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Just The Sports: 2011-01-30

Just The Sports

Saturday, February 05, 2011

Sam Bradford Does Not Deserve AP Offensive Rookie Of The Year Honors

Like with so many other end of the season awards, the AP voters got it terribly wrong when they gave St. Louis Rams quarterback Sam Bradford their Rookie of the Year award. That Bradford won is bad enough, but that he won in such a landslide with 44 out of a possible 50 votes shows an excruciatingly high level of ignorance from the AP voters.

Based on Bradford's college career, eventually he will be a star NFL quarterback, but that time was definitely not in the 2010 season. In the regular season that just ended, Bradford was one of the worst starting quarterbacks in the NFL by multiple measures.

According to Football Outsiders, of the 48 quarterbacks who attempted at least 100 passes in 2010, Bradford ranked 34th in DYAR, which measures total value, with 81 DYAR and 34th in DVOA, which measures value per play, with a -9.1 percent DVOA.

Bradford's negative DVOA had everything to do with his pathetically low 5.95 yards per pass attempt. Not only did Michael Vick and Jamaal Charles have higher yards per rush averages, 6.8 and 6.4 respectively, but of the 31 qualifying NFL quarterbacks, those who attempted at least 14 pass attempts per team's game, Bradford ranked 30th in yards per pass attempt. Only Jimmy Clausen of the Carolina Panthers was worse.

Bradford's Rookie of the Year candidacy was further weakened by the fact he was not even the best rookie quarterback to play in 2010. Even the most ardent Bradford supporter has to admit that Bradford could not possibly be the best rookie in the NFL if he was not even the best rookie playing his position.

Cleveland Browns quarterback Colt McCoy was superior to Bradford in both total value with 235 DYAR and value per play with a 3.7 percent DVOA. The advantages McCoy holds in those two statistics become even greater when one remembers he appeared in eight fewer games and threw 380 fewer passes (246 to 626) than did Bradford; Football Outsiders count sacks and aborted snaps as passes in addition to regular pass attempts.

Even with 60.7 percent fewer pass attempts, McCoy's quarterbacking was still more valuable than Bradford's.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Williams, who received four of the six votes Bradford did not get, was also unworthy of his Rookie of the Year votes because he was outplayed by a fellow rookie wide receiver.

Colt McCoy's former college teammate, current Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Jordan Shipley, had more total value than Williams with 156 DYAR compared to Williams' 65 DYAR and more value per play with 14.1 percent DVOA to Williams' -6.6 percent DVOA.

Shipley put up those more impressive numbers despite being targeted for 54, or 42.7 percent, fewer passes than Williams (74 to 128).

The true Rookie of the Year was New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski. Gronkowski was more than just a great rookie. He was the second-most productive tight end in the entire NFL in total value with 249 DYAR and the third-most productive tight end in value per play with 53.2 percent DVOA. Only San Diego Chargers tight end Antonio Gates had more total value, and only Antonio Gates and Green Bay Packers tight end Jermichael Finley had more value per play.

Additionally, having Gronkowski on the field made Tom Brady a better quarterback. Gronkowski's dominant play this season is what one should really be looking for when choosing a Rookie of the Year, and the award should be his.

The fact that the AP voters voted for two rookies, Sam Bradford and Mike Williams, who were completely unworthy of them while at the same time completely ignoring the one player, Rob Gronkowski, who most deserved the Rookie of the Year award essentially eliminates all credibility of the honor this season.

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Friday, February 04, 2011

Josh Freeman and Matt Ryan Both Legitimately Improved to Varying Degrees

Although I am on record as doubting that the complete NFL careers of Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Josh Freeman and Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan will justify the first round draft picks used on them, there is no denying that each quarterback improved their play in the 2010 season.

For Freeman, the improvement took place between his rookie year in 2009 and his sophomore campaign in 2010. Freeman's NFL career got off to a pretty rocky start in 2009 in his first nine games as Tampa Bay's primary quarterback, games in which he either attempted the most passes or threw for the most yards for the team.

In those nine games, Freeman played terribly, completing 54.5 percent of his passes, gaining 6.4 yards per pass attempt, gaining 4.3 adjusted yards per pass attempt, gaining 5.8 net yards per pass attempt, gaining 3.8 adjusted net yards per pass attempt, gaining 11.8 yards per completion, throwing 10 touchdowns (3.5 touchdown percentage) to 18 interceptions (6.3 interception percentage), and getting sacked 18 times (5.9 sack percentage).

