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 by Elvis
3 years 6 days ago
 Total posts:   38457  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/th ... 538twitter

The Records That May (Or May Not) Fall In A 17-Game NFL Season

By Ty Schalter

The NFL’s long-awaited move to a 17-game regular season means a lot of obvious changes: a later Super Bowl, more exposure to injury risks and more games to sell TV ads against. It also means that sooner or later, single-season records set during the 16-game era are doomed to fall.

Eric Dickerson set the current single-season rushing record in 1984, just seven seasons into the 16-game era. If the league had gone to 17 games the following year, and everyone produced at the same per-game rate, Dickerson’s record would have been surpassed seven times by now.1

But it’s more than just records. NFL fans under 50 have spent their entire conscious lives following a league in which wins, losses and statistical totals all fit into a 16-game paradigm. What production levels should be considered good, bad and mediocre will change — and not just in a “the same, plus 6.3 percent” kind of way.

The 1978 season marked a turning point for the NFL. More than a decade removed from the AFL-NFL merger, the league had recently added two expansion clubs to bring its total up to 28 teams. The 16-game season and the wild-card playoff format were adopted, and the league instituted the pro-offense “Mel Blount Rule” to limit defensive contact with wide receivers. Since then, the game’s evolution toward passing has rewritten the record books over and over again. While Dickerson’s 1984 record stands, Dan Marino’s record-setting 1984 season now ranks just 10th all-time. In fact, 22 of the top 25 passing-yardage seasons have come in the past 10 years.

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Across the entire 16-game era, quarterbacks have thrown for as many as 5,477 yards (Peyton Manning’s record-setting 2013 season) and as few as 1,514 (Mark Rypien’s 1993 strugglefest).2 The box-and-whisker chart below shows how the simple act of adding one average game would affect all modern-era passing-yardage performances: shifts the low mark, first quartile, third quartile and upper bound up a little bit. In other words, what qualifies as a “worst possible,” “pretty bad,” “really good,” or “record-setting” performance all just go up by one game’s worth.

But if we take just the last pass-happy decade, we see even bigger across-the-board jumps in passing benchmarks: a 46 percent increase in the lower bound, a 15 percent increase in the first quartile and 12 percent increase in the third quartile. If we assume that passing over the next 10 years will look like the last 10, the new normal of the 17-game era will look much different than the 16-game era: a 32 percent higher floor, a 23 percent increase in the first quartile and a 19 percent increase in the third quartile. In fact, the median passing mark in our 17-game 2010s would have been 4,003 yards — not just above the third quartile of what we’re used to, but a mark that passers for two NFL franchises never reached in the entire 16-game era.

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The story is much the same with passing touchdowns: The low-water mark and first quartile rise dramatically, and the median and third quartile get big bumps.

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Unsurprisingly, the pendulum swings the other way with running backs. Those who played fantasy football in the 1990s tend to think of 250 carries as a good utilization benchmark for a No. 1 tailback. But in 2020, only three tailbacks ran the ball at least that many times. Derrick Henry did join the 2,000-yard club, so it’s not as though there were no great runners. But the last time a tailback joined that club, in 2012, Adrian Peterson was one of 14 runners with at least 250 carries. In 2020, Alvin Kamara made the Pro Bowl with just 187 rushing attempts.

Surprisingly, though, bell-cow backs hadn’t always been a feature of the league. In the 1970s and early 1980s, teams ran more overall — but it was more common for multiple backs to get a decent workload than one star to rack up massive carries. In 1978, only eight tailbacks hit the 250-carry mark, but 40 runners had at least 150 carries. In 2020, only 24 runners hit 150.

Looking at just the past 10 years’ actual performance,3 the likes of Peterson and Henry kept the ceiling high — and the floor went up, too, as the days of feeding 472 carries to a back averaging only 2.68 yards per carry are over.4 But there was a great squeezing in the middle: The first quartile rose slightly, and the third quartile dropped 12 percent. That means half of all primary backs of the last 10 years gained between 857 and 1,161 yards per season:

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While 17 games will raise the production floor further for backs who stay healthy all season, and outliers like Henry will have a better shot at Dickerson’s record, multiplying drastically reduced tailback numbers by 17 games doesn’t boost first quartile and median numbers by much — and the third-quartile mark stays exactly the same. A 1,239-yard season will be just as “good” for a contemporary tailback in the new 17-game era as it was in years past.

Receiver utilization is tough to track. There’s no official data for targets prior to 1992, and “starts” are less reliable an indicator of a wideout’s importance to an offense than for first-string quarterbacks and running backs.

So let’s look at the production of receivers with at least 30 catches who appeared in at least 10 games, with one of their average games tacked on:

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Here we can see the changing nature of wideout use, too: first-quartile, median and third-quartile receptions are all slightly higher in our 2010s-only 17-game projection than if we project based off the entire 16-game era. Yet in either 17-game projection method, receiving yardage comes out eerily the same — suggesting that today’s wideouts catch more, shorter passes that result in the same ground gained.

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Overall, there’s no question: Going to a 17-game season will eventually topple what few pre-2010s offensive records still stand. But it will also highlight huge changes in the game that predate the schedule change: Quarterbacks are producing far more across the board than ever before, running backs are used much less overall, and receivers are more plentiful and more specialized than in prior years.

