Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Turnovers


t96

Recommended Posts

Huge part of why we're 1-5 that hasn't really been touched upon much.

Our turnover differential this year is -8, or 2nd last in the league. We have just 8 takeaways on defense tied with 6 other teams for 16th in the league. We've turned the ball over 16 times on offense/special teams, for 2nd most in the league. Both of these are a huge issue.

Last year we were +20, good for first in the league by a margin of 6. We had 39 takeaways, the most in the league, and just 19 giveaways, tied for 8th best. 

We're on pace for about 21 takeaways and 43 giveaways, which would be a -22 differential. That's a difference of 42 turnovers from last year to this year.

Hopefully this has been an emphasis over the bye and will be fixed.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Cary Kollins said:

I think this goes hand in hand with not getting any pressure on the QB.

Yep. A large portion(I want to say majority but I have zero stats to back this up) of turnovers come from strip sacks or interceptions on a rushed throw to avoid pressure. NFL QB's don't often make stupid throws if they are allowed to sit there without any pressure.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Turnover differential is a fickle thing. To a certain extent, we can control that number by taking care of the ball better on offense and creating more opportunities on the defense.

Unfortunately, luck plays a factor as well such as fumbles that we can't recover or passes that get tipped and it gets picked off. That fumble last season that Dickson scored on against the Bucs is something that only would've happened last season.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, outlaw4 said:

Turnover differential is a fickle thing. To a certain extent, we can control that number by taking care of the ball better on offense and creating more opportunities on the defense.

Unfortunately, luck plays a factor as well such as fumbles that we can't recover or passes that get tipped and it gets picked off. That fumble last season that Dickson scored on against the Bucs is something that only would've happened last season.

Luck can be a small factor on fumble recoveries but not on interceptions or the actual act of fumbling the ball.

If a ball is tipped and picked it's the QBs fault for letting it get tipped by a defender. If it's off the receiver's hands it's on the receiver, or possibly QB if it's too hard of a throw and just out of reach for the receiver. No interception is ever being unlucky. A QB's stats may be unlucky if his receivers tip a lot of balls ending up in picks like Cam has had a bit of the last few years, but that's not unlucky for the team, just the QB's stats.

On the act of fumbling, any time a player fumbles it's his fault for not protecting the ball. It's never being unlucky. And a team who's disciplined at going for the football on D will have more forced fumbles than other teams who aren't disciplined or skilled at going for strips. It's not luck. The only thing that's luck is the way it bounces once it's actually lost, and that's very minimal.

I'd say turnovers are about 1% luck, if that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have touched on this several times.

The Panthers are on pace to set a record franchise low in defensive takeaways, and a record franchise high in turnovers.

What compounds this even more is the Panthers D gave up 1 TD and forced 2 turnovers following team turnovers last season. They have given up 3 TDs and forced 0 turnovers this season.

The turnovers by the offense are not the major issue. You can expect an offense to turn the ball over 20 to 30 times per season. It is when an offense is forced to play from behind that the turnovers get to 30+.

The defense must effectively keep opponents from scoring TDs following a turnover and force some turnovers to counter the opposing teams defense. Turnover margin is 80% defense and 20% offense.

The secondary is not forcing their share of turnovers or scoring TDs like last season. The Panthers secondary last season combined for 15 interceptions and 7 forced fumbles. The secondary this season is on pace for 12 interceptions and 0 forced fumbles. They are clearly not attacking the ball this season.

That is your problem. Has nothing to do with sacks. The sacks last season came because QBs were forced to hold the ball and move around in the pocket to find an open receiver. KK did not get 11 sacks by getting to the QB in under 3 seconds. This season it is a 3 step drop and the ball is out. Way too easy for QBs. I doubt QBs are holding the ball longer than 3 seconds. I know they are not having to move around in the pocket much due to coverage. Their receivers seem to be open very quickly.

It would be interesting to know what the opposing QBs average release time is against the Panthers secondary last season versus this season. That will likely pin point the problem you are looking for.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, CPantherKing said:

I have touched on this several times.

The Panthers are on pace to set a record franchise low in defensive takeaways, and a record franchise high in turnovers.

What compounds this even more is the Panthers D gave up 1 TD and forced 2 turnovers following team turnovers last season. They have given up 3 TDs and forced 0 turnovers this season.

The turnovers by the offense are not the major issue. You can expect an offense to turn the ball over 20 to 30 times per season. It is when an offense is forced to play from behind that the turnovers get to 30+.

The defense must effectively keep opponents from scoring TDs following a turnover and force some turnovers to counter the opposing teams defense. Turnover margin is 80% defense and 20% offense.

The secondary is not forcing their share of turnovers or scoring TDs like last season. The Panthers secondary last season combined for 15 interceptions and 7 forced fumbles. The secondary this season is on pace for 12 interceptions and 0 forced fumbles. They are clearly not attacking the ball this season.

