Broncos WR Courtland Sutton has a perfect career passer rating

Broncos WR Courtland Sutton is the only player in franchise history to attempt more than 2 passes and post a perfect passer rating (158.3).

Denver Broncos wide receiver Courtland Sutton completed his second pass of the season on Sunday with a two-yard touchdown toss to quarterback Bo Nix against the Baltimore Ravens.

Sutton is now 2-of-2 on the year for 30 yards with one touchdown, good for a perfect 158.3 passer rating. Sutton is 4-of-4 on passes in his career for 84 yards with four first downs, one score and no turnovers, also good for a perfect passer rating.

“We called it at the right time,” Nix said of the play after the game. “We knew that they were going to be in zero funnel, and the guy actually made a good play of retreating and trailing, and Courtland looked pretty good again on that play.”

Sutton became the third receiver in franchise history to throw a touchdown pass on Sunday, joining Emmanuel Sanders (once) and Arthur Marshall (twice). Sutton was on the receiving end of Sanders’ touchdown pass in 2018.

Sutton is one of four players in franchise history with a perfect passer rating, joining Sanders, Marshall and fullback Jon Keyworth. Of those players, Sutton is the only one with more than two pass attempts.

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All 32 NFL quarterbacks (including Derek Carr) ranked by passer rating in 2023 regular season

Here’s where all 32 NFL quarterbacks (including Derek Carr) ranked by passer rating in the 2023 regular season:

It wasn’t pretty, but the numbers suggest Derek Carr was an effective quarterback for the New Orleans Saints in 2023. He at least was efficient when asked to drop back and pass. And once he settled into the offense, he was downright impressive. No quarterback threw more touchdown passes in the final month of the season than Carr.

With the regular season behind us, we’ve taken a look at all 32 quarterbacks who started the most games for their teams and ranked them by passer rating. Here’s how Carr stacks up against his competition around the league:

All 32 NFL quarterbacks (including Saints QB Derek Carr) ranked by passer rating after Week 15

Where does Derek Carr rank in passer rating around the league? Here are all 32 starting quarterbacks after Week 15:

Derek Carr played his best football yet for the New Orleans Saints in Week 15’s win over the New York Giants, so how does that boost his standing around the league?

Carr has dealt with some injuries this season but he hasn’t missed a start, and his 448 pass attempts are the 13th-most in the NFL after 14 games.

With the Saints set to kick off Week 16 on Thursday night against the Los Angeles Rams, here’s a look at all 32 quarterbacks who started in Week 15 ranked by passer rating, including Carr:

Ranking all 32 starting NFL quarterbacks by passer rating

Here’s how all 32 starting quarterbacks compare in passer rating going into Week 7.

Patterns are beginning to emerge as the 2023 NFL season slowly approaches its mid-point. Each week we have been using a different stat to rank the quarterbacks around the league, but the same names tend to keep popping up at the top of our lists. Specifically, Tua Tagovailoa and Brock Purdy have been the most-dominant QBs statistically this year, and this week they are once again at the top of our rankings.

Here’s how all 32 starting quarterbacks compare in passer rating going into Week 7.

Tua Tagovailoa ranked No. 82 in the NFL’s Top 100 player list for 2023 season

Tua Tagovailoa ranked as one of the Top 100 players in the NFL by other players in the league

The NFL season is less than two months away and the Hall of Fame game is just next Friday so I feel like I can officially declare that football is back.

Another key indicator that football is back is when the NFL releases its top 100 players for the upcoming season. The list is voted on by the players and is a highly anticipated part of the offseason. While it doesn’t translate to any awards or future on-the-field success, it is an honor to be recognized by your teammates and the guys you’re playing against on a weekly basis as one of the best in the game.

Ravens Marlon Humphrey and Eagles DeVonta Smith both are former Alabama players who have already cracked the NFL’s Top 100 list. Miami Dolphins quarterback, [autotag]Tua Tagovailoa[/autotag], is the next to join the list as the No. 82 ranked player.

Despite missing four games in 2023 due to multiple concussions, Tagovailoa was outstanding when he was on the field. He went 8-5 as a starter and was able to guide the Dolphins to a playoff appearance, even though he couldn’t play in it due to injury.

In the 13 games, however, he completed 64.8% of his passes for 3,548 yards 25 touchdowns, and eight interceptions. He also led the NFL in passing yards per attempt with an 8.9 YPA and a passer rating of 105.5.

If Tagovailoa can stay on the field, the Dolphins will be real contenders in the AFC and I think this is the season he could push for a Pro Bowl appearance. This is the most stability he’s had during his tenure with the Dolphins and he could be in for a breakout season.

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Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith makes top 10 in 2022 NFL QB Index

Seattle Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith landed at No. 9 overall in Marc Sessler’s 2022 NFL QB Index, one spot above the GOAT, Tom Brady.

