From Bill Barnwell's Teams Most Likely to Decline in 2020:
- Point Differential
Most 13-3 teams blow out their competition. Green Bay didn't have many of those blowouts. Forty-eight teams have gone 13-3 since 1989, and they outscored their competition by an average of more than 150 points, or 9.4 points per game. Matt LaFleur's team outscored its opponents by 63 points -- less than 4 points per contest. It's the worst point differential for a team with this record over the past 31 seasons and the fourth-largest gap between a team's win-loss record and expected win-loss record over that time frame.
- Close Games
The Packers were 6-1 in games decided by seven points or fewer (and that's not including two eight-point wins). As tempting as it is to ascribe that to Rodgers' brilliance, he was just 34-34-1 as a starter in those same games before 2019. Is it possible that the difference between LaFleur and oft-criticized game manager Mike McCarthy was enough to turn this team into a late-game juggernaut? Theoretically, yes, although there has never been a coach in league history who won anything close to 85% of his close games over any significant length of time. The overwhelming evidence suggests that they won't win as many of these close ones in 2020.
- Health
What will slow down the Packers? To start, they're not likely to be as healthy. While star wideout Davante Adams missed time, Rodgers started all 16 games. Guard Lane Taylor missed the entire season after suffering a preseason injury, but their five other linemen made it through all 16 games without any missed time. Likewise, while linebacker Oren Burks went down with a torn pectoral muscle before the season, the 11 projected starters on defense missed a total of four games throughout the regular season. Those preseason injuries count, of course, but Green Bay's depth wasn't really tested.
- Interception/Turnover Variation
The Packers improved from 29th in defensive DVOA to 15th, in part because they were able to come up with 17 interceptions. Expressed on a per-play basis, they picked off 3.1% of opposing passes last season, which was third in the league behind the Patriots (an amazing 4.7%) and Steelers (3.9%).
Relying on a steady dose of interceptions to fuel your defense, especially with big stops at the right time, can be tough. The Packers' interception rate should fall in 2020. Their fumble recovery rate should improve, as they ranked 30th in the league at just 41.2%, but they are also counting on Rodgers to continue producing virtually unprecedented interception rates. He posted the lowest interception rate in league history in 2018 and then followed it with the sixth-lowest interception rate in league history last season. Rodgers' interception rate had never been an issue, but it had also not been astronomically low before 2018. I would expect it to climb at least a tiny bit this season, and for Green Bay to struggle to keep up the plus-12 turnover differential it posted a year ago.
- Red Zone acumen
It's also difficult to imagine the Packers being quite as dominant on both sides of the football in the red zone, given how inconsistent red zone performance is from year to year. Assigning 6.95 points for a touchdown (given the estimated chances of an extra point) and three for a field goal, last season they scored 5.17 points per red zone trip on offense and allowed 4.41 points each time the opposing offense entered the red zone. Both marks ranked in the top 10 in the league.
If you take the difference between those two performances, you could say that the Packers had a red zone differential of 0.76 points per trip. That was the third-best mark in football a year ago, trailing only the Ravens and Vikings. Go back through 2001, and there are 91 teams that posted a red zone differential greater than 0.6 points per possession. The following season, those teams' average red zone differential was 0.13 points per trip, falling almost all the way to average. They also declined by an average of nearly two full wins over the prior season.
- Division Dominance
From Aaron Schatz's Ranking the Most Likely First to Worst Teams for 2020One other place I'd be worried about the Packers keeping up their 2019 formula is within the NFC North. Rodgers & Co. went 6-0 in the North last season despite outscoring the Bears, Lions and Vikings by a little more than six points per game. Since the NFL went to its current format in 2002, 21 other teams have swept their divisions in a given season. Just one repeated the feat the following year, with those 21 teams averaging 3.3 divisional wins the following campaign. Green Bay's schedule outside the division isn't particularly onerous, but the North should be tougher for them this season.
- DVOA
The Packers were a good team last year, but they were a good team masquerading as a great team. The Packers had the second-lowest DVOA since 1985 for any team that finished 13-3, and finished 10th in the league.
- Point Differential
They had only 9.8 Pythagorean projected wins, based solely on points scored and allowed.
- Close Games
From Football Outsiders' Scramble for the Ball: NFC North Over/UndersGreen Bay finished the regular season 8-1 in one-score games.
- Actual Talent
If Green Bay's brain trust wasn't in love with the receivers, fine -- but why not a defensive tackle, after the Packers' line got run over early and often, most notably against the 49ers in the NFC Championship Game? Why not an inside linebacker -- they were so undermanned there in 2019 they had to basically stick in dime on nearly every snap, and that was before losing Blake Martinez? Why not an offensive lineman to patch up the other guard spot, or to replace the departed Bryan Bulaga? Ricky Wagner and Christian Kirksey do not move the needle for me in any way, shape, or form, so the Packers are really just trying to run back a lesser version of their squad from last season and hope that that's good enough. Davante Adams is basically the entire receiving corps -- Allen Lazard was promising in a small sample size, but that's not something I would be confident about going forward, while offseason pickup Devin Funchess A) is not good, and B) will be sitting the season out anyway. And that's all before we get to the fact that, well, Aaron Rodgers isn't AARON RODGERS anymore. Don't get me wrong, he's still good, and can still make plays that no one else in the league can, but he has lost the every-down consistency that made him one of, if not the, best passer in the league in the early part of last decade.
I feel they've gotten worse in the offseason.
- DVOA
(worth noting that the other author in this piece made a counter-argument for why the team had improved in terms of talent and is more likely to hit 10 wins this year, but that didn't tie in with regression themes).the basic argument is: they weren't as good as their record was last year; their DVOA was more along the lines of a nine- or 10-win team
Conclusions
What we have here is a fairly comprehensive set of traits and achievements from last year that often lead to win-loss regression the following year. DVOA measures team efficiency. So our efficiency wasn't as good as most 13-3 teams, our close games and point differential both indicate that we were a bit lucky to get some of the wins we got and that isn't repeatable, the turnover numbers will be difficult to maintain, and the team was relatively healthy last year. All of these have been shown to have been difficult to maintain from season to season.
Personally, I have long accepted that the team that went 13-3 last year may go 10-6 or 11-5 the next year (or would have gone 10-6 or 11-5 in most years had we a multiverse to play out the season over and over again). That seems reasonable to me.
Of note, only ONE of these columns mentions actual changes in talent (they all do mention the draft but not in a substantive way).At leats one author thinks the team got a little worse last year. Most tend to stick with the general theme that the draft didn't make them tangibly better.
My take on this has been on display all offseason. First, I do not think the 2020 draft will make very many teams tangibly better for most of 2020 given the nature of the offseason. Second, I do believe that AJ Dillon makes us tangibly better late in the year.
Third, the non-draft part:
Personnel Changes:
- EQSB > Allison
- Kirksey > Martinez
- Wagner < Bulaga
- Sterngerger/Tonyan = Graham
Other Potential Improvements
- 2nd year jumps for Gary and Savage
- 2nd year int he MLF offense has historically yielded improved QB play
- Continuity (very few major changes to our personnel and coaching staffs)
In short, I expect the Packers to put a slightly better product on the field next year than last year. However, I totally buy that close game and health luck had a part in our record. I am expecting maybe a 3 game revision toward the mean (since most analytics say the Packers were closer to a 10-win team last year) impact with a 1-game improvement of the team impact netting out to an 11-5 team this year. Those are my expectations.
I'd be interested to see how people feel about the case for regression and the Packers' likelihood or not to weather those storms.