Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes is having his best season since 2019 in two key areas

#Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes is on track to put up his best numbers since 2019 in these two key areas.

Though Patrick Mahomes’ raw production hasn’t lived up to the expectations placed on him as the NFL’s reigning MVP, the Kansas City Chiefs quarterback has managed to excel in two key areas through the team’s first nine games.

According to Pro Football Reference, Mahomes is on track to put up his lowest bad throw percentage and highest on-target pass percentage since 2019.

Both of these stats are good indicators of Mahomes’ ability to run the Chiefs offense efficiently, despite the lower counting stats he has put up so far this season. While passing yards, touchdowns, and yards per attempt serve a purpose in quantifying a quarterback’s production, stats like bad throw and on-target pass percentages can give fans more context for his recent performances.

Mahomes will need to keep up his excellent work in these categories to help lift Kansas City to its eighth win of the season against the Philadelphia Eagles on Monday Night Football in Week 11.

4 different methods that show where the Vikings are ranked

With the opinions on the Vikings being so varied, we took a look at four different methods that have the Vikings ranked differently

The opinions on the Minnesota Vikings are widespread and varied. A lot of the conversation with the Minnesota Vikings derives from the team being in so many close games and having excellent luck on a number of levels.

As we try to identify this team and where they sit in the lexicon of the NFL, it’s a smart thing to look at how different models and stats view the 8-1 Vikings.

We took a look at the overall stats of the team, Football Outsiders’ DVOA, PFF and the betting market tiers derived by Ben Baldwin to see how varied the Vikings look.

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Tigers in the NFL year in review: Cleveland’s Greedy Williams

His stock is rising after a productive 2021 campaign.

Greedy Williams’ 2018 season at LSU was about as good a season as any LSU cornerback has had. Playing opposite of Kristian Fulton, he played a large role in LSU having one of the best defenses in the country.

The Browns selected him in the second round with the 46th overall pick. Unfortunately, he did not pan out his first couple years in the NFL. He struggled in 2019 and was hurt in 2020, not seeing a single snap.

2021 was a different story for Williams as he finally started to look closer to the player he was at LSU. Williams saw limited action the first few weeks of the season but finally got an opportunity in week four when the Browns faced the Vikings.

Williams picked off his first career pass. According to Pro Football Reference, he was targeted five times and allowed just a 34.2 quarterback rating on those targets. Williams played in 100% of the defensive snaps. A big step for a player coming off an injury.

Williams then struggled in his next couple of games. A pair of games that saw the Browns defense give up a combined 84 points.

He bounced back from that slump though, allowing just five catches on 13 targets in his next four games, breaking up three passes in that stretch.

Over the last few weeks of the year, Williams was somewhat inconsistent, but still good. Against the Raiders, he broke up two passes while picking off another, helping a depleted Browns team win a defensive battle.

He didn’t play a ton against Pittsburgh in week 17’s Monday night game, but he was good when he did, allowing just three yards on two targets.

All things considered; Williams had a pretty good year. Coming into week 18, he was in the top 20% of cornerbacks when it came to passer rating when targeted.

Williams 2021 was a pleasant surprise for some who thought he may have been a bust. It didn’t look promising after his first couple years in the league. If Williams builds on his 2021 in 2022, he has a chance to be seen in the same light as some other LSU cornerbacks who have gone on to be really good NFL players.

Updated sacks totals extends Rickey Jackson’s lead on Saints record

Cameron Jordan is still chasing Rickey Jackson for the Saints sacks record, but new research may put it out of reach:

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Here’s some big news for NFL stat heads: the team at Pro Football Reference announced that they have gone back to log sacks before they were officially recorded in 1982, giving a more comprehensive history of pro football’s greatest pass rushers. But it’s a tough break for New Orleans Saints defensive end Cameron Jordan, who finds himself a bit further behind Rickey Jackson in his quest for the franchise sacks record.

The PFR researchers found that Jackson bagged 8.0 sacks in his 1981 rookie year, raising his career total with the Saints to 123.0. That means Jordan  (94.5 career sacks) needs 28.5 more takedowns for New Orleans to tie the Hall of Famer for first place, or 29.0 sacks to win the title.