Throughout the 2022 regular and postseason, 68 quarterbacks had the chance to start an NFL game. Around the NFL writer Marc Sessler took a look at each and ranked them top to bottom for his final QB Index piece of the year.

Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith landed in the top 10 of Sessler’s list.

“Philip Rivers once received a Comeback Player of the Year nod for improving marginally from one autumn to the next,” Sessler writes. “Snagging that same award earlier this month, Geno offered something far meatier, sticking it to his summertime critics (read: this blogger) by waltzing into a post-Russ universe, starting every game and blasting Wilson’s single-season Seahawks passing record into the sun.”

“He also led the league in completion percentage, crafted a 32-to-12 touchdown-to-pick ratio and displayed dramatic improvement as a deep-strike artist,” Sessler continued. “Few players have more effectively dropped a continent-clearing hammer on the haters.”

For his impressive season, Smith finished at No. 9 overall, one spot above the GOAT, Tom Brady.

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Seahawks veteran QB Geno Smith earns 1st Pro Bowl nod of his career

After 10 years in the NFL mostly as a backup, Seattle Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith has finally earned his first Pro Bowl nod.

Seattle Seahawks quarterback Geno Smith has come a long way in his 10-year career to finally earn his first nod onto a Pro Bowl roster. Smith is among four Seattle players who were named to the 2023 Pro Bowl Games.

Smith was originally selected by the Jets in the second round of the 2013 NFL draft out of West Virginia. He was inconsistent throughout his first two seasons as a starter before serving in a backup role his last two years in New York. He next spent time as a backup with the Giants and the Chargers before signing with Seattle in 2019.

After backing up quarterback Russell Wilson for three seasons, Smith earned his chance to start for Seattle in 2022 and has never looked back. He now heads the league in completion percentage with a whopping 71.4. In addition, Smith has the second-best passer rating (105.3), ranks fourth in passing touchdowns (26), sixth in completions (337), seventh in yards (3,671) and is tied for ninth place in attempts (472).

All that from a guy who many considered a career backup at best.

Honestly, my focus is on this week and this game,” Smith told reporters Wednesday before hearing of his honor. “Obviously, those things are personal accolades, but I’m focused on the team part of it. It’s really important for us to go out there and get a win. It’s a crucial part of our season. We got three games left to figure out what we are going to do here.

“I’ve just been focused on that and locked in on that.”

Congrats to Smith and the rest of the Seahawks who will be representing Seattle and the NFC in the 2023 Pro Bowl Games.

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Andy Dalton posts near-perfect passer rating in Week 11 win vs. Rams

Andy Dalton posted a near-perfect passer rating in the Saints’ Week 11 win. His rating is the best of any Saints QB since Drew Brees’ game against the Colts in 2019:

Look at Andy Dalton making some New Orleans Saints history. The veteran quarterback helped his team defeat the Los Angeles Rams on Sunday with an efficient performance that the numbers say was better than it looked — as observed by Nola.com’s Luke Johnson, Dalton’s 149.6 passer rating from this win is the highest single-game performance from any quarterback in the league this year (minimum 20 attempts). He completed 21 of 25 attempts for 260 yards with 3 touchdown passes.

For context, a perfect passer rating is 158.3. The only quarterback in Saints history to accomplish that is Drew Brees, per Stathead, who went 18-of-23 for 371 yards with 5 touchdown passes and no interceptions against the New England Patriots back in 2009. Dalton’s passer rating on Sunday was the highest of all Saints quarterbacks dating back to Brees’ game with the Indianapolis Colts in 2019, when he completed 29 of 30 passes for 307 yards with 4 touchdown passes and no interceptions (resulting in a passer rating of 148.9).

Dalton’s big game is just the fifth time this season a quarterback has posted a passer rating over 140, per Stathead. The others to come close are Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts (140.6 in Week 8), Baltimore Ravens MVP Lamar Jackson (142.6 in Week 2), Kansas City Chiefs superstar Patrick Mahomes (144.2 in Week 1), and Green Bay Packers passer Aaron Rodgers (146.7 in Week 10). So, yeah, Dalton is in rare company.

That’s not to say Dalton was perfect. He was off-target on a few throws and too often settled for unambitious passes well short of the first down marker. He took several sacks in which he could have thrown the ball away instead to preserve field positioning. When watching the game play out, it didn’t feel like we were watching a quarterback take over the way Brees once did. The point is that he could have been better.

But we shouldn’t diminish his accomplishments too much. Dalton stepped up in a big spot on his 53-yard touchdown pass to Chris Olave with Aaron Donald barreling down on him, and he had a couple of other big-time throws under pressure. He deserves credit for his role in the win.

Now, is it sustainable? It’s telling that the Saints rotated Dalton in and out of the game with Taysom Hill taking snaps at quarterback (Hill attempted three passes, completing one of them for 14 yards while taking a sack; he logged 9 carries for 52 rushing yards). They had a good game plan to try and get the most out of each players’ skill sets and minimize their vulnerabilities. It worked out this time, and they’ll likely try and ride that formula as far as it’ll take them. Their next big test comes next Sunday against the San Francisco 49ers.

