Pckfn23 wrote: ↑20 Oct 2021 11:16
Yoop wrote: ↑20 Oct 2021 11:12
lets not mix words OK, PFR records data they determine to be accurate, same as PFF, same as Andy Herman all determine if a pass rush is a hurry, all determine if a DB is charged with missing a tackle, same with other stats they record
PFF and Andy Herman try to grade each player on every play. PFR does not do this.
Yeah, PFR does no grading at all. Even their Career AV comes from a mathematical formula based on the stats.
The only "subjective" things PFR has are some of their "Advanced stats", like hurries and knockdowns, and that data PFR gets from Sportsradar who do break film down to produce these advanced stats, and have to evaluate things like whether a play counts as a hurry and who gets credited with a knockdown.
PFR's oft-misunderstood "pressure" stat is simply hurries+knockdowns+sacks (almost). What's so confusing about that stat is that both solo sacks and half sacks count as one pressure. So if a player has many half sacks, it can look like he has more pressures than simply summing up his hurries+knockdowns+sacks.
PFF, Andy Herman and others who do subjective evaluation have different criteria as to what counts as a pressure, whether sacks are included in pressures or are a separate thing, etc, so their numbers are gonna differ from PFR's. And they actually grade players, which is obviously subjective.
The point of grading is different from assigning stats to players. For example, if Alexander has PERFECT coverage, and the QB doesn't throw his way, it does not show up in any way in stats, but it will in grades. Same for Clark tying up and pushing back two defenders and allowing someone else get a stat. Same for a WR getting wide open with a sick release, but QB not seeing him. Or a DB getting embarrassed, being saved by a quick pressure. A gimme INT off deflection is worth the same in stats than a sick athletic INT in 1-1 coverage on a deep pass, but a grader can give the latter play a higher grade.
That's why PFR has a different use for me than the grading ones. Stats get better the more data there is. They can tell the tale of a player's career real well (like AR's TD to INT -ratio), but they do not tell the full tale of one game.
And both stats and grade are just tools to help give ideas and to help the poor eyeballs that can't see everything in a game.