12 Packers players that regressed most in 2021

Highlighting the Packers players that regressed the most during the 2021 season.

Last week, we highlighted the 15 most improved players for the Green Bay Packers during the 2021 season. Now, it’s time for the other side of the coin: players that regressed.

The Packers were unable to match a prolific offense from the 2020 season, resulting in the unavoidable regression from several players, including quarterback Aaron Rodgers. But going from historically great to just great is a preferable regression, especially when the quarterback in question is expected to win his second straight MVP award this week.

The starting safety duo also went downhill after they were arguably the best in football a year ago. And the player with the biggest slide in 2021 won’t be a surprise.

Here are the Packers players that regressed the most from 2020 to 2021:

9 Packers players that regressed most in 2020

Highlighting the Packers players that suffered some regression in PFF grades during the 2020 season.

Last week, we highlighted the 16 most improved players for the Green Bay Packers during the 2020 season. Now, it’s time for the other side of the coin: players that regressed.

Regression comes in many forms, but a team that won 13 games in 2019 won 13 more games in 2020 because progression from players out-weighed regression, especially on offense.

The Packers were fortunate that a fewer number of players regressed in a meaningful way in 2020, although the majority of those players came on defense. In fact, seven of the Packers’ preferred starters on defense suffered a regression of some kind this past season.

Here’s a closer look at the players that regressed most during the 2020 season, using overall regular-season grades from Pro Football Focus as our guide:

How the Packers resisted the pull of regression in 2020

An elite offense led by a Hall of Fame quarterback having an MVP season has created the ultimate regression-stopper.

The Green Bay Packers were prime regression candidates in 2020. Matt LaFleur’s team possessed many of the hallmark qualities of teams about to regress in the win-loss column. Last year, they won a bunch of close games, stayed healthy and got a bunch of timely turnovers, creating a 13-3 team with the worst point differential in over 30 years.

The pull of regression in 2020 was great. Three games remain, but the Packers have resisted well. Exceedingly well. This team is better, and the major win-loss regression hasn’t happened.

Why? How? Even with predictable regression on defense happening, the inconsistent offense and inconsistent passing game from 2019 has morphed into an elite offense and the most efficient passing game in football in 2020.

Back in August, we outlined some of the ways the Packers could resist regression. It all started on offense, which had the most room for improvement, and the biggest potential for improvement, especially with Aaron Rodgers entering his second season in Matt LaFleur’s offense.

What we wrote: “On offense, the passing game must get more explosive and more consistent, and the Packers must get better on third down. There’s a chance all three could happen in Year 2 of LaFleur’s offense, although the Packers will need more efficiency and accuracy from Aaron Rodgers and big jumps from the young players at the wide receiver and tight end positions.”

Check, check, and check.

The Packers are more explosive, more consistent, and excellent on third down. Rodgers is more efficient and more accurate. And the Packers are getting productive seasons from receivers Allen Lazard and Marquez Valdes-Scantling and tight end Robert Tonyan.

The defense isn’t getting as much pressure or creating as many turnovers in 2020, but it just hasn’t mattered. The Packers are 10-3 and in possession of the top seed in the NFC because the offense has played at such a ridiculously high level all season long, save for one long afternoon in Tampa Bay.

Rodgers is first in the NFL in touchdown passes (39) and passer rating (119.7). He’s completing a career-high 69.6 percent of his passes. The Packers are second in the NFL on third down (49.7 percent) and first in the red zone (77.1 percent). They are first in points per game (31.5) and points per drive (2.97).

Regression hasn’t happened because the Packers offense turned it away in a big way.

The Packers’ point differential is 87, up 24 points over last year with three games to go. They’ve played in just five one-score games, and they’ve actually regressed here, losing two (vs. Minnesota, at Indianapolis). For most of the season, the Packers have won big (six wins of 14 or more) or been leading big in the second half of wins.

While the team hasn’t faced any major injuries, they’ve been without key players for most of the season. Aaron Jones, Davante Adams, Allen Lazard, David Bakhtiari, Corey Linsley, Kenny Clark, Christian Kirksey and Kevin King have all missed time.

