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Best and worst PFF grades from Panthers' Week 10 win over Giants


TheSpecialJuan
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1 hour ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

Best of the defense

 

1. ILB Josey Jewell: 84.1
2. OLB DJ Johnson: 74.7
3. OLB D.J. Wonnum: 74.7
4. DT A’Shawn Robinson: 72.5
5. CB Caleb Farley: 70.0

Jewell outlawed New York’s chances at a victory, as he recorded his first interception of the season and recovered the fumble that set up the game-winning field goal. That fumble was caused by