Jul/03/08 04:38 PM Filed in:
Reggie Wayne
I've been doing full-season
tape reviews for five years now, and the one fact
that stands out more than any other is that player
performance does not take place in a vacuum. The
level of competition a player faces seems, more
times than not, to largely determine the level of
production that player achieves.
I first reviewed this in an article in Scientific
Football 2005 when I saw that 26 of Peyton Manning's 53
regular-season and postseason touchdown passes that
year came against either subpar coverage personnel or
no coverage at all.
I decided to take that concept one step further in
Scientific Football 2008 by looking at wide receiver
performance versus varying levels of competition. I did
this by segmenting cornerbacks into three color
categories -- red (the most difficult matchups), yellow
(average matchups) and green (the most favorable
matchups).
I used the 2007 yards per attempt average of each
cornerback to determine his color rating, with red
being a YPA of less than 7 yards, yellow being between
7 and 9 yards, and green being more than 9 yards.
Cornerbacks who didn't have enough passes thrown in
their direction to qualify were placed in a separate
"non-qualifier" category. I also tracked receiver
performance when facing a cornerback and when facing a
non-cornerback (i.e., a safety, a linebacker, no
coverage, etc.).
This study produced a large amount of very interesting
numbers, but for the sake of brevity, I have culled out
the top 10 nuggets of information. They are:
1. Randy Moss can be slowed by red- and yellow-rated
cornerbacks. I know it sounds crazy to say anything
negative about someone who scored 23 touchdowns for the
Patriots this past season, but consider this: In the 95
passes Moss had thrown to him while he was being
covered by a red- or yellow-rated cornerback, he gained
only 541 yards. That equals 5.7 yards per attempt, a
terribly low total. Because 62 of those passes came
against yellow-rated corners, Moss' YPA actually was
less than those cornerbacks' standard YPA in 2007.
2. The Colts' Reggie Wayne is the best wide receiver in
the NFL. Moss and Terrell Owens generally are said to
hold this spot, but Wayne beats those two in one of the
most important indicators of quality among wide
receivers: the ability to beat any cornerback. Take a
look at the totals of each of these three when facing
cornerbacks last season:
Player ---------Att---Yards---YPA ----TD---INT
---Success %
Reggie Wayne---99---1,158---11.7-----9----3--------74.7
Terrell
Owens----95---759-----8.0------9----7--------54.7
Randy Moss-----127---924-----7.3-----15----4-------63.8
Wayne easily topped the others in every sub-segment in
this metric except in touchdowns, and he equaled Owens
in that one. Wayne has spent his entire career playing
in the shadow of Marvin Harrison, even though he has
put up numbers just as good as Harrison's in most
years. In 2007, when Harrison was out for most of the
season and Wayne finally got the Colts' spotlight to
himself, he still couldn't avoid the shadow on a
leaguewide level, even though he once again posted
top-of-the-line totals.
(espn.com)