As a rookie, Freeman struggled with his accuracy, value per pass attempt, and his touchdown to interception ratio, the three most important aspects of a quarterback's play.

Freeman turned all that around during this past season, however, and improved by leaps and bounds over his rookie season. As Tampa Bay's primary quarterback for 16 games in the 2010 season, Freeman completed 61.4 percent of his passes, gained 7.3 yards per pass attempt, gained 7.8 adjusted yards per pass attempt, gained 6.5 net yards per pass attempt, gained 6.9 adjusted net yards per pass attempt, gained 11.9 yards per completion, threw 25 touchdowns (5.3 touchdown percentage) to six interceptions (1.3 interception percentage), and was sacked 28 times (5.6 sack percentage).

Compared to his rookie season, in his second year as a starting quarterback, Freeman experienced a 12.7 percent increase in completion percentage, a 14.1 percent increase in yards per pass attempt, an 81.4 percent increase in adjusted yards per pass attempt, a 12.1 percent increase in net yards per pass attempt, an 81.6 percent increase in adjusted net yards per pass attempt, a .8 percent increase in yards per completion, a 51.4 percent increase in touchdown percentage, a 79.4 percent decrease in interception percentage, and a 5.1 percent decrease in sack percentage.

Freeman's largest improvement came in elevating his touchdown to interception ratio to elite levels, which was then reflected in his adjusted yards per pass attempt and adjusted net yards per pass attempt statistics. He also did a good job of becoming a more accurate passer, and that, in turn, gave him more value per pass.

When faced with an improvement of such incredible proportions, it is always worth seeing how legitimate it was and whether the new level of play will continue into the future without undergoing too much regression.

One way in which to measure the legitimacy of a quarterback's improvement is to compare his statistics to all other primary quarterbacks who faced the same defenses; in the rare cases where one quarterback threw the most pass attempts and another quarterback threw for the most yards, I combined their statistics.

During his rookie season, Freeman was 7.9 percent worse in completion percentage (54.5 percent to 59.2 percent), 8.6 percent worse in yards per pass attempt (6.4 to 7.0), 30.6 percent worse in adjusted yards per pass attempt (4.3 to 6.2), 6.5 percent worse in net yards per pass attempt (5.8 to 6.2), 29.6 percent worse in adjusted net yards per pass attempt (3.8 to 5.4), and 7.9 percent worse at touchdown percentage (3.5 percent to 3.8 percent) than his primary quarterback contemporaries.

Freeman also threw 80.0 percent more interceptions per pass attempt (6.3 interception percentage to 3.5 interception percentage) and was sacked 1.7 percent more times per pass attempt (5.9 sack percentage to 5.8 sack percentage). There was no difference in yards per completion between Freeman and the other primary quarterbacks.

His rookie year looks even worse when you see how much better other primary quarterbacks played when facing the same opponents.

Just like the improvement between his rookie and second year, though, Freeman underwent a similar turnaround in relation to the other primary quarterbacks who faced the same opponents.

In comparison to the other primary quarterbacks for the 2010 season, Freeman was 4.3 percent better in yards per pass attempt (7.3 to 7.0), 20.0 percent better in adjusted yards per pass attempt (7.8 to 6.5), 4.8 percent better in net yards per pass attempt (6.5 to 6.2), 21.1 percent better in adjusted net yards per pass attempt (6.9 to 5.7), 4.4 percent better in yards per completion (11.9 to 11.4), 35.6 percent better at touchdown percentage (5.3 percent to 3.9 percent), 56.7 percent better at avoiding interceptions per pass attempt (1.3 percent to 3.0 percent), and 1.8 percent better at avoiding sacks per pass attempt (5.6 percent to 5.7 percent).

Identically to the advantage his sophomore season holds over his rookie season, Freeman was much better than the other primary quarterbacks in touchdown to interception ratio. The statistically significant differences between Freeman and the other primary quarterbacks in adjusted yards per pass attempt and adjusted net yards per pass attempt were a direct result of that ratio.

