Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers is heralded as one of the best quarterbacks in NFL history due to his incredible blend of intelligence, athleticism, and arm strength.
Rodgers currently holds the career record for Passer Rating among NFL quarterbacks (minimum 1,500 passing attempts), is fourth in career passing yards per attempt, tops in career interception rate, and is one of two post-merger quarterbacks to rank in the top-10 in career touchdown rate.
Long story short: he’s really good.
One part of Rodgers’ game that is also unparalleled, however, is his ability to catch opposing defenses committing penalties. His hard count is one of the best ever at getting offsides or neutral zone infraction calls, he routinely catches opponents with too many men on the field, and he can sucker even the best defensive backs into committing pass interference.
Though much is made of this skill anecdotally, we haven’t seen its value quantified. With numberFire’s incredibly incisive Eli Manning, Carson Palmer, Andrew Luck and Matt Hasselbeck, and Philip Rivers. All of these passers are savvy enough to notice when defenses are out of position and take advantage of their carelessness.
Still, a total number of penalties doesn’t tell us as much as we’d like. We can gather from this that Rodgers gets the most of these kinds of calls (by a longshot), but does he get the most value out of them?
Penalty Shot
numberFire has made it possible for us to glean this kind of performance data right from the play-by-play information of a game. If you’ve watched any games recently with numberFire Live sitting open on your laptop beside you, you know how incredibly insightful these Win Probability and Expected Points analytics can be, especially when seen in real time.
I mentioned Net Expected Points (NEP) before; how will this help us figure out how good quarterbacks are at getting free yardage? NEP helps us take the numbers we get from the box score and assign them contextual value so they relate even closer to the game on the field. By adding down-and-distance value, we can see just how much each play and each team as a whole influence the outcome of games. For more info on NEP, check out our glossary.
By looking at how many yards the penalties gained for the offense, as well as adjusting for the down the penalty occurred on, we can get a better idea of how impactful a penalty was and, therefore, its value.
Which quarterbacks take the most advantage of defensive carelessness?
The table below compares the top 12 teams in the league with at least 25 free play penalties in terms of yards gained, NEP gained, and cumulative Win Probability Added (WPA). Who reigns supreme?
Rank | Team | Yards | NEP | WPA |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Green Bay Packers | 404 (1st) | 50.93 (1st) | 95.77 (6th) |
2 | New York Giants | 314 (3rd) | 37.57 (3rd) | 96.56 (5th) |
3 | Arizona Cardinals | 383 (2nd) | 40.92 (2nd) | 87.70 (9th) |
4 | Indianapolis Colts | 252 (7th) | 36.62 (4th) | 101.66 (3rd) |
5 | Carolina Panthers | 191 (17th) | 27.86 (12th) | 54.89 (19th) |
6 | San Diego Chargers | 203 (15th) | 28.37 (11th) | 64.69 (14th) |
7 | Minnesota Vikings | 246 (9th) | 29.35 (10th) | 85.92 (10th) |
8 | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | 268 (5th) | 33.23 (6th) | 78.07 (11th) |
9 | Houston Texans | 169 (22nd) | 23.11 (19th) | 47.36 (22nd) |
10 | Denver Broncos | 190 (18th) | 24.48 (18th) | 59.93 (16th) |
11 | St. Louis Rams | 251 (8th) | 29.67 (9th) | 59.78 (17th) |
12 | Tennessee Titans | 242 (10th) | 32.96 (7th) | 97.24 (4th) |
The results are in, and it’s clear: the only team that comes anywhere near the Packers in terms of value added through defensive penalties is the New York Giants, and they are a solid step down in value, though right behind in rankings. Across the board, Rodgers’ Packers top the charts in penalty totals, penalty yardage, penalty NEP gained, and still have a strong showing in total Win Probability Added.
While things like a quarterback’s awareness or hard count seem hard to define, quantifying the results of these types of penalties allows us to break this data apart and really see who reigns supreme in these traits from a tangible perspective.
And in this arena, Aaron Rodgers is as good as advertised.