Saturday, February 27, 2021

QB Prospect Response to Pressure Analysis - 2020

 Pressure Makes Diamonds

We love to look at the highlight reels of QBs making pretty plays but the reality is football is all about making a QB uncomfortable to force him into errors.  Let's take a look at how the top QB prospects for this coming NFL Player Draft responded to pressure in the 2020-21 season.

The Data

I started with PFF.com's statistics for QB performance with pressure.  The data was compiled for the following 2021 NFL Draft eligible FBS prospects:

  1. Sam  Ehlinger, Texas
  2. Mac Jones, Alabama
  3. Trevor Lawrence, Clemson
  4. Kyle Trask, Florida
  5. Kellen Mond, Texas A&M
  6. Brady White, Memphis
  7. Justin Fields, Ohio State
  8. Zach Wilson, Brigham Young 
  9. Ian Book, Notre Dame
  10. Desmond Ridder, Cincinnati
  11. K.J. Costello, Mississippi State
  12. Zac Thomas, Appalachian State
  13. Shane Buechele, Southern Methodist
  14. Jarrett Guarantano, Tennessee
  15. Davis Mils, Stanford
Their data for certain metrics were analyzed:
  • Dropback % - Percentage of Dropbacks under pressure
  • Hit % -  Dropbacks where QB was hit
  • Sack % - Percentage of dropbacks resulting in a sack
  • Comp % - Percentage of Completions to Attempts under pressure
  • Accuracy % - Percentage of Accurate Passes under pressure per PFF.com
  • TD/INT - Touchdowns under pressure divided by Interceptions under pressure
Grading is based on Z-Score which represents the number of standard deviations from the mean for each metric; in our analysis, a higher score is better (less pressure, higher accuracy, etc). 





The color coding is as follows:


Observations:

  • The table above is sorted by Z score for Dropback %, the higher the score the less pressure the prospect faced.  As you can see, White and Jones faced the least pressure, while Ehlinger, Book, Guarantano and Costello were under fire the most.  
  • When we compare Hit% to Dropback% Book, despite having to deal with pressure more than most, is near the tops in Hit%, meaning he is avoiding contact at a ridiculous rate.
    • Near consensus #1 overall pick, Lawrence has dealt with less pressure than average but he dropped two grade levels showing the worst Hit% of the group.It will be interesting to review his footage to see what caused him to take so many hits when he faced less pressure than average. 
    • Everyone else is pretty much in line with where you would expect (White is tops in least pressure and has the fewest hits, Costello has the most pressure and is number 2 in hits). 
  • Using the same lens for Sack %, White faced the least pressure but fell two grade levels in terms of Sack% under pressure. 
    • Mond saw more pressure than average but did an outstanding job in avoiding sacks.
  • Regarding Completion %, White dropped below average here again compared to his Dropback %.  
    • Ridder went from bad (falling two grades compared to his Dropback %), to worse dropping to the basement in Comp % under pressure.  
    • Despite facing the most pressure, Costello had the second highest Completion %. 
  • Varying most from their Dropback % when it comes to Accuracy% were White and Ridder, who both declined, and Book, who had the greatest accuracy under pressure of the sample.
  • The best performance under pressure in terms of TD/INT ratio goes to Jones who was two standard deviations above the mean on this metric.
    • Ehlinger and Book continue to show they have grace under pressure by having top TD/INT scores. 
Let's look at the table resorted based on the averages of the five pressure response metrics used above:



















  • Jones faced the least pressure and in those situations, he performed well.  In fact, he had one of the tops scores in each metric giving him the only average score greater than 1 standard deviation above the mean. 
  • Book and Costello faced tremendous pressure but their averages were two grade levels above their respective Dropback % so it will be interesting to see if this will have any impact on their draft statuses. 
  • White started strong out of the gate, but overall his response to pressure will need attention at the next level. 

The Big Five

When talking about QB prospects, the five FBS QBs I hear about most are Trask, Jones, Lawrence, Wilson and Fields.  The table below has their pressure response metrics side by side:




















  • Jones, Wilson and Trask all faced less than average pressure and had above average performance.   
  • Fields had to deal with far more pressure than the others in this group and his results were below average.
  • From the above either (1) the more pressure one has to experience, the more likely they are to make mistakes over time or (2) the aggregate impact of pressure does not have any impact and players are performing to their capabilities. 

Who Could Have Foreseen This?

  • The big surprise is presumed #1 overall QB Trevor Lawrence's results which were markedly average across the board.
    • His three out of five metrics were below average with his Hit% two grades below his baseline Dropback % resulting in his overall Impact Avg (average of the five pressure response metrics) being below average.  
  • Teams will want to look at his response to pressure historically to ensure this strange season may have been an anomaly in this respect. 

Final Thought

Regarding correlations (not causation, right?) there is no correlation between Pressure Dropback% and any of the Pressure Response metrics.   








There seems to be a real correlation between Accuracy under pressure and Completion % under pressure, but that's not really very surprising. 

In the end, the numbers stand on their own - some guys have mastered dealing with pressure while others struggle.  It remains to be seen if the complexity or simplicity of each players' system has any impact on these results;  the questions about Fields' "slow" processing have been answered with the response that the complexity of the system he is asked to run is a factor.  The best analogy I've heard is Fields is learning to drive stick (a more complex pro style offense) and others are driving automatics.  The average viewer sees Fields stall and assumes he is a bad driver with no regards for the fundamental differences between stick and automatic.  This and other potential factors should be thoroughly considered in pre-draft evaluations.  


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Other Posts To Read

Jets Reset Part II - The Elephant in the Room - Part II of my look at my NY Jets and this time we have to attack head on the issue of the quarterback.  https://boombearfootball.blogspot.com/2021/02/jets-reset-part-ii-elephant-in-room.html

The Nut Doesn't Fall Far from the Coaching Tree - Looking at the lineages of some of the NFL head coaching prospects for 2021.  Boombear's College Football Analysis: Strong Roots: NFL Head Coaching Vacancies and Coaching Trees (boombearfootball.blogspot.com)


Tanking for Trevor - Everyone wants the highest drafted players but how often do those players lead their teams to Super Bowls?  We have you covered right here!  Boombear's College Football Analysis: Tanking for Trevor (boombearfootball.blogspot.com)


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