It’s a tall order, but Jordan has gotten this far. He’s averaged 0.59 sacks per game in 160 appearances for New Orleans compared to Jackson’s 0.63 sacks per game in 195 outings; at that rate, he would have to play in 49 more games, or a little under three years, to claim the top spot. If he does go the distance and total 209 games with the Saints, that would rank second-most in team history behind Drew Brees (228), ahead of Morten Andersen (196), Jackson (195), and Thomas Morstead (190).

But Jordan’s contract is set to expire after the 2023 season, which is the end of this projected 49-game sequence for him to take Jackson’s spot. And he’ll be 34 then. If his down year in 2020 (just 7.5 sacks, tying the second-lowest total of his career) is the beginning of a slump, he could very well come up short. That’s very possible considering the Saints drafted Payton Turner in the first round this year as part of a contingency plan should the team move on from him or Marcus Davenport in the near future.

Will Jordan reach the mountaintop before his time in black and gold runs out? We’ll just have to wait and see. But the stakes couldn’t be higher for the 6-time Pro Bowler (the same number of all-star game appearances Jackson earned, by the way). If anything, it goes to show just how special Jackson was that the best Saints defender of his generation is still chasing him.

And Jackson benefited in the all-time rankings from PFR’s new research, too, not just for his spot in New Orleans’ record books. He’s now tied with Jared Allen for the 16th-most sacks in NFL history (136.0) despite having started playing in an era when teams were passing 5% less often than they would in Allen’s day. Jordan is enjoying an epoch where almost half the league is throwing on 60% or more of downs, but it might not be enough for him to catch up. It really puts into perspective how rare talents like the Dome Patrol’s best player really are.

While these updated numbers haven’t been vetted by the Saints or the NFL, defensive stats are, well, historically played with fast and loose. Here is how the unofficial top-20 from PFR shakes out, with Jackson among them:

Unofficial Leaders Table
Rank Player Sk Years
1 Bruce Smith+ 200.0 1985-2003
2 Reggie White+ 198.0 1985-2000
3 Deacon Jones+ 173.5 1961-1974
4 Kevin Greene+ 160.0 1985-1999
5 Julius Peppers 159.5 2002-2018
6 Jack Youngblood+ 151.5 1971-1984
7 Chris Doleman+ 150.5 1985-1999
8 Alan Page+ 148.5 1967-1981
9 Lawrence Taylor+ 142.0 1981-1993
10 Michael Strahan+ 141.5 1993-2007
11 Jason Taylor+ 139.5 1997-2011
12 Terrell Suggs 139.0 2003-2019
13 DeMarcus Ware 138.5 2005-2016
14 Richard Dent+ 137.5 1983-1997
John Randle+ 137.5 1990-2003
16 Jared Allen 136.0 2004-2015
Rickey Jackson+ 136.0 1981-1995
18 John Abraham 133.5 2000-2014
Carl Eller+ 133.5 1964-1979
20 Leslie O’Neal 132.5 1986-1999

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Notre Dame in NFL: An Insane 2019 Ronnie Stanley Stat

We all know Ronnie Stanley had an insane 2019 in terms of pass blocking but just how absurd was it in a historical context?

Notre Dame was recently credited by Sports Illustrated as being “Offensive Line U” for the stars they put in the league.

Going into 2019 Zack Martin and Quenton Nelson were established stars on the inside, even if Nelson had only played one NFL season.  Ronnie Stanley was by no means a disappointment entering 2019 but he wasn’t in the territory of either of those two, either.

Then again, few are.

Ronnie Stanley didn’t just take a nice stride in 2019 though, he just an enormous leap.  Pro Football Focus analyzed his season and called him the Pass Blocker of the Year at the end of the regular season.  Now they’ve released information on just how great his 2019 was.

A 14 year window and no pass blocker allowed fewer pressures than Stanley did in 2019.

This is to take nothing away from Stanley because he was clearly great and a key part in Lamar Jackson stunning the league and winning the league MVP.  However, it is worth noting that Stanley did miss two games for the Ravens last year and that Baltimore did run the ball 98 more times than any other team in all of the NFL last season.

That all said, Ronnie Stanley still had a monstrous season worthy of the All-Pro and Pro Bowl accolades he received.

NFL comparisons for Miami Dolphins guard Solomon Kindley

NFL pros that former Georgia football and now Miami Dolphins guard Solomon Kindley compares to.

The Miami dolphins selected Georgia guard Solomon Kindley with the No. 111 pick in the fourth round of the 2020 NFL Draft.

