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Great Article about why SD may win this weekend.

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  • Great Article about why SD may win this weekend.

    SD's baby-blueprint for victory

    Cold, Hard Football Facts for January 17, 2008


    (Ed. Note: the author and Chief Troll will join Dennis & Callahan on WEEI 850 AM in Boston Friday at 7:20 a.m. to discuss San Diego’s blueprint to beat New England.)

    By Kerry J. Byrne
    Cold, Hard Football Facts Mike Brady wanna-be

    New England’s opponents this year – not to mention the pigskin “pundits” – have turned into amateur architects over the past few months, searching for the proverbial blueprint to beat the Patriots.

    So far the effort has gone as well as O.J.’s quest for the real killers.

    The best any team has been able to produce is a blueprint for remaining competitive midway through the fourth quarter. And that blueprint makes for a rickety row-house on Victory Lane.

    The best the “pundits” have produced are a list of meaningless and misguided clichés about “aging” linebackers or a “vulnerable” defense. And that argument is imploded by the dynamite of actual evidence. The Patriots, for example, surrendered 288.3 YPG this season, the fewest by a New England team since 1979, while giving up just 8.4 second-half points per game (despite surrendering a lot of garbage-time points while sporting large second-half leads).

    But leave it to the I.M. Pei of pigskin, the Cold, Hard Football Facts, to secure the necessary blueprints for beating New England.

    The blueprint we uncovered tells us that if any team can complete the job, it’s the Chargers. Let’s call it San Diego’s baby-blueprint to beat New England, in honor of the pigskin-pastel of their alternative togs.

    Despite their slow start, the Chargers proved to be one of the most statistically dominant teams in the NFL this year. If you size them across the board in our Quality Stats, only New England and Green Bay were stronger, and the margin between the three was so slim that O.J.’s buddies use it to jimmy open doors in Vegas hotel rooms.

    * The Patriots ranked an average of 4.44 in our nine Quality Stats
    * The Packers ranked an average of 4.56 in our nine Quality Stats
    * The Chargers ranked an average of 4.67 in our nine Quality Stats

    The Chargers topped the entire NFL in three of our nine Quality Stats. Only New England itself led the league in more categories (four).

    San Diego’s statistical dominance offers us a pretty definitive guide to why the Chargers can beat the Patriots. We didn’t say will beat the Patriots; we said can beat the Patriots.

    And, certainly, the injuries to key San Diego players Philip Rivers, Antonio Gates and LaDainian Tomlinson (none of whom practiced Wednesday), can shatter the best-laid plans. But if the Chargers do win, only the Cold, Hard Football Facts will have outlined the pattern ahead of time.

    Baby-blueprint: San Diego boasts the best pass defense in football
    The Cold, Hard Football Facts measure pass defenses by Defensive Passer Rating, a “Quality Stat” because it has a direct correlation to winning football games: the top 11 teams in Defensive Passer Rating this year all reached the playoffs.

    And the Chargers topped the list, allowing opposing passers a 70.0 rating this year. Their capabilities were most evident in their league-leading 30 picks, eight more than any other team in football. The 2007 Chargers are the first team in franchise history to lead the league in either category, let alone both.

    The Cold, Hard Football Facts have proven time and again the devestating effect of interceptions in the playoffs. Teams that throw 0 INTs have won 78.6 of their playoff games in the Super Bowl Era. Teams that throw two or more picks in the playoffs win just 23.5 percent of the time.

    We’ve yet to see anybody truly shutdown Tom Brady’s passing attack this year. And, of course, he absolutely shredded San Diego in their first meeting back in Week 2:

    * 25 of 31 (80.6%) for 279 yards, 9.0 YPA, 3 TD, 1 INT, 123.0 passer rating.

    But these lightning Bolts need only strike once. And if any team in football this year has a shot at humbling New England’s historic attack, it’s San Diego.

    Baby-blueprint: San Diego is the top Big Play team in football
    The Cold, Hard Football Facts measure each team in its ability to make “Big Plays” on both sides of the ball.

    Most NFL contests are wars of attrition in which one or two Big Plays typically prove the difference between victory and defeat (our definition of “Big Plays” can be found here). Our Big Play Index is a hugely important indicator with a high correlation to winning football games.

    Teams that won the Big Play battle this year were a remarkable 180-34 (.841). (Forty-two games featured an even Big Play battle.)

    And no team was better in the Big Play wars this year than San Diego. The Chargers led the league in the number of Big Plays they made (69), eight more than second-place Minnesota. More importantly, the Chargers led the league in Big Play differential (+29), two ahead of second place New England.

    All those interceptions, long runs and explosive special teams plays add up to a lot of game-winning moments for the Chargers.

    But the Patriots certainly pose a difficult Big Play challenge. They allowed just 28 Big Plays, fewest in the NFL this year.

    Baby-blueprint: San Diego is the most efficient team in football
    The Cold, Hard Football Facts measure the efficiency of each team’s offense and defense through our Scoreability and Bendability Indices. These Quality Stats have a high correlation to victory because they do not measure offenses and defenses in a vacuum. Instead, they measure how each unit on a team interacts to 1) put points on the board or 2) keep opponents off the scoreboard.

    In other words, they are measures of team-wide efficiency.

    And no team rated more highly than the Chargers: they defined the “bend-but-don’t break” phenomenon on defense this year, with a No. 1 ranking in our Bendability Index. And they were second only to New England in our Scoreability Index. (It's actually quite a tribute to the widely-criticized Norv Turner that his team played so efficiently in 2007; poorly coached teams never rate highly in these indicators.)