NFL analysts have been era-adjusting statistics for years; comparing 2013 Manning to 1984 Marino isn’t truly apples-to-apples even though they both played 16 games. Though some may lament the end of this unprecedented run of cross-decade statistical comparison, the record books might have been better served if this change had been made 10 years ago.

 by Hacksaw
3 years 6 days ago
 Total posts:   24523  
 Joined:  Apr 15 2015
United States of America   AT THE BEACH
Moderator

A few got close but no one surpassed Dickerson's rushing total over a 16 game schedule and never will. Of course if a player actually passes him in 16 games with a game to play in a season, the asterisk will be somewhat transparent.

The per game averages would be closer to truth and could include and better compare the old 12 and 14 game schedules too. It's just not quite the same as the single season record title is..

 by Mr. Sparkle
3 years 6 days ago
 Total posts:   952  
 Joined:  Nov 28 2017
United States of America   Orange County Ca.
Veteran

Hacksaw wrote:A few got close but no one surpassed Dickerson's rushing total over a 16 game schedule and never will.


No one surpassed O.J. Simpson's rushing total over a 14 games season and never will.

I've mentioned this before but this is the most annoying thing about the 17 game schedule to me. So many records now get reset. And these will all change again when they move to the 18 game schedule which is almost a gimmie at this point.

 by Elvis
3 years 6 days ago
 Total posts:   38457  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

This is all true but we went from a 12 game season to a 14 game season to a 16 game season, Jim Brown, OJ Simpson, Erick Dickerson.

We can do this too...

 by PARAM
3 years 5 days ago
 Total posts:   12244  
 Joined:  Jul 15 2015
Barbados   Just far enough North of Philadelphia
Hall of Fame

AvengerRam wrote:Perhaps we'll need to start talking about records in terms of per game averages, rather than yearly totals.


True and it's been a long time coming. Gone are the days 1,000 yards rushing is a true accomplishment. I could see 1,000 yards in a 12 or 14 game season being something to be happy about. In 16 games 1,333 yards is the equivalent of 1000 yards in a 12 game season. That becomes over 1400 over 17 games.

Two guys compiled 1333 yards or more in 2020. Derrick Henry (2027) and Dalvin Cook (1557). 7 guys had 1,000+ but didn't get to 1300. Four guys did it in 2019. Derrick Henry (1,540), Nick Chubb (1,494) Christian McCaffrey, (1,387) and Ezekiel Elliott (1,357). A dozen guys had 1,000+ but not 1,300 in 2019. So for my money, those 6 guys the last two years are the elite. Not the other 19.

I remember when Namath the first to throw for 4,000 yards. It seemed like something nobody else would equal. Now it's done with regularity. Not just because the schedule increased 2 more games but the style of play and the rule changes favored more passing yards. Now 5,000 has become the pinnacle of passing prowess.

A dozen guys in 2020 had 4,000 or more yards passing. From the time Namath did it in 1967, it took another 9 years before the total number of players in history eclipsed 12 (13 after the 1986 season). 11 did it in 2019 and another dozen in 2018. That's 34 guys the last 3 years. From 1967 to 1998 there were 33 QBs who threw for 4,000 yards in a season.

On the other hand, 100 receptions? Don't get me started. From 1961 through 1993, 100 receptions in a season was accomplished 7 times. Then 3 guys did it in 1994 and another 9 in 1995. But only 2 averaged 15.0 yards or more per reception. Jerry Rice and Isaac Bruce (Rice did it previously in 1990 and Charlie Hennigan in 1964). . 8 guys had 100 receptions in 2020 and the high water mark for average was Travis Kelce with 13.5. A tight end? Another 5 amassed 100 receptions in 2019 and the best average among them was 11.5 (Keenan Allen). Yeah the game has changed. I don't look at receptions. I look at yards and yards per reception. How hard is it to catch a 7 yard pass? That's practically a pitch to a running back going around end.

 by Elvis
3 years 5 days ago
 Total posts:   38457  
 Joined:  Mar 28 2015
United States of America   Los Angeles
Administrator

Number of games and the era are huge factors, era probably more. 1,000 yard receiving isn't anywhere near the accomplishment it once was...

 by PARAM
3 years 5 days ago
 Total posts:   12244  
 Joined:  Jul 15 2015
Barbados   Just far enough North of Philadelphia
Hall of Fame

Elvis wrote:Number of games and the era are huge factors, era probably more. 1,000 yard receiving isn't anywhere near the accomplishment it once was...



^^^^^ This!!!! ^^^^^

More so than 1,000 yards rushing.

In 2020, there were 18 receivers with 1,000 yards.
In 2019, there were 29!!!
In 2018 there were 21.

Pre 1994 there were some years when 20 guys had 1,000. But after 94 it just took off, just like the 4,000 yard passing year for QBs. Back in the 70's and 60's (1979 was the high water mark with 12 thousand yard receivers) they never hit double digits.

 by snackdaddy
3 years 5 days ago
 Total posts:   9657  
 Joined:  May 30 2015
United States of America   Merced California
Hall of Fame

AvengerRam wrote:Perhaps we'll need to start talking about records in terms of per game averages, rather than yearly totals.


Dickerson averaged over 133 yards per game. OJ Simpson had the best per game average at 143 the year he ran for over 2000 yards in 14 games. When you look at that, Simpson had the best season ever.

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10 posts Apr 19 2024