The Packers have pulled off a neat trick. They were fortunate to win 13 games in 2019, sure. That wasn’t a dominant team. But they haven’t regressed in 2020. In fact, they’ve gotten better in most of the important ways a team can get better and haven’t suffered at all in the win-loss column, even if reaching 13 wins again was a tall task entering the season. Now, two weeks into December, no one is talking about the Packers as the worst 10-3 team of all-time. They’re talking about the dominance of the offense, the race for the No. 1 seed in the NFC and Rodgers’ MVP hopes.

The Packers could have easily regressed this season, possibly improving overall but losing a few more games. It would have been understandable, given all the factors involved with last year. But LaFleur’s team resisted. An elite offense led by a Hall of Fame quarterback having an MVP season has created the ultimate regression-stopper.

Packers are prime regression candidates in 2020

The Packers probably won’t win 13 games again in 2020. ESPN’s Bill Barnwell paints a picture of regression for Matt LaFleur’s team in 2020.

In all likelihood, the Green Bay Packers will not win 13 regular season games again during the 2020 season. Just about all of the major predictors for regression suggest the Packers are headed for a step back in the win column this season.

ESPN’s Bill Barnwell, who has a strong track record of predicting regressing teams based on several independent metrics, identified the Packers as the NFL’s top regression candidate in 2020. Matt LaFleur’s team hits many of the predictors, including big ones like point differential, expected wins, record in close games and overall team health, but also smaller ones such as interception percentage, red zone efficiency and record inside the division.

One notable tidbit from Barnwell: The Packers had the worst point differential for a 13-3 team over the past 31 years.

Overall, the Packers were a fortunate team that played really well in key spots and moments, stayed mostly healthy, faced a bunch of bad quarterbacks and received a bunch of good luck along the way. The numbers suggest they were much closer to a 10-6 team in 2019 than 13-3. Had they finished 10-6, they wouldn’t be regression candidates.

The Packers aren’t going to apologize for how they won games last season. Style points don’t really matter in the NFL. LaFleur, in his first season as a head coach, reshaped an entire football team while installing a brand new offense and still won 13 games. That’s an achievement all on its own. But Barnwell’s method for predicting regressors is strong. It’s rooted in both past data and a high hit percentage. The Packers have their work cut out for them in terms of repeating last year’s magic. In most cases, luck evens out and outliers like the 2019 Packers regress to the mean the following year.

How can the Packers avoid a major regression?

On offense, the passing game must get more explosive and more consistent, and the Packers must get better on third down. There’s a chance all three could happen in Year 2 of LaFleur’s offense, although the Packers will need more efficiency and accuracy from Aaron Rodgers and big jumps from the young players at the wide receiver and tight end positions.

The defense has a chance to jump into the elite tier, especially against the pass. This team is loaded with pass rushers, and the secondary is young, athletic and talented. There are holes, especially along the defensive line and at linebacker, but Mike Pettine’s defense should be very good against the pass in 2020. Any team that can defend and disrupt the passing game at a high rate has a chance to be elite.

The Packers had a point differential of plus-63 in 2019. Although this team isn’t notably improved in any one area, at least based on offseason additions to the roster, it wouldn’t be unreasonable or surprising for the Packers to improve in its point differential slightly while also losing more games.

More than likely, the Packers will lose a couple more close games in 2020, suffer a key injury or two and regress in the turnover department and within the red zone. And more than likely, this team will finish somewhere between 9-7 and 11-5.

Perception will almost certainly taint the result. Last year’s 13-3 finish set a standard this team probably can’t reach. But the Packers could still be good in 2020 without winning 13 games. The pull of regression is strong, but the Packers don’t have to sink under the weight of last year’s good fortune.

Cowboys 2020 story will be written in regression to, progression past the mean

Under former head coach Jason Garrett, the Dallas Cowboys rode a roller coaster of an existence. As an interim hire in 2010, the team rebounded from a 1-7 start under midseason-deposed Wade Phillips, to a 5-3 finish under the man who was hired as OC …

Under former head coach Jason Garrett, the Dallas Cowboys rode a roller coaster of an existence. As an interim hire in 2010, the team rebounded from a 1-7 start under midseason-deposed Wade Phillips, to a 5-3 finish under the man who was hired as OC before the head coach. Garrett’s water then found its level, with the club finishing 8-8 for three consecutive seasons.