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Teddy Bridgewater’s high completion percentage puts him in good company

Teddy Bridgewater’s completion percentage (77.8%) ranks No. 1 among Broncos QBs in their debut, even better than Peyton Manning (73.1%).

Teddy Bridgewater looked sharp in his Denver Broncos debut on Sunday, completing 28 of his 36 passes for 264 yards with two touchdowns and no interceptions.

Bridgewater’s 77.8% completion mark was the best percentage by a Broncos quarterback in his debut in franchise history, even better than when Peyton Manning completed 73.1% of his passes in 2012.

“He did an incredible job,” outside linebacker Von Miller said following a 27-13 win over the New York Giants. “He was poised back there, he got out of some big-time sacks early in the game and he converted off of those scrambles. Just a great day from Teddy.”

Bridgewater bought time and made plays throughout the game while also protecting the football, finishing the day with a 115.7 passer rating, the sixth-best passer rating in Broncos history.

“I saw a guy in total control and when he had the improvise, he did, and some of those were on big, big plays,” coach Vic Fangio said on Sunday evening. “He’s been doing that his entire career when he’s been a player and he showed it today.”

ESPN gave Bridgewater a QBR rating of 95.7. At the time of his writing — before Monday Night Football — that’s the highest QBR for Week 1. As DNVR’s Andrew Mason pointed out on Twitter, that also marks the best QBR of Bridgewater’s career.

Next week, Bridgewater will face a Jacksonville Jaguars defense that surrendered 291 passing yards and two touchdowns to Tyrod Taylor in a 37-21 loss to the Houston Texans in Week 1.

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Drew Brees, Saints putting their legacy on the line in latest playoff push

New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees and his teammates are putting their legacies on the line in the playoffs against the Chicago Bears

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Most observers aren’t expecting a very competitive matchup between the New Orleans Saints and the wild-card Chicago Bears. NFL experts are picking New Orleans by a healthy margin, and the oddsmakers are calling for a blowout. But the Saints have learned — painfully — that no playoff game can be written off as an easy win.

And few players on their team should be more aware of that than Drew Brees. The quarterback is bound for the Hall of Fame whenever he hangs up his cleats, which ESPN reports could happen this very offseason. But as gaudy as his records and stats sheet have become over the years in New Orleans, retiring with just one Super Bowl victory on his resume would sting. There’s a chance Sunday’s game with the Bears is the last time Brees ever plays for the Saints.

Earned or not, the Saints have been stuck with a reputation as regular season champions that fold in the playoffs against lesser competition. While that’s been pointed to often in recent years, it’s been a thing throughout Brees’ era; only one team to eliminate them in the postseason has gone on to win that year’s Super Bowl, being the 2013 Seattle Seahawks.

And that Seahawks team was the only Saints playoff opponent to be led by a quarterback with a career quarterback rating over 100.0. See for yourself, per Pro Football Reference:

  • Rex Grossman (vs. Saints in 2006 playoffs): 71.4
  • Matt Hasselbeck (vs. Saints in 2010 playoffs): 82.4
  • Alex Smith (vs. Saints in 2011 playoffs): 86.9
  • Russell Wilson (vs. Saints in 2013 playoffs): 101.7
  • Case Keenum (vs. Saints in 2017 playoffs): 85.2
  • Jared Goff (vs. Saints in 2018 playoffs): 91.5
  • Kirk Cousins (vs. Saints in 2019 playoffs): 97.9

That isn’t exactly a rogues’ gallery of all-time elite passers. It’s a group of mediocre-to-average throwers (plus Wilson) that the Saints have underestimated in critical moments.

All of this was said to illustrate the point that the Saints can’t overlook the Bears and Mitchell Trubisky. While the former second-overall draft pick has underachieved throughout his NFL career (with a quarterback rating of 87.2), he’s exactly the sort of player who has knocked the Saints out of playoff contention before.

If they can’t handle their business against Trubisky, the modern-day Saints will go down in history as underachievers themselves. They’ve strung together the four winningest seasons in franchise history without a Super Bowl title to show for it. And that’s unacceptable for them and for Brees.

It’s worse than even the 1990-1993 Buffalo Bills, who at least made it to four consecutive Super Bowls, though they couldn’t seal the deal. The 2017-2020 Saints risk becoming an even more obscure trivia answer if they can’t cap off this last run with Brees by going all the way.

Sure, Saints coach Sean Payton has groused about the narrative of flat playoff performances from New Orleans, but the specifics won’t be remembered if the Saints come up short against Chicago. That’s the sort of multiyear trend that gets set in stone, especially if it’s the coda to Brees’ career with the Saints. They’d always be looked back on as also-rans.

It goes without saying that every playoff game is a must-win matchup. But for Brees and the Saints, their Wild-Card Round kickoff against Trubisky and the Bears is as critical as it can possibly be.

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