That is your problem. Has nothing to do with sacks. The sacks last season came because QBs were forced to hold the ball and move around in the pocket to find an open receiver. KK did not get 11 sacks by getting to the QB in under 3 seconds. This season it is a 3 step drop and the ball is out. Way too easy for QBs. I doubt QBs are holding the ball longer than 3 seconds. I know they are not having to move around in the pocket much due to coverage. Their receivers seem to be open very quickly.

It would be interesting to know what the opposing QBs average release time is against the Panthers secondary last season versus this season. That will likely pin point the problem you are looking for.

 

If you find you are repeating yourself. Maybe you should rethink your delivery? You could try exploring different ways to better connect with your target audience. I mean, there must be a reason you are having to address topics over and over?

 

Now please don't take this the wrong way. What happens if the QB release time between last year, and this year, is minimal? That will do nothing to pin point the problem. Then we are stuck right back here in wtf? land. We don't need/want that. We demand answers up in here. Pin point the problem, and let's fix it. That's the Merican way.

 

What if QBs are getting rid of the ball earlier this year? Does that mean they are afraid of our pass rush? Or if the release time is longer. Does that mean the DBs are covering well, and the QB is having to wait for WRs to get open?

 

Point being. Lots goes into how long it takes the QB to release the pass. I am not sure it can be used as an accurate barometer to gauge where the problem lies.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 hours ago, thomas96 said:

Huge part of why we're 1-5 that hasn't really been touched upon much.

Our turnover differential this year is -8, or 2nd last in the league. We have just 8 takeaways on defense tied with 6 other teams for 16th in the league. We've turned the ball over 16 times on offense/special teams, for 2nd most in the league. Both of these are a huge issue.

Last year we were +20, good for first in the league by a margin of 6. We had 39 takeaways, the most in the league, and just 19 giveaways, tied for 8th best. 

We're on pace for about 21 takeaways and 43 giveaways, which would be a -22 differential. That's a difference of 42 turnovers from last year to this year.

Hopefully this has been an emphasis over the bye and will be fixed.

One thing that might fix it is to get  Kurt Coleman back into his native position. He was a key part of that equation last season.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, thomas96 said:

Luck can be a small factor on fumble recoveries but not on interceptions or the actual act of fumbling the ball.

If a ball is tipped and picked it's the QBs fault for letting it get tipped by a defender. If it's off the receiver's hands it's on the receiver, or possibly QB if it's too hard of a throw and just out of reach for the receiver. No interception is ever being unlucky. A QB's stats may be unlucky if his receivers tip a lot of balls ending up in picks like Cam has had a bit of the last few years, but that's not unlucky for the team, just the QB's stats.

On the act of fumbling, any time a player fumbles it's his fault for not protecting the ball. It's never being unlucky. And a team who's disciplined at going for the football on D will have more forced fumbles than other teams who aren't disciplined or skilled at going for strips. It's not luck. The only thing that's luck is the way it bounces once it's actually lost, and that's very minimal.

I'd say turnovers are about 1% luck, if that.

I'd say it's a higher percentage than that. I still remember how Russell Wilson had this long streak of fumbling the ball and yet finding ways to keep possession. On the flip side, someone can practice tip drills all day but trajectory is dictated by small margins. One day, they shoot upwards for an easy pick. The next, the receiver finds a way to catch it anyways.

Long story short, I wasn't expecting us to match our turnovers from last season. Didn't expect this much of a swing, however.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Fair enough. I never once said not supporting Tepper makes you a bad fan by the way. I can't stand the guy myself. You on the other hand don't like anything about the team. You can't stand the owner or the coach because his religion doesn't fall in line with how you feel it should so I'm curious why you are even a fan at this point? Hell, you like nothing about the team, why even be a fan these days?  We can go backs and forth about how many games we have been to and measure dicks if you want or but it doesn't matter. I've been to my fair share over the years. Some as a fan and some work related but I bet you have been to more due to my weekends being filled with some work I do at the collegiate level so I probably only average maybe 2-3 games per year tops. You have me beat there im sure. You are probably very correct on us not being the same in anything at all I am quite sure of that. If I'm a "mark" (as you put it) for not liking Tepper and not caring about Canales religion or his political beliefs or letting it have weight on whether or not I like the team then call me a "mark" but you're still a whiny bitch either way.  When you hate everything about leadership from their personalities to their religious beliefs all the way to who they vote for at that point why even be a fan? I can side with you judging by your beliefs that you have made apparent, if you owned and coached the team, I sure as hell would find a new one to support but as you said we are different. Enjoy Norway, it is a beautiful country. Visited last year myself and absolutely loved it.
    • The playing well part, depends on what happens going forward. It could have been a tease that will dig our hole deeper.  In the small picture of one game, probably his best game. Green Bay wasn't as great as people think it was. More like one good quarter. Followed by two games of exactly nothing. 
    • Oh, it was handled horrifically.  Ego got in the way of a plan.  I'm just saying, that he actually probably stumbled into the better outcome/plan.  
×
×
  • Create New...