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The Panthers were playing inspired football last year down the stretch with Wilks and came within a couple of Brady voodoo 4th quarters of winning the division.

Based on this year, it's starting to give me Bisaccia/Raider vibes (ie team plays their asses off for interim HC, but instead hire a recently failed retread).

I don't think they could have fared any worse this year if they kept Wilks.

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The following rookies have at least one QB start under their belt already:

Bryce Young (CAR)

CJ Stroud (HOU)

Anthony Richardson (IND)

Will Levis (TEN)

Aidan O'Connel (LV)

Clayton Tune (ARI)

Dorian Thompson-Robinson (CLE)

Jaren Hall (MIN)

Tyson Bagent (CHI)

and soon to be Tommy DeVito (NYG)

For reference, 2020 had six different rookie QBs start a game (I originally had five before remembering the Kendall Hinton emergency), while 2021 had six and 2022 had seven

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I try to do this weekly during the season. Third year now. The previous edition can be found here.

#What is ANY/A and why does this matter?

ANY/A is a QB statistic which correlates extremely well with wins. Aside from EPA/play (which as far as I’m aware is much harder to calculate as an individual, I think it’s the best available (to us plebeians, that is). Its full name is Adjusted Net Yards per Attempt, and it’s basically a modification of yards per attempt in the following manner:

(20 x TDs + passing yards - 45 x INTs - sack yards)/(pass attempts + sacks)

A higher number is better.

Is it perfect? No, obviously not. It doesn’t account for a lot of things, like fumbles and rush yards and pick sixes and several other things like torrential rain games which skew stats in weird directions, but it is a pretty good stat and is not too terribly difficult to calculate by hand.

ANY/A is often computed over at least several games, but most often over a season or career. This is because it’s very prone to volatility. As you’ll see below, QBs can put up ANY/As in a single game that can be far better or worse than their career ANY/A.

So, why should you care about this? Frankly, if you don’t care than feel free to ignore this post. I just like statistics and thought it was be interesting to put up. But my argument for it is that even at a small sample size, the larger ANY/A in a game seems to win a lot (generally because it means the QB played better than the other QB). So maybe it’ll give you one more aspect you can pay attention to in a football game.

With all that being said, here’s the data I’ve accumulated.

#Data Table for Week 9

Player ANY/A Grade
Jaren Hall 13.00 A
CJ Stroud 12.07 A
Baker Mayfield 9.09 B
Jalen Hurts 8.58 B
Joe Burrow 8.51 B
Aidan O'Connell 8.36 B
Deshaun Watson 8.16 B
Dak Prescott 8.02 B
Jordan Love 7.57 B
Derek Carr 7.38 C
Patrick Mahomes 6.69 C
Lamar Jackson 6.63 C
Taylor Heinicke 6.03 C
Kenny Pickett 6.00 C
Sam Howell 5.90 C
Josh Allen 5.74 C
Joshua Dobbs 5.64 C
Tua Tagovailoa 5.27 C
Gardner Minshew 5.19 C
Mac Jones 4.43 D
Will Levis 4.42 D
Tyson Bagent 3.66 D
Zach Wilson 3.61 D
Tommy Devito 2.92 D
Justin Herbert 2.82 D
Brett Rypien 2.55 D
Geno Smith 2.44 D
Daniel Jones 0.73 F
Bryce Young 0.51 F
Clayton Tune -2.70 F

#Grades

Now, what are those little letters listed after the ANY/A? Well, those are my grades.

Before you start screaming at me about your favorite player’s grade, let me just say that it isn’t just random where the cutoffs are. Specifically:

An A grade corresponds to a single-game ANY/A greater than or equal to 10.

A B grade corresponds to a single-game ANY/A greater than or equal to 7.5, but less than 10.

A C grade corresponds to a single-game ANY/A greater than or equal to 4.5, but less than 7.5.

A D grade corresponds to a single-game ANY/A greater than or equal to 2, but less than 4.5

An F grade corresponds to a single-game ANY/A less than 2.

Now, these grades aren’t like those in school, where the average ends up usually being a B, and very few people get D’s and F’s. This is a curve where the average is intended to be a straight C. Similarly, the vast majority of single-game performances also are intended to be a C, because C’s should be enough to be competitive in most games. As such, B’s and D’s are somewhat unusual but not extraordinarily so, and F’s and A’s are extraordinary games, for either good or bad reasons.

Note that single-game ANY/As do not necessarily match up with season-long and career-long ANY/As. Single-game ANY/As are much, much more volatile and will yield a much larger spread than a typical season-long ANY/A spread. For that reason, you cannot treat them the same as you would a season-long ANY/A, where an exceptional, MVP-caliber season would be an 8+ ANY/A. It’s kind of like the PFF system, where a lot of consistently good performances will get you a higher grade than one great performance and a bunch of mediocre performances.

Well then, what do the grades mean? While they are certainly somewhat subjective, this is what I intended them to represent:

A: This grade represents an exceptional game through the air. This performance was nearly flawless and is incredibly difficult to replicate game in and game out. It’s nearly unsustainable, even for the best QBs. There should be no more than a few of these per week. A string of these would probably result in the greatest season of all time.

B: This grade represents an excellent game through the air. While some mistakes were present, the good vastly outweighs the bad. These are certainly more sustainable than the A-graded games, and the best QBs can sometimes have these games for long stretches at a time. A lot of these games will probably put you in the MVP race, and there should be a handful of these per week.