Just as Tony Romo started to solve the quarterbacking Rubik’s Cube, his health started to go for good and a 12-4 campaign in 2014 was followed by 4-12 when he only finished two games and subsequently saw the team luck into his replacement in Dak Prescott. The club has won more than they lost since then, by a wide margin, but in the last three seasons failed to approach the greatness of Prescott’s first campaign in 2016 that finished 13-3. A return to 8-8 with Garrett and his staff existing without a safety net ended with their dismissal and the hiring of Mike McCarthy.

There are numerous micro explanations and statistical forays into what went wrong and what could correct things, but the tried and true edict that close games in the NFL are a coin flip rings true in Dallas more than any other city.

The team’s roller-coaster results travel along tracks hammered into the ground with regression-to-the-mean stakes. When looking ahead to 2020, progress in close games seems logical, almost promised.

ESPN’s statistical savant Bill Barnwell recently dove into which teams should improve from their 2019 selves and which should backslide, and he went into great detail as to why the Cowboys are one of the teams that should zoom past their previous-season win total. The reasoning, the close-game swings.

The Cowboys were plus-6 in one-score games in 2018 and minus-5 in those same games in 2019. That’s an 11-game swing over the course of two seasons. Since 1989, just five other teams have dealt with an 11-win swing or more in close games, one of which will be appearing later in this column. To get something resembling a significant sample, we have to expand a bit and consider the teams that had a negative swing of eight games or more. When teams typically undergo that sort of swing from year to year, what happens in the third season?

They almost always improve. Of the 27 teams that fell off by eight or more wins in close games, 23 improved the following season, while one stayed at their prior record and only three declined. Three of the four teams that didn’t improve either replaced their quarterback by choice or via injury, including last year’s Panthers, who got only two injury-hampered games from Cam Newton. The 27 teams improved by an average of 2.7 wins the following year and won just over 46% of their close games. Dallas should be better in those one-score games in 2020.

In a nutshell, Barnwell discusses how teams that are lopsided on one side of the curve tend to swing to the other the following year, and the 2019 Cowboys were already an example of this.

The 10-win 2018 team was not all they were cracked up to be, as witnessed by a late-season road shutout to Indianapolis, an in-retrospect gift from Seattle’s run-first, run-last script in the Wild-Card game and then a drubbing at the hands of the Los Angeles Rams in the divisional round.

Out of the Cowboys 10 wins, an astounding eight of them came in close games, with the club finishing 8-2 in games decided by one score. That record plummeted to 0-5 in 2019. Again, the NFL has proven year over year that close game records are not indicators of team strength; blowout wins are.

The Cowboys finished 8-3 in games decided by multiple scores.

Cowboys Wire’s weekly EPA power rankings (exquisitely compiled by Dan Morse) consistently showed Dallas’ ceiling as high in 2019.

The team was a top-5 passing club and a top-5 rushing club by expected points added (EPA). They entered Week 17 ranked sixth in opponent-adjusted EPA before throttling Washington by 31 points.

They were the first team since the 1989 Bengals to finish +100 in scoring differential and fail to win at least nine games.

As Barnwell points out, the team should improve on their record, even if their offensive dips slightly.

With better luck, Dallas would project as one of the best teams in football, given that it was one of those teams a year ago. If anything, it wouldn’t shock me if the Cowboys actually were a little worse on a play-by-play basis and still improved their record anyway. . .

This sounds like a simple concept, and I’m sure longtime readers aren’t hearing anything new when I say this, but the simple reality of the NFL is that the easiest way to find which teams are likely to improve or decline the following season is to look at their record in close games.

Garrett finished his time in Dallas with a 85-67 overall record, but 42-36 in games decided by seven points or less. While McCarthy was in Green Bay, where he won a Super Bowl and finished with a career mark of 125-77-2, he was 48-40-2 in one-score contests. The win percentages in close games is similar (.538 for Garrett, .545 for McCarthy), but in two-score-or-more games, McCarthy’s had much better success (.675 to .581).

The obvious rub here, is that the Cowboys are faced with the daunting task of working in a new system under the cloud of Covid-19. McCarthy hasn’t had any of the regular teaching sessions afforded new head coaches, and instead went until late July before having any semblance of official interaction with his draft picks, free agents and returning veterans. Missing rookie camps, OTAs and minicamps may not be a death sentence to expectations, but it seems reasonable their loss will make the terrain much more difficult to travail.

If those hurdles can be overcome though, simply by playing the percentages the Cowboys should be in a great position to progress past average and into a contender’s role.

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