    The San Diego defense this year forced opponents to march 18.04 Yards Per Point Scored, or the equivalent of a daunting 126.3 yards for every 7 points they put on the board. It tells us that opponents churned up a lot of empty yards against the Chargers.

    The 30 INTs were certainly a big reason why. And the win over Indy last week provided a perfect example of this “bend-don’t-break” efficiency: the Colts cranked out 446 yards of offense, including 402 in the air. But they produced a measly 24 points – a pathetic number relative to the yards they generated. Two red-zone picks by San Diego were a big reason for Indy's lack of efficiency on offense.

    The San Diego offense, meanwhile, was highly efficient throughout the year. The Chargers needed just 12.24 Yards Per Point Scored in 2007, or the equivalent 85.7 yards for every 7 points they put on the board. It tells us that the Chargers often find themselves in good scoring position, and then take advantage of those opportunities.

    And we don’t want to get any of those “yeah, but” emails that these arguments about scoring efficiency always generate. Yes, special teams and defense have played a large role in San Diego’s scoring opportunities. Yes, we understand that argument. Yes, we understand that other teams were more spectacular on offense, if you compare only the production of those individual offenses.

    But that’s the point, folks. The scoreboard does not care where the points come from. The scoreboad does not care that a big kick return gave the offense a short field. The scoreboard does not care if points came off a pick-six instead of a long offensive drive. The scoreboard is a truly egalitarian place: it treats all points equally. And so should football fans.

    San Diego’s ability to score efficiently, paired with the most efficient defense in football this year – the one defense that makes opponents work harder than any other to put points on the board – spell out one very dangerous team.

    It's a team that clearly offers a blueprint to topple the Patriots powerhouse.

  • #2


    SOBER SINCE MARCH 28TH OF 2007!!!

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Chado1



      Guees this what I will be doing when I take my girl out with your money!

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by thaikarate1
        Guees this what I will be doing when I take my girl out with your money!
        If only this article could convert into reality...
        SOBER SINCE MARCH 28TH OF 2007!!!

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        • #5
          You can certainly make a case for SD to cover the spread. NE defense is showing its age. The NE offense carries the team and SD will need to score a bunch and control clock.


          The play I like is NE on the moneyline, then back it up with the Chargers to cover. Refs will do whatever it takes to make sure it happens, same goes for Green Bay. Don't think for a minute the NFL does not want to see a NE vs GB superbowl. $$$$$$$$$ The fix will be in baby.
          NBA is a joke

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          • #6
            This may work on my xbox 360 playing Madden 2008, but I'm not sure this piece of fiction will fly anywhere else. There is no way barring a massive sickness in the Pats locker room that will keep this game close.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by TheRook
              This may work on my xbox 360 playing Madden 2008, but I'm not sure this piece of fiction will fly anywhere else. There is no way barring a massive sickness in the Pats locker room that will keep this game close.

              You too huh? Guess I am the loner here.

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              • #8
                I got a feeling thaikarate is rooting for a SD win...

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by thaikarate1
                  You too huh? Guess I am the loner here.

                  I think anything is possible and anything can happen.

                  But me being the conspiricy theriost here......there is no way on god's green earth that the NFL wants a SD/GB or a SD/NYG superbowl. I really don't think they want a NE/NYG Superbowl.

                  They may cover....But I doubt it.

                  Not being an ass, cause I know it's your team....I just can't see it happening. I've been through this when Jordan was with the Bulls.....it's all about the ratings.

                  If I'm proven wrong...I will be the FIRST person on here to say I was wrong.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by TheRook
                    This may work on my xbox 360 playing Madden 2008, but I'm not sure this piece of fiction will fly anywhere else. There is no way barring a massive sickness in the Pats locker room that will keep this game close.

                    I cant even beat people that use the Pats when I play Madden online let alone what will happen in real life...
                    SOBER SINCE MARCH 28TH OF 2007!!!

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                    • #11
                      Don't worry Thai I felt similar when Jax was playing them last week. I was all over the ML and cover on that!
                      This game presents issues- one is Moss is back in the news and as before everyone speaks as if its a family and then come back and deal with- Moss should be grateful but he will be 6 figures down to this 11 year friend.
                      On the other hand- SD has health issues but poses a solid defense against the pass which was Jax issue. (I am convince we need a speedy receiver, a linebacker, and another safety- just taller with more verticle leap.
                      Anyway- best of luck to the Bolts. If healthy they will give the Pats all they can handle!
                      "The range of what we think and do is limited by what we fail to notice.

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                      • #12


                        Fuck you Philip Rivers sandiego gets a fucking beatdown

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by jason18


                          Fuck you Philip Rivers sandiego gets a fucking beatdown

                          Damn Jason, Didin't know you have a thing for the guy!

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                          • #14
                            Also just to let you know. the guy is married to his Middle school sweetheart. Have 4 children and still taking care of them while in college.

                            He may smack talk during the game. But outside, I think he should admired!
                            Last edited by thaikarate1; 01-17-2008, 06:08 PM.

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                            • #15
                              Mark my words guys. You can tell and you can just feel it up here. This Randy Moss issue is a BAD thing for S.D. not N.E.

                              This team is using this and they are rallying around it for Moss. Last time somebody was in the news, it was Belichick and that too was before the 1st S.D. game. Don't think for a minute that the Moss situation is going to hurt N.E. because it isn't. They feed off this shit .........

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