Freeman was not so much better than the other primary quarterbacks in all areas, however, as his completion percentage was .8 percent worse than the other primary quarterbacks' (61.4 percent to 61.9 percent). The other primary quarterbacks certainly benefited from throwing shorter passes as measured by yards per completion, but even taking that into account, Freeman simply hasn't shown any consistently great accuracy over his first two NFL seasons. He is still very much ordinary in that category even with his improvement.

Just how important Freeman's improvement in his touchdown to interception ratio was to his 2010 season is further reflected by the fact that among the 31 qualifying quarterbacks, those who attempted at least 14 passes per their team's games, he ranked 17th in completion percentage, 13th in yards per pass attempt, and sixth in quarterback rating.

If he had not had so much success throwing touchdowns while avoiding interceptions, his quarterback rating would not be nearly so high.

Whether or not Freeman continues to be a productive quarterback seems to have everything to do with that one ratio. If he is unable to maintain it, then his effectiveness will decrease to average quarterback levels.

Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan also experienced improvements, but to a much lesser degree than Freeman. In Ryan's case, his improvement came between his second season in 2009 and his third season in 2010.

Ryan's 2009 season was the very definition of sophomore slump. After a surprisingly good rookie season, at least in terms of yards per pass attempt (7.9), in 2009 during his 13 games as Atlanta's primary quarterback, Ryan completed a measly 58.3 percent of his passes, gained 6.5 yards per pass attempt, gained 6.1 adjusted yards per pass attempt, gained 6.0 net yards per pass attempt, gained 5.6 adjusted net yards per pass attempt, gained 11.1 yards per completion, threw 22 touchdowns (4.9 touchdown percentage) to 14 interceptions (3.1 interception percentage), and was sacked 18 times (3.9 sack percentage).

During his 2010 season, Ryan completed 62.5 percent of his passes, gained 6.5 yards per pass attempt, gained 6.8 adjusted yards per pass attempt, gained 6.0 adjusted yards per pass attempt, gained 6.2 yards per pass attempt, gained 10.4 yards per pass attempt, threw 28 touchdowns (4.9 touchdown percentage) to nine interceptions (1.6 interception percentage), and was sacked 23 times (3.9 sack percentage).

Only in avoiding throwing interceptions did Ryan truly get better from 2009 to 2010 as he experienced a 48.4 percent decrease in his interception percentage; therefore, he also experienced an 11.5 percent increase in his adjusted yards per pass attempt and a 10.7 percent increase in his adjusted net yards per pass attempt.

His increase in completion percentage (7.2 percent increase) was made almost entirely illegitimate by the fact it came at the expense of his yards per completion average that decreased by 6.3 percent. Even with the higher completion percentage, Ryan still did not have a higher yards per pass attempt.

Neither did Ryan improve in his net yards per pass attempt, touchdown percentage, or sack percentage. It was only a small improvement that Ryan underwent.

Against the other primary quarterbacks in 2009 that faced the same opponents, Ryan was 3.2 percent worse in completion percentage (58.3 percent to 60.2 percent), 5.8 percent worse in yards per pass attempt (6.5 to 6.9), 1.6 percent worse in adjusted yards per pass attempt (6.1 to 6.2), 1.6 percent worse in net yards per pass attempt (6.0 to 6.1), 3.7 percent better in adjusted net yards per pass attempt (5.6 to 5.4), 3.5 percent worse in yards per completion (11.1 to 11.5), 28.9 percent better in touchdown percentage (4.9 percent to 3.8 percent), 6.1 percent better at avoiding interceptions per pass attempt (3.1 interception percentage to 3.3 interception percentage), and 38.1 percent better at avoiding sacks per pass attempt (3.9 sack percentage to 6.3 sack percentage).

Ryan was superior to the other primary quarterbacks in only two aspects, his touchdown to interception ratio and his ability to keep from being sacked. For a supposedly up and coming elite quarterback, Ryan certainly did not play like it in 2009.

He did not exactly play like it in 2010, either, in relation to the other primary quarterbacks. In this past season, Ryan was 4.0 percent better in completion percentage (62.5 percent to 60.1 percent), 5.8 percent worse in yards per pass attempt (6.5 to 6.9), 7.9 percent better in adjusted yards per pass attempt (6.8 to 6.3), 1.6 percent worse in net yards per pass attempt (6.0 to 6.1), 12.7 percent better in adjusted net yards per pass attempt (6.2 to 5.5), 9.6 percent worse in yards per completion (10.4 to 11.5), 22.5 percent better in touchdown percentage (4.9 percent to 4.0 percent), 50.0 percent better at avoiding interceptions per pass attempt (1.6 interception percentage to 3.2 interception percentage), and 35.0 percent better at avoiding sacks per pass attempt (3.9 sack percentage to 6.0 sack percentage).

