You might not have seen Thursday Night Football this week.
Maybe you had plans to go out. Maybe you chose to watch NBA basketball. Maybe you just didn’t want to watch the Titans play the Jaguars.
If that’s the case, maybe you did just check the box score and look at Blake Bortles’ statistics, and maybe you were actually impressed with what you saw: 33 completions on 54 attempts for 337 yards, 3 touchdowns and no interceptions. By our advanced metrics here at numberFire, Bortles produced 11.49 dropping Jacksonville’s win expectancy to 0.01%. The game is all but over, it has been an awful one for the Jaguars, and Bortles has the line to show for it: 207 yards passing, 20 completions on 38 attempts, and two sacks for a loss of 15 yards, translating to 4.8 net yards per drop back and a 52.6% completion percentage.
The advanced stats up to this point are somehow worse, as Bortles has accounted for -0.82 Passing NEP, a -0.02 NEP per drop back average, and a 42.5% Success Rate.
Even if you were watching the Bulls and Celtics, you can probably infer what happens next...
Bortles led touchdown drives on Jacksonville’s last two possessions and put up a superb stat line in the process, albeit one that did not budge the game’s win probability graph an inch. In the game’s final 5:19, he completed 13-of-16 passes for 130 yards and 2 touchdowns (an 8.1 yards per drop back average), amassing 12.30 NEP.
On these final throws, his adjusted net yards per pass average (ANY/A) was 10.6, his NEP per drop back average was 0.77, and his Success Rate was 81.3%. The NFL leaders in each category have marks of 10.9, 0.36, and 56.2%, respectively (adjusted net yards per pass takes the raw net yards average and adjusts for touchdowns and interceptions; it is the box-score passing stat with the highest correlation with winning).
The finish was good enough to completely wipe away Bortles' putrid start and make it look like he actually had a good game.
The King of Garbage Time?
While Bortles’ fantasy owners laughed with delight and owners of the Tennessee defense cried into their pillows, NFL Twitter is on to the Jaguars' quarterback.
Time for Bortles to go to work. 2-3 scores down, late 3rd quarter. He lives for this stuff. Time to pad the stats
— Jason La Canfora (@JasonLaCanfora) October 28, 2016
Blake Bortles' first words were "Garbage time." #JAXvsTEN
— Brad Evans (@YahooNoise) October 28, 2016
Bortles has to be the best garbage time quarterback in the history of the league.
— Derek Schultz (@Schultz975) October 28, 2016
What of this final claim? Is Bortles actually the master of these meaningless late-game situations?
While we can't truly know if he is the “best†ever here, we can at least look at the last decade. Since 2006, 53 quarterbacks have at least 150 drop backs in one-score games with another 150 when his team is trailing by nine or more in the fourth quarter. It may seem like a liberal use of the term “garbage time,†but consider: an average team with the ball at its own 20 trailing by 9 at the start of the fourth quarter has about a 9% chance of winning, per the Pro Football Reference win probability calculator.
Unsurprisingly, the top quarterbacks in terms of ANY/A in one-score games during this span are Aaron Rodgers (7.5), Peyton Manning (7.5), and Tom Brady (7.4). The leaders in garbage time were Rodgers (7.3), Philip Rivers (7.0) and (drumroll please….), Blake Bortles (!), who had a 7.0 average coming into Thursday.
Here are his stats in the two splits (the game versus Tennessee is not included):
Situation | Dropbacks | Comp% | TD% | INT% | Sk% | First Downs/Pass | Rating | ANY/A |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1-score games | 848 | 56.9 | 3.2 | 3.5 | 8.4 | 0.29 | 71.3 | 4.3 |
"Garbage Time" | 273 | 66.5 | 6.8 | 4 | 8.1 | 0.43 | 99.1 | 7 |
Difference | ---- | 9.6 | 3.6 | 0.5 | -0.3 | 0.14 | 27.8 | 2.7 |
As you might have guessed, Bortles’ 2.7 increase in ANY/A is the largest among the 53 quarterbacks in the sample. Here are the top five overachievers.
Player | 1-Score ANY/A | "Garbage Time" ANY/A | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
Blake Bortles | 4.3 | 7 | 2.7 |
Dan Orlovsky* | 4.1 | 6.3 | 2.2 |
Shaun Hill | 5.3 | 6.7 | 1.4 |
Tarvaris Jackson | 4.4 | 5.7 | 1.3 |
Joe Flacco | 5.9 | 7 | 1.1 |
It might be tempting to make this about some kind of “clutch†factor, but of Bortles’ four career fourth-quarter comebacks, only one involved overcoming a two-score, fourth-quarter deficit. Also, in one-score games in the fourth quarter, his ANY/A drops to a putrid 3.3 on 191 drop backs -- not exactly Michael Jordan in the 1998 Finals.
If you are curious, here are the five guys whose numbers declined the most upon entering garbage time.
Player | 1-Score ANY/A | "Garbage Time" ANY/A | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
Colin Kaepernick | 6.5 | 2.6 | -3.9 |
Brett Favre* | 5.9 | 3.7 | -2.2 |
Ryan Tannehill | 5.7 | 3.6 | -2.1 |
Matt Schaub* | 6.6 | 4.7 | -1.9 |
Kirk Cousins | 6.4 | 4.5 | -1.9 |
(*while Orlovsky, Favre and Schaub all had earlier debuts, these numbers only include their performances beginning in 2006).
Returning to Bortles, his overall career numbers, such as his 5.1 ANY/A, 58.9% completion rate, and 1.3 touchdown-to-interception ratio, are generally subpar. When we also consider much of the good stuff has taken place only after the Jaguars become unlikely to win, it becomes easy to see why they could soon begin yet another search for a new quarterback.