DrAstroZoom
Bon vivant
Either that, or he looked at the receiver he was going to throw to as soon as he started dropping back. :escape:
Wouldn't have been a whole lot of time to look anywhere else....DrAstroZoom said:Either that, or he looked at the receiver he was going to throw to as soon as he started dropping back. :escape:
This is what he said yesterday....tastes like chi said:our offense was VERY predictable and even more so on 2nd and long and 3rd and long. I think in the Red zone he was playing smarter(knowing we had 3 already) and fron the 20-50 he was trying to make to many things happen with a poor line and no running game.
Feeley said:He said he has become much more comfortable with Linehan's offense.
"Looking at where I started with the mini-camps to where I am now, I think, as a whole, I have made tremendous strides," he said.
"We have weapons here. We have a running back, wide receivers and skill guys that are great. It is not all up to the quarterback to put the ball in the air to make plays. You can depend on other guys."
To me it's simple...it's where the vast majority of the plays occurred. Like any set of statistics, the more samples you have, the more the data tells you the truth. In my estimation, the stats between the 20 and 50 are most likely telling of how he did for the whole season, and is probably more telling of his success within that system. Why the better numbers in their territory? Not sure, but I'm guessing it is a product of the fact that those numbers have come from the tail end of a good drive vs. a bad drive that stalled at the other end. Can't prove this, but I'm a believer that when you get some momentum going, your success rate goes through roof. So, maybe the two sets of stats (opposing sides of the field) are simply apples and oranges. Dunno.inFINSible said:These are AJ Feeley's stats but, let's try to keep this thread from devolving into another back and forth session about AJ, please, just interpret the facts, maams....:)
By yard lines C A % Y YPA T/I 1stD 1stD% QBR
OWN 1-20 - 26/42 61.9 245 5.83 0 0 12 46.2 78.0
OWN 21-50 - 96/181 53.0 908 5.09 0 12 44 45.8 39.6
OPP 49-20 - 55/102 53.9 609 5.95 3 2 35 63.6 73.5
OPP 19-1 - 14/31 45.2 131 4.23 8 1 10 71.4 83.5
I thought these were interesting stats from last year.....I really love the red zone stats....8 Tds and 1 Int.....That's great, that's 1 Td for every 4 attempts from inside the opponents 20....That's high dollar real estate and he got it at a bargain!.....I'm going to look at other QBs around the league to see how he compares after I'm done here...
But what is up with the abysmal stats between our own 20 and the 50??!! What causes that large of a disparity from the stats of every other spot on the field?? I'm totally confused about that, anybody got any ideas?
StLouisFinFan said:To me it's simple...it's where the vast majority of the plays occurred. Like any set of statistics, the more samples you have, the more the data tells you the truth. In my estimation, the stats between the 20 and 50 are most likely telling of how he did for the whole season, and is probably more telling of his success within that system. Why the better numbers in their territory? Not sure, but I'm guessing it is a product of the fact that those numbers have come from the tail end of a good drive vs. a bad drive that stalled at the other end. Can't prove this, but I'm a believer that when you get some momentum going, your success rate goes through roof. So, maybe the two sets of stats (opposing sides of the field) are simply apples and oranges. Dunno.
phinphanphrommi said:More fun, and sometimes telling stats:
Split G Cmp Att Pct Yds Yds/Att TD Int 1st Sck Rtg
Blitz 11 55 125 44.0 629 5.0 7 7 32 13 55.1
QB Under Pressure 11 31 86 36.0 277 3.2 0 3 13 23 31.0
QB Knocked Down 11 10 45 22.2 114 2.5 0 3 5 20 11.8
inFINSible said:Wouldn't have been a whole lot of time to look anywhere else....
phinphanphrommi said:More fun, and sometimes telling stats:
Split G Cmp Att Pct Yds Yds/Att TD Int 1st Sck Rtg
Blitz 11 55 125 44.0 629 5.0 7 7 32 13 55.1
QB Under Pressure 11 31 86 36.0 277 3.2 0 3 13 23 31.0
QB Knocked Down 11 10 45 22.2 114 2.5 0 3 5 20 11.8
inFINSible said:These are AJ Feeley's stats but, let's try to keep this thread from devolving into another back and forth session about AJ, please, just interpret the facts, maams....:)
By yard lines C A % Y YPA T/I 1stD 1stD% QBR
OWN 1-20 - 26/42 61.9 245 5.83 0 0 12 46.2 78.0
OWN 21-50 - 96/181 53.0 908 5.09 0 12 44 45.8 39.6
OPP 49-20 - 55/102 53.9 609 5.95 3 2 35 63.6 73.5
OPP 19-1 - 14/31 45.2 131 4.23 8 1 10 71.4 83.5
I thought these were interesting stats from last year.....I really love the red zone stats....8 Tds and 1 Int.....That's great, that's 1 Td for every 4 attempts from inside the opponents 20....That's high dollar real estate and he got it at a bargain!.....I'm going to look at other QBs around the league to see how he compares after I'm done here...
But what is up with the abysmal stats between our own 20 and the 50??!! What causes that large of a disparity from the stats of every other spot on the field?? I'm totally confused about that, anybody got any ideas?
DrAstroZoom said:That's when you throw it away. I think that's what Linehan was referring to when he made the infamous comments defending Gus's performance. Frerotte has historically made better decisions when the play blew up than did Feeley. Now, I will say this historical trend imploded during the Tampa Bay game. But Feeley had much more time in both that game and the previous game.
The one disturbing thing to me, however (and something I haven't heard mentioned yet), is that even with time, Feeley is staring down receivers. On the TD throw to Farmer, Feeley never looked at another receiver. And had the defensive back not stumbled, the result may have been different. Now Feeley may have seen that stumble, but I thought the ball had already been released.
StLouisFinFan said:To me it's simple...it's where the vast majority of the plays occurred. Like any set of statistics, the more samples you have, the more the data tells you the truth. In my estimation, the stats between the 20 and 50 are most likely telling of how he did for the whole season, and is probably more telling of his success within that system.