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And the division with the Best Rated Quarterbacks is...


Dpantherman

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...the AFC South

Vince Young has a league-best passer rating of 103.1, ahead of No. 2 Peyton Manning (101.4). The passer rating formula uses attempts, completions, yards, interceptions and touchdowns. A rating of 100 is good. Young came into the season with a career rating of 72.3.

He’s played in seven games (sitting out one hurt) and thrown for 998 yards, 1,186 yards fewer than Manning in the same amount of starts.

The up-and-down David Garrard is fourth in the NFL with a 98.8 rating while Matt Schaub is 12th among QBs that have played regularly at 89.3.

Garrard (112.1) is No. 1 in the fourth quarter but has built some of that against prevent defenses protecting big leads. Manning is second (111.0), Kerry Collins is third (99.2) and Schaub (96.2) seventh. Young doesn’t qualify for the leader list because of too few attempts – he’s missed three fourth quarters plus one full game.

Young is fourth with a 99.5 third-down passer rating, where Manning is seventh at 94.9, Garrard is ninth at 93.1 and Schaub is 13th at 90.9.

http://espn.go.com/blog/afcsouth/post/_/id/17341/the-nfl-passer-rating-leader-vince-young

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    • You're correct (on its face). But PFF does indeed use advanced stats to come up with their grades. Not trying to turn this into a debate about PFF (at all because it's been done ad nauseum), but here is how PFF explains it:   GRADES VS. STATS We aren’t grading players based on the yardage they rack up or the stats they collect. Statistics can be indicative of performance but don’t tell the whole story and can often lie badly. Quarterbacks can throw the ball straight to defenders but if the ball is dropped, you won't see it on the stat sheet. Conversely, they can dump the ball off on a sequence of screen passes and end up with a gaudy looking stat line if those skill position players do enough work after the catch. PFF grades the play, not its result, so the quarterback that throws the ball to defenders will be downgraded whether the defender catches the ball to notch the interception on the stat sheet or not. No amount of broken tackles and yards after the catch from a bubble screen will earn a quarterback a better grade, even though his passing stats may be getting padded. The same is true for most positions. Statistics can be misleading. A tackle whose quarterback gets the ball out of his hands quicker than anybody else may not give up many sacks, but he can still be beaten often and earn a poor grade. Receivers that are targeted relentlessly could post big-time numbers but may offer little more than the product of a volume-based aerial attack. https://www.pff.com/grades So PFF uses stats to come up with player grades and rankings.  
    • Not even what that's about. Moreover, remember that search engines are a tool.
    • Knowing how a person is compared to everyone else is always better. 
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