Bear in mind that Baltimore did a major retool of their O-Line last year.
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So the Chiefs have a top 10 TE corps???? PBJ PBJ PBJ
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LMAO ROFL
Jaguars: http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/1926.../ku-xlarge.png Worst Possible: http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/1926.../ku-xlarge.png |
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...and were #11 overall. This thread really isn't a trolling attempt. We all know that the Broncos had a great start to the season statistically. I found it interesting that SD is #2. Look at the teams around them. The data says that this is going to be an interesting year for the AFCW. Take it for what it's worth. Still a small sample size. |
FEAR THE BEARD!
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(LeSean McCoy is the single best running back, for example, but the Denver backs are a better unit
JFC ROFL ROFL ROFL ROFL |
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RUNNING BACKS 2013 Regular season totals, through Week 4 Revised as of 10/1/2013 Running backs are ranked according to DYAR, or Defense-adjusted Yards Above Replacement. This gives the value of the performance on plays where this RB carried/caught the ball compared to replacement level, adjusted for situation and opponent and then translated into yardage. DYAR (and its cousin, YAR, which isn't adjusted based on opponent) is further explained here. The next statistic given is DVOA, or Defense-adjusted Value Over Average. This number represents value, per play, over an average running back in the same game situations. The more positive the DVOA rating, the better the player's performance. Negative DVOA represents below-average offense. DVOA (and its cousin, VOA, which isn't adjusted based on opponent) is further explained here. The simple version: DYAR means a running back with more total value. DVOA means a running back with more value per play. Effective Yards, listed in red, translate DVOA into a yards per attempt figure. This provides an easy comparison: in general, players with more Effective Yards than standard yards played better than standard stats would otherwise indicate, while players with fewer Effective Yards than standard yards played worse than standard stats would otherwise indicate. Effective Yards are not the best way to measure total value because they are more dependent on usage than DYAR. The final statistic is Success Rate. This number represents the player's consistency, measured by successful running plays (the definition of success being different based on down and distance) divided by total running plays. A player with higher DVOA and a low success rate mixes long runs with downs getting stuffed at the line of scrimmage. A player with lower DVOA and a high success rate generally gets the yards needed, but doesn't often get more. Success Rate is further explained here. It is not adjusted for opponent.
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