Kindley is the third offensive lineman from Georgia taken in this years draft behind Andrew Thomas to the Giants and Isaiah Wilson to the Tennessee Titans.

Kindley (6-foot-3, 327 pounds) brings incredible power and anchoring ability to the Dolphins. Something that Miami fans should be excited about as he will be tasked with protecting Dolphins’ first round pick and Alabama great Tua Tagovailoa in years to come.

NFL analyst Lance Zierlein wrote:

“Nasty guard who lives in scrap mode, looking for fights inside a relatively small phone booth where he’s most comfortable.”

Here are a couple of NFL guards that Kindley’s game most resembles:

Shaq Mason (6-1, 310) New England Patriots

Mason is known for using his leverage and strength at the point-of-attack and at 6-foot-1 it is nearly impossible to win the leverage game against him as a defender. Now, Kindley possesses the power, width and strength to move guys like Mason does, but his technique will have to be molded to be a quality NFL starter.

Larry Warford (6-3, 313) New Orleans Saints

Warford is another pro that is one of the nastiest run-blockers in the NFL. Like Kindley and Mason, Warford traps defenders in the run game and once he establishes leverage, defenders are trapped and at his mercy. Warford backs up his power in the run game with steady feet in pass-protection, another thing that Kindley will have to improve on in Miami.

Bears CB Buster Skrine is becoming one of Ryan Pace’s better pickups

While GM Ryan Pace has come under scrutiny for some of his acquisitions, CB Buster Skrine is looking to be one of Pace’s better pickups.

One of the biggest questions for Chicago Bears general manager Ryan Pace entering the 2019 offseason was what he would do at the slot cornerback position. Would he elect to re-sign Bryce Callahan, a former undrafted free agent who rose through the ranks to become an unsung hero for the 2018 Bears defense? Or would he let him walk and find his replacement via free agency or the NFL draft?

Pace chose the latter, signing former New York Jets cornerback Buster Skrine to a 3-year, $16.6 million deal, allowing Callahan to follow former defensive coordinator Vic Fangio to Denver, signing for three years and $21 million. A move that was initially questioned and panned by fans and experts alike may now be seen as one of Pace’s best pickups during his tenure with the Bears.

Skrine, a nine-year veteran, has been a dependable pickup for the 2019 Bears defense. He’s made an impact in the running game, wrapping up ball carriers with solid tackling and has been fairly effective as a blitzer when called upon. When it comes to his pass defense, however, he’s improved drastically from his last season with the Jets in nearly every statistical category, including penalties. In 2018, Skrine tied for the team-lead in penalties with seven. So far this season, he’s only been flagged once, an offsides call back in Week 2 against the Denver Broncos.

What’s more, Skrine is on pace to exceed Callahan’s production from last season in most statistical categories. Below is a comparison of Skrine’s 2019 season with Callahan’s 2018 campaign using data courtesy of Pro Football Reference.

Player/Year Buster Skrine/2019 Bryce Callahan/2018
Games played 11 13
Total Tackles 33 45
Tackles for loss 1 6
Sacks 0 2
Completion % 57.1% 71.7%
Yards per completion 8.5 9.2
QB Rating 76.9 79.9
Touchdowns 1 1
Interceptions 0 2
Forced Fumbles 2 0

The comparison shows that while Skrine isn’t as great of a blitzing cornerback as Callahan was, his pass defense has exceeded what his predecessor accomplished in his best season as a pro thus far. Most notably, Skrine’s completion percentage is nearly 14 points lower than Callahan’s was in 2018. This all coming from a healthy player as well.

One of the main concerns when considering re-signing Callahan was his injury history. He missed the final four games of the season, including the team’s playoff loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in the wildcard round due to a broken foot. Now nearly one year later, he’s yet to play a down for the Broncos and will miss the season due to a setback to the injury suffered in training camp. Meanwhile, Skrine hasn’t missed a game yet and has been on the field 67% of the time, per The Athletic’s Kevin Fishbain.

There are still two years left on both Skrine and Callahan’s contracts, respectively. The Bears nickel corner could crash down to earth next season and Callahan may pick up where left off in 2018 once he’s healthy. But through nearly three quarters of the 2019 season, Pace’s decision to sign Skrine is arguably his best move of the offseason and one of his better signings during his tenure.

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