The 2010 season was definitely a mixed bag for Ryan. Even though he increased his completion percentage, he paid for it with his dreadfully low yards per pass attempt and yards per completion, meaning he got ripped off in the transaction.

Ryan's yards per pass attempt was so poor that among the 31 qualified NFL quarterbacks, he ranked 27th in that category. Once again, there is mounting evidence that the hype surrounding Ryan does not truly equal the production on the field.

What saved Ryan's season from his disappointing basic passing statistics were his touchdown to interception ratio and the lack of sacks he took. Like Freeman, he will have to rely heavily upon that ratio to continue having success in the NFL. If he is unable to keep it at the level he reached in 2010, he will be doomed to be a below-average quarterback because he has nothing else in his repertoire to make up for it.

While Freeman and Ryan both improved in the 2010 season, they have still not improved enough to outperform their college statistics, which is the main reason why I never believed they would be star quarterbacks in the NFL. It also reinforces just how important a quarterback's college statistics are to the play in the NFL.

While at Kansas State University, in games in which he was primary quarterback, Freeman completed 59.5 percent of his passes and gained 7.0 yards per pass attempt. In the NFL in his time as Tampa Bay's primary quarterback, he has completed 58.8 percent of his passes and gained 7.0 yards per pass attempt. There is no statistically significant difference between the two data sets.

Ryan's statistics tell a similar story. In his games as Boston College's primary quarterback, he completed 59.6 percent of his passes and gained 6.9 yards per pass attempt. For the Atlanta Falcons, in his games as primary quarterback, he has completed 60.8 percent of his passes and gained 6.9 yards per pass attempt. Again, there is no statistically significant difference between the two data sets.

Going forward, we should all be keeping an eye on both Freeman's and Ryan's touchdown to interception ratios because it will be those ratios that provide the most information about how successful they are being in the NFL. They are certainly not going to be able to rely on their completion percentages or yards per pass attempt averages as truly elite quarterbacks would.

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Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Los Angeles Lakers Strongest, Boston Celtics Most Susceptible In Back To Back Games

Grinding out back to back games is the most grueling aspect of an NBA season, and performance in back to back games provides an excellent barometer for determining which teams are the most consistently dominant.

When it comes to back to back games, most teams perform much better in one game over the other; sometimes it is the first game and sometimes it is the second. It is extremely difficult to play well on consecutive nights, but the teams who manage to do so are the wheat that has separated themselves from the chaff that is the rest of the NBA.

Of the 16 teams I examined, the eight Eastern Conference and eight Western Conference teams that would qualify for the playoffs if the season ended today, only seven of the teams (Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls, Miami Heat, Orlando Magic, Los Angeles Lakers, Dallas Mavericks, and New Orleans Hornets) have managed to outscore their opponents per 100 possessions on both nights of their back to back games.

Not all of those seven teams are created equally, though. Very good teams are those who can outscore their opponents by 100 possessions on consecutive nights, but the teams that have the consistent dominance of an elite team are the ones who can perform that feat with no significant drop-off in their performances.

In the Eastern Conference, two teams, the Miami Heat and the Chicago Bulls, qualify as the most consistently dominant squads in back to back contests.

The Heat have outscored opponents by 8.5 points per 100 possessions in the first game and by 7.0 points per 100 possessions in the second game. Not only are the Heat handily beating their opponents on both nights, but there is only a difference of 1.5 points per 100 possessions between how they play in back to back games, displaying a high level of consistently excellent play.

The Bulls have also shown themselves to be a consistently elite team in back to back games, although to a slightly lesser extent than the Heat. In their 14 back to back games, the Bulls have outscored their opponents by 5.7 points per 100 possessions in the first game and by 6.9 points per 100 possessions in the second.

While the Eastern Conference is home to the Heat and the Bulls, which are two of the top three NBA teams in back to back games, it is also home to the most Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde of all the 16 playoff-bound teams, the Boston Celtics.

