 touchdowns for every interception, and that he had a 105 quarterback rating. If Dak’s the 88th best player in the sport and there’s seven quarterbacks better than him, then I was watching a different league this year.”
Carter’s claim is that a lot of quarterbacks would have done what Prescott did with Dallas’s offense. But is that really true? How many quarterbacks have gone 13-2 (you can’t in the Philly loss on Dak)? How many have gone a season with only four interceptions? Troy Aikman had a great offensive line and a Hall of Fame running back and wide receiver, but he never put up the totals Dak Prescott did as a rookie.
In fact, the numbers undersell Dak’s value, because none of this includes his six touchdowns running the ball, which tied Tyrod Taylor for the lead among quarterbacks, or his 282 yards rushing, which ranked eighth.
The point of this article is not to rank Dak, who was among the most consistent performers last year, but just to look at new numbers that establish beyond question his excellence, and standing among the NFL’s elite quarterbacks. It’s quite a story.
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