A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about interceptions per incompletion, or POPIP. In that article I showed how a player’s completion percentage is a better predictor of his future interception rate than his actual interception rate. And in this article by Brian Burke, one comment stuck with me:
Griffin has thrown deep, defined as attempts of greater than 15 yards through the air, on only 13% of his attempts, 30th among league quarterbacks. This is also likely the largest factor in his very low interception rate.
That makes sense — quarterbacks throwing short, safe passes should throw fewer interceptions. But this statement is a more important one than you might originally think, thanks to some great research by Mike Clay.
Clay came up with a metric he calls ‘aDOT’ — average depth of target — which measures exactly what you think it does. For each targeted or aimed pass, Pro Football Focus tracks how far from the line of scrimmage the intended target is. What’s makes this stat particularly appealing to me is that it’s very predictable as far as football statistics go. That’s not all that surprising because aDOT is based on a large sample of plays and basically frames how an offense operates.
Clay posted the 10 passers with the largest and smallest aDOT in 2011, which I’ve reproduced below. Note that there are some passes — spikes, throwaways, passes tipped at the line (these are grouped together as ‘other’) — with no target, and therefore are excluded when calculating aDOT. In the far right column, I’ve shown how the player’s aDOT compares to the league average rate of 8.8.
Passer | Yr | Att | Aim | Other | aDOT | lgAVG |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tim Tebow | 2011 | 318 | 286 | 32 | 13.3 | 151% |
Vince Young | 2011 | 114 | 111 | 3 | 11.6 | 131% |
Jason Campbell | 2011 | 165 | 151 | 14 | 10.5 | 119% |
Matt Moore | 2011 | 347 | 328 | 19 | 10.4 | 118% |
Carson Palmer | 2011 | 328 | 312 | 16 | 10.3 | 117% |
Eli Manning | 2011 | 752 | 698 | 54 | 10.1 | 114% |
Cam Newton | 2011 | 517 | 494 | 23 | 10 | 113% |
Joe Flacco | 2011 | 605 | 568 | 37 | 9.8 | 111% |
Ben Roethlisberger | 2011 | 553 | 529 | 24 | 9.8 | 110% |
Chad Henne | 2011 | 112 | 102 | 10 | 9.7 | 110% |
T.J. Yates | 2011 | 189 | 171 | 18 | 9.6 | 109% |
Matt Hasselbeck | 2011 | 518 | 490 | 28 | 8.3 | 94% |
Drew Brees | 2011 | 763 | 730 | 33 | 8.2 | 93% |
Blaine Gabbert | 2011 | 413 | 381 | 32 | 8.1 | 92% |
Alex Smith | 2011 | 513 | 463 | 50 | 8.1 | 91% |
Tony Romo | 2011 | 522 | 497 | 25 | 8.1 | 91% |
Ryan Fitzpatrick | 2011 | 569 | 544 | 25 | 8 | 90% |
Donovan McNabb | 2011 | 156 | 145 | 11 | 7.9 | 89% |
Colt McCoy | 2011 | 463 | 434 | 29 | 7.8 | 88% |
Tyler Palko | 2011 | 135 | 127 | 8 | 7.4 | 84% |
Josh Freeman | 2011 | 551 | 519 | 32 | 7.4 | 83% |