Then please, give a coherent statement about the percentage of "short sacks" the Dolphins have allowed over and above the average team in the league, and the number of actual sacks to which that translates.No, it's not THREE sacks. It's not even SEVENTEEN sacks. It's the bulk of THIRTY TWO sacks that are on the OL. I don't give a crap about % of pressures, sack rates, standard deviations, blah, blah, blah.....
I can WATCH the plays and determine, in my opinion (and these are all just opinions), that the OL has not been playing up to par. You can ignore the obvious all you want, luckily you are in the minority. Your "analysis" is flawed is too many ways to keep trying to convince you. Several posters (myself included) have shot more holes in it than we can count, but please, continue on.....
If that's truly a confirmation of what we're all supposedly "seeing" with regard to a comparison between the Dolphins' line and the typical NFL offensive line, then it should be only too easy to grasp that from the data and render a coherent statement about it.
---------- Post added at 05:53 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:52 PM ----------
Then like I said, use the data in the article in the OP. Neither that nor the PFF data jibe with the subjective impressions of the offensive line of many people here.We all went over the PFF sack times in another thread weeks ago. they're times are way off all you have to do is watch the game clock to see.