Surprisingly, since the Celtics are universally agreed upon to be a championship-caliber team and have the best record in the Eastern Conference with 37 wins and 11 losses, they are the ones with the highest difference between their performances in back to back games, a difference of 13.8 points per 100 possessions. In the first games, the Celtics have outscored their foes by 14.3 points per 100 possessions, but on the second night of back to back games, they are only beating opponents by 0.5 points per 100 possessions.

The Celtics are unbeatable on the first night, but very susceptible to defeat whenever they are having to play their second game in a row. Therefore, no NBA team should fear the Celtics provided the Celtics played just the night before. Under that condition, the Celtics are no better than a .500 team.

Both the Atlanta Hawks and the Orlando Magic are two Eastern Conference teams that also have a difference of more than 10.0 points per 100 possessions between their play in back to back games.

The Hawks have a difference of 12.0 points per 100 possessions between their back to back games, being outscored by 4.4 points per 100 possessions in the first game and outscoring their opponents by 7.6 points per 100 possessions in the second game.

For the Magic, there is a drop-off of 10.2 points per 100 possessions between their back to back games. The Magic outscore their opponents by 11.4 points per 100 possessions in the first contest and only by 1.2 points per 100 possessions in the second. As impressive as the performances in their first games have been, there is a troubling lack of consistency when they have to play the next night.

In the Western Conference, the Los Angeles Lakers are not just the best Western Conference team in back to back games, but they are the best in the NBA in their back to back performances.

The Los Angeles Lakers have outscored their foes by 13.1 points per 100 possessions on the first night of back to back games, second only to the Boston Celtics in first game performances, and have outscored their opponents by 7.7 points per 100 possessions in the second game, second to no one.

For all the criticism heaped upon the Lakers, criticism that only rings true if one is talking about the complete lack of production from the point guard position, they are still elite.

The San Antonio Spurs, which appear elite based on the fact they hold the best record in the NBA this season with a 40-8 mark, are decidedly un-elite in back to back games, placing them squarely in the same boat with the Boston Celtics as a team that is not dominant across all aspects of the game.

In the first games of back to back contests, the Spurs have outscored their opponents by 9.2 points per 100 possessions, but have been outscored by 1.1 points per 100 possessions whenever called upon to play the next day. That difference of 10.3 points per 100 possessions makes the Spurs one of the most inconsistent NBA teams in back to back games, a distinction that certainly tarnishes their stellar record just a bit.

Comfort for the Spurs can be found in knowing that they are not the most inconsistent Western Conference team in back to back games, however. The award for that dubious honor goes to the Utah Jazz with a difference of 12.3 points per 100 possessions between their back to back games. The Jazz are outscored by an astounding 11.4 points per 100 possessions in the first game and manage to just outscore their opponents by .9 points per 100 possessions in the second.

Poor performances in back to back games will not affect the Celtics and Spurs once they reach the postseason, but with seven sets of back to back games left for the Celtics and 10 sets of back to back games left for the Spurs, it could very well play a huge role in deciding seeding in the playoffs and which team receives the ultimate prize of homecourt advantage.

If at the end of the season the Heat or the Bulls sit atop the Eastern Conference and the Lakers have the best record in the Western Conference, it should not be surprising if back to back games are what allow them to overtake the Celtics and Spurs.

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Monday, January 31, 2011

Colin Kaepernick's NFL Draft Prospects: The Prestige of Colin Kaepernick

Nothing does revisionist history or illusion quite like college football's Senior Bowl. In the span of one week that is filled with a handful of practices and one meaningless game, the Senior Bowl can make four years of actual play on the field in meaningful games vanish into thin air and can turn a middling college quarterback like former University of Nevada-Reno's Colin Kaepernick into the next great thing.

However, to paraphrase Cutter from The Prestige, the Senior Bowl's trick in making an ordinary player's talent level look extraordinary by making his college past disappear is only the first two parts of any great magic trick. Since making something disappear is not enough, eventually you have to bring it back, which brings us to the third act, or the prestige, of this trick.

For this particular illusion, the prestige of Kaepernick involves reminding people of the real Kaepernick before they think that the hype and buzz surrounding Kaepernick's abilities is an accurate representation of him as a quarterback.

