For Lane's era = 49.6% completion percentageJuggernautJ wrote:JohnTurney wrote:
Do you happen to know the QB completion percentage from similar dates?
For Sherman's = 61.9%
For Lane's era = 49.6% completion percentageJuggernautJ wrote:JohnTurney wrote:
Do you happen to know the QB completion percentage from similar dates?
Thank you, John.JohnTurney wrote:For Lane's era = 49.6% completion percentageJuggernautJ wrote:JohnTurney wrote:
Do you happen to know the QB completion percentage from similar dates?
For Sherman's = 61.9%
There is a weird mathematical relationship between league completion percentage and league interception percentage that has held up throughout since 1933. If you take the end of the season passing stats for the league for each season (NFL, AFL or AAFC), and graph Y=C+2.3*I, where C is the league completion percentage and I is the league interception percentage for any given season, Y always stays in a range between .6 and .7, and has only been outside that range three times. In 85 percent of all seasons, C has remained between .63 and .68. As completion percentage increases by 2.3 percentage points, interception percentage has to decrease by one percentage point in order to keep it steady. I know this sounds strange, but if you check this out you will find this to be true.JohnTurney wrote:JuggernautJ wrote:That's a pretty amazing statistical difference.JohnTurney wrote: Anyway, from 1952-65 6.2% of the passes were picked off
From 2011-2017 2.6% of the passes have been picked off
Do you happen to know the QB completion percentage from similar dates?
I bet it would be similarly different.
I can get that... but yes, completion percentage has skyrocketed...
Wow, that's really amazing!Rupert Patrick wrote: There is a weird mathematical relationship between league completion percentage and league interception percentage that has held up throughout since 1933. If you take the end of the season passing stats for the league for each season (NFL, AFL or AAFC), and graph Y=C+2.3*I, where C is the league completion percentage and I is the league interception percentage for any given season, Y always stays in a range between .6 and .7, and has only been outside that range three times. In 85 percent of all seasons, C has remained between .63 and .68. As completion percentage increases by 2.3 percentage points, interception percentage has to decrease by one percentage point in order to keep it steady. I know this sounds strange, but if you check this out you will find this to be true.