C: This grade represents a mediocre or satisfactory game. There were mistakes and success, but neither vastly outweighed the other. This kind of performance will put most teams in contention to win most games, and the majority of QBs in a week will have this kind of performance.

D: This grade represents a bad game. Many mistakes were made, enough so that they significantly outweighed the successes. A team with a QB playing like this will be hard-pressed to win games, and if your QB is playing like this often, it’s probably time to look for a replacement. There should t be too many of these per week, but there should definitely be some.

F: This grade represents a terrible game. The QB had essentially none or very few positives throughout the game, far outweighed by the negatives. With this kind of performance, it’s almost impossible to win a game. A string of these warrants a benching almost immediately. Just like for the A’s, there should only be a couple of these per week at the most.

My opinion is that my cutoffs do represent these grades well. The vast majority of grades fall between B and D, with the most in C, and A’s and F’s are few and far between. I didn’t just throw darts at a board either, I spent quite a few weeks looking at the numbers before coming up with these cutoffs, sometime last year (unfortunately I do not remember exactly when). Obviously you can always make slight changes here and there, but I’ve been using this system for a while and it’s easier for me to keep using it than to do some statistics with standard deviations and percentages and the like and figure out what the perfect cutoffs would be. [And actually, most of the time, these track pretty well with the idea of standard deviation - usually the number of C’s is pretty close to the amount within a single standard deviation of the mean, and usually there are only a couple A’s and F’s, which are ideally meant to be outside 2 standard deviations from the mean. While this hasn’t been numerically tested or anything, I feel pretty good about it in general].

If you don’t like them even after this explanation, feel free to ignore them. I just made them for fun anyway.

#Tl;dr

ANY/A is a QB stat that tracks well with wins; larger is better. This includes a list of the single-game ANY/A for any QB who played significant snaps (aka both meaningful in number and meaningful in value) this week. There are attached grades which are somewhat arbitrary (I set the cutoffs once in the past but I don’t make changes to individual grades). I think they make sense and fit my goal, but if you don’t like them feel free to ignore them.

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The bears now have as many wins in 13 games using a backup QB as they do in 31 games when Fields starts. People keep talking about how bad the rest of the roster is (which is true) but it's crazy how other guys have somehow managed to get it done.

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I am trying to recall a list that someone did.

1st team to win—> team that beat the first team and so on all the way to current day.

Anyone help with this?

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in the second round. They also have a young, promising defense in Jeremy Chinn, Brian Burns, and Jaycee Horn. And while Bryce Young looks like he isn't even in the same universe as CJ Stroud right now, he has been performing admirably with very little help around him. I think the future is far from bleak in Carolina. It might not be bright, but it's not all doom and gloom either.

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I’m getting Herschel Walker vibes.

Bears are gonna be stacked.

The Bears traded the first pick for a no 1 WR, Caleb Williams, 9th pick and some filler.

Wtf were the panthers thinking?

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Since November 9th of last year. Fields last win at Soldier field was September 25th against the Texans. That game was also the last time the Bears were above .500

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You had Richard Sherman, Kam Chancellor, Earl Thomas, Brandon Browner, Byron Maxwell, and Walter Thurmond.

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Very confidence inspiring and contradictory, lol

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The first time was in 2019, when Duck Hodges’ Steelers beat Kyler Murray’s Cardinals

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#Carolina Panthers at Chicago Bears

ESPN Gamecast

Soldier Field- Chicago, IL

Network(s): PRIME VIDEO (All prime games are streamed on twitch for free)


Time Clock
Final

Scoreboard

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total
CAR 7 3 0 3 13
CHI 3 6 7 0 16

Scoring Plays

Team Quarter Type Description
CAR 1 TD Ihmir Smith-Marsette 79 Yd Punt Return Eddy Pineiro Made Ex. Pt
CHI 1 FG Cairo Santos Made 54 Yd Field Goal
CAR 2 FG Eddy Pineiro Made 33 Yd Field Goal
CHI 2 FG Cairo Santos Made 36 Yd Field Goal
CHI 2 FG Cairo Santos Made 39 Yd Field Goal
CHI 3 TD D'Onta Foreman 4 Yd Rush, C.Santos extra point is GOOD, Center-P.Scales, Holder-T.Gill.
CAR 4 FG Eddy Pineiro Made 39 Yd Field Goal

Passing Leaders

Team Player C/ATT YDS TD INT SACKS
CAR Bryce Young 21/38 185 0 0 3-15
CHI Tyson Bagent 20/33 162 0 0 0-0

Rushing Leaders

Team Player CAR YDS AVG TD LONG
CAR Chuba Hubbard 9 23 2.6 0 9
CHI D'Onta Foreman 21 80 3.8 1 11

Receiving Leaders

Team Player REC YDS AVG TD LONG TGTS
CAR Mike Strachan 1 45 45.0 0 45 2
CHI DJ Moore 5 58 11.6 0 16 9

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Jason Kelce is currently in the booth for the Panthers Bears game. Admittedly, these aren’t the most exciting teams, but since Kelce entered the booth they’re just talking over the game for the most part.

In the preseason they’ll sometimes have guests in the booth, especially for the Hall of Fame game. What is your opinion on special guests in the booth during regular season games?

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