Last season for the Nevada Wolfpack, Kaepernick completed 64.9 percent of his passes, gained 8.4 yards per pass attempt, gained 13.0 yards per completion, and threw 21 touchdown passes (5.8 touchdown percentage) to eight interceptions (2.2 interception percentage). If Kaepernick had put up numbers like that consistently across his four years at Nevada, then he would be a bonafide NFL quarterback prospect worthy of being drafted, but in his other three seasons, he never came close to having a season like he did his senior year.

In his freshman season, Kaepernick was Nevada's primary quarterback for nine games, games in which he either attempted the most passes or threw for the most passing yards for the Wolfpack. During those nine games, Kaepernick completed 54.4 percent of his passes, gained 9.0 yards per pass attempt, and threw 19 touchdowns (7.9 touchdown percentage) to two interceptions (.8 interception percentage).

The reason for Kaepernick's extremely high yards per pass attempt average was due to the 16.5 yards he averaged per completion, but because of his low completion percentage, he was a boom-or-bust quarterback his freshman year, thereby reducing his passing efficiency.

For his sophomore season, Kaepernick played in 13 games as Nevada's primary quarterback and completed 54.3 percent of his passes, gained 7.4 yards per pass attempt, and threw 22 touchdowns (5.7 touchdown percentage) to seven interceptions (1.8 interception percentage).

Even though Kaepernick was throwing shorter passes his sophomore season with 13.7 yards per completion, he could still not improve upon his completion percentage from his freshman season.

While playing in 13 games as Nevada's primary quarterback in his junior season, Kaepernick completed 58.9 percent of his passes, gained 7.3 yards per attempt, and threw 20 touchdowns (7.1 touchdown percentage) to six interceptions (2.1 interception percentage).

It took Kaepernick's yards per completion dropping to 12.4, meaning he was throwing shorter and easier to complete passes, before his completion percentage could increase.

As you can see, Kaepernick increased his completion percentage, somewhat artificially, each year from his sophomore season to his junior season and his junior season to his senior campaign, but he started out with such a low completion percentage that even with the improvements, he can still be described as nothing more than a quarterback with average accuracy at best.

For Kaepernick's career as Nevada's primary quarterback, he completed 58.3 percent of his 1,265 passes, gained 8.0 yards per pass attempt, gained 13.7 yards per completion, and threw 82 touchdowns (6.5 touchdown percentage) to 23 interceptions (1.8 interception percentage).

Although not exactly a dangerous passer in college, Kaepernick was very dangerous as a runner, averaging 6.9 yards per pass attempt; as always, remember that sacks in college count against a quarterback's rushing totals. He was also great at keeping his interceptions to a minimum; it is too bad he could not keep his incomplete passes to the same minimum.

Although Kaepernick's entire career was unexceptional, NFL teams might fall victim to recency effect, where the most recently presented items are remembered best, and overrate what Kaepernick did in his senior season, which was his best overall season in college. However, they should understand what an outlier of a season that was for Kaepernick.

In an effort to find out which season of Kaepernick's four years in college was most representative of his true talent level in completion percentage, I separated each season and compared it to the other three seasons.

There were only two seasons that were statistically significantly different from the other three. The first season was his freshman year, where his completion percentage was 54.4 percent, which barely qualified as being statistically significantly different from his other three seasons where he combined to complete 59.3 percent of his passes.

The other season was his senior one, the one in which his completion percentage was 64.9 percent, where there was absolutely no doubt that it was statistically significantly different from his other seasons where he combined to complete just 55.7 percent of his passes. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that Kaepernick would ever be able to complete 64.9 percent of his passes in the NFL over the course of his career.

It was Kaepernick's junior season that painted the most accurate portrait of his accuracy, or lack thereof. Kaepernick's junior completion percentage of 58.9 percent was almost identical to his 58.2 completion percentage in his other three seasons. That is the quarterback an NFL team will be getting if one chooses to draft Kaepernick, and it is a quarterback who does not possess the kind of accuracy that will translate to success in the NFL.

All NFL teams should be wary of the small sample size that one week provides in judging in whom to invest millions. The best method of judging a player's pro potential is to look at his entire college career because that will allow a team to have the most information possible about a player. When one does that for Kaepernick, one discovers that the real Kaepernick is an inaccurate passer, who is destined to struggle in the NFL and whose best season in college was a statistical outlier and unreliable in predicting his future going forward.

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