My issue is that sometimes with those trying to show a guy belongs in the Hall of Fame based on stat studies, it ends up not being much film work or any film work at all.bachslunch wrote:Fair enough, and thanks for explaining.
Only one quibble. I'm not sure the folks who are doing this kind of analysis have an ax to grind. My guess is that they devised their systems in ways that make the most sense, and they just happen to show results with Anderson near the top of the heap. I have a suspicion that Anderson may have been better than many folks think, which is the purpose and beauty of approaches like this -- as I said elsewhere, he's definitely a stathead's darling, at least as far as regular season play is concerned. YMMV of course, depending on what one values in a QB.
In baseball, it has helped show how good players such as Bert Blyleven and Bobby Grich were, which fortunately was enough to get the former enshrined in the BBHoF.
To use one fictitious game as an example, let's suppose the two quarterbacks produced these stats in a 27-21 game-
QB of losing team- 22 of 29 for 199 yards, 2 TDs, 0 INTs
QB of winning team- 14 of 29 for 245 yards, 3 TDs, 2 INTs
The quarterback of the losing team, stats-wise, seems like Ken Anderson. The other quarterback seems more like Joe Namath or Bobby Layne. I bet film work would probably show the quarterback of the winning team was making tougher throws and probably looked better overall.
My point here is more interceptions are not always bad and a worse completion percentage is also not always bad.
I think we would all agree Anderson was pretty efficient and his completion percentage sparkled compared to his contemporaries. It just can't be all stats, though, as to why Anderson should be inducted. I have come across many old preview magazines from the 1970s and 1980s. Rarely, if ever, did I see Anderson rated in the top 5 quarterbacks. Maybe a couple times in the early 1980s it happened.
I try to take into consideration film, stats, comparison to contemporaries, testimonials, etc. Anderson falls a tad short for me.
I am with John Turney. I've sort of had it with the quarterbacks. I believe the ones who belong in are already in. If Ken Anderson remains the best quarterback not in, then that is fine. If he gets in, then there will be some replacement for him who we will be discussing left and right for a couple decades.