This chart shows how little help Matthew Stafford got this season

When you adjust for drops, blocking and other factors, Matthew Stafford actually wasn’t playing that poorly

Matthew Stafford wasn’t having a good season by his standards before suffering a neck injury that landed him on injured reserve. He had just 10 touchdown passes and eight interceptions, averaging just 231.9 yards per game – the third-lowest of his career.

However, he wasn’t solely to blame for the Rams’ issues despite going just 3-6 in his nine starts. He got very little help from his teammates, particularly an ever-changing offensive line that struggled to block opposing pass rushers.

In fact, when you take look at his context-adjusted efficiency, which factors in things like blocking, drops, receivers and strength of schedule, Stafford was making up for a lot of issues around him.

Take a look at this chart, which shows Stafford ranking eighth in context-adjusted EPA (expected points added) per play as opposed to his actual fifth-worst ranking.

Stafford had a lot of things working against him, from a lack of receiver talent behind Cooper Kupp to abysmal pass protection up front. This chart helps contextualize his season, as frustrating as it was.

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