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PFF: What's wrong with the Carolina Panthers offense?


TheSpecialJuan
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Ok, PFF has no freaking clue.  Their stats don't even line up with . . . anything.  (I'm not calling out the OP here - just PFF who remain crazy)

42 minutes ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

His accuracy rate is one of the highest in the NFL at 63.7%, and his plus-accuracy rate (call it pass attempts with excellent ball location) is also seventh-highest.

Love to know how they measure that.  His completion percentage is 63.2%, which is good for 23rd in the league.  His on target percentage is 73% - good for 23rd among QB's with at least 50 attempts.  His bad throw percentage is 20.9%, good for 31st (again, QB's with at least 50 attempts).  He is 33rd in drops - he's only had three passes dropped all year.

53 minutes ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

This is a team that just lacks playmakers. Receivers that can consistently get open and make plays. That makes things tough for Young. Sometimes the post-snap picture is too muddy because there’s nothing for Young to look at, everyone is covered.

Keep seeing this dragged around, and it's just an excuse.  I worked it out a week or so ago.  Our receivers on average have 9 inches less separation than the overall NFL average.  It's not ideal, but it's just not that far off.  Of course you'd like to see your receivers running Travis Kelce open, but that's ALSO not anywhere near the NFL average.

56 minutes ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

It would help if the Panthers had a counter-punch in a consistent running game, but they don’t. Miles Sanders has been an abject disappointment after signing a four-year, $25 million contract in the offseason. He’s averaging just a career-low 3.1 yards per carry and his 0.08 missed tackles forced per attempt is sixth-lowest among all ball carriers with at least 25 attempts.

There is a bit of a point here, however, there's more to the story.  100% agree, Sanders has been eleventy kinds of awful this year.  The real story however is that our defense isn't keeping the games close enough for a run game to really take root.  We are next to last in points surrendered per game.  It's very hard to run the ball when you are down multiple scores.

I really despise superficial reporting.  I wish someone would take the time to do real analysis.  C'est la vie.

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Lots of words to say our offense has been one of the worst in the NFL and outside of AT, nothing has been great. And y'all can sleep on him but AT has been great. Better than expected for a WR of his age. 

We average 5.5 yards per pass attempt as a team so far in 2023. The last time Carolina was that low was 2010 when we averaged 5.4 for the season. Clausen averaged 5.2 and Bryce is currently averaging 5.3. 

We have a new playcaller tomorrow and Bryce gets more and more experience under his belt each week. I am expecting a pretty good game from him in a game that should be close the entire way.

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Lot of different opinions here. And that's probably what's wrong... too many things not working to the point it seems impossible to fix one and move on. 

Let's see if two weeks of preparation against a team that was demonstrably worse than us last season with a rookie QB and HC will show any improvement.

 

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10 hours ago, BrianS said:

Keep seeing this dragged around, and it's just an excuse.  I worked it out a week or so ago.  Our receivers on average have 9 inches less separation than the overall NFL average.  It's not ideal, but it's just not that far off.  Of course you'd like to see your receivers running Travis Kelce open, but that's ALSO not anywhere near the NFL average.

Man, I told you before: in this game of inches, nine inches of separation is huge. That's a big deal. Don't minimize it. 

And, sure, it's average, but that is not the standard we're shooting for. I'd guess that the top tier teams have even more than nine inches. We need a better TE, or at least to start throwing to TEs.

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I'd also add that play calling absolutely matters in terms of receiver separation. The few inches that you gain with pre-snap motions and play action plays could be the difference between a catch made and a pass break up, or a busted play or a big play. All this stuff makes a difference and works together (or not).

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    • I'd edited to be more clear where he was ahead of league average, but realize it was easily missed, sorry.  I do hope he falls off a cliff production wise because if he actually continues at this pace it's highly likely the TDs come and then he'll be a real problem. Anyway, to the stats... Shough is substantially better than the average in completion percentage, YPG, and INT% (68% vs 64.4% and 237 vs 215 and 1.7 vs 2.2). He is pretty close to the average in Y/A (7.14 vs 7.1) and rating (91.63 vs 91.8). He is a bit below the average in TDs per game (1.3 vs ~1.5, which is hard to average exactly due to the number of players that are part of this stat), QBR (51.54 vs 54.7) and quite a bit below in TD% (3% vs 4.7%). In advanced stats, he's above the league average in intended air yards/attempt (8.1 v 7.7) and on target % (76.8 vs 74.6), while barely below is in bad throw % (16.1 vs 16.0). This jives with what I've seen - decent young player, playing at a level that looks like a veteran starter, on a bad team. I've always said (and this is true of Bryce too, I even mentioned it this year) that I am less concerned with 30+ yard bombs than consistency at 15+ yards, because you need to be able to threaten past the sticks. Shough is doing that. Vs us in week 15 he had ~one third of his passes 15ish or more yards and he was money on them, and that wasn't really an exception, he has had some nice throws outside of that.  All that said, dude is just super new to the league, and once film gets out, if he does have limitations they will be exploited. No way he can get OROTY. And thanks for the kind words - I am prone to hyperbole at times, but I'm also just impressed by Shough. We'll see if he can keep it up (I hope not, unless the Saints randomly trade him lol)
    • To be fair, going from 2 wins, to 5 wins, to 8 wins at least is a pretty big positive no matter how insufferably miserable a select handful in this group want to make everything.
    • Yeah Moore is definitely going to be a problem.  I remember he was the favorite for our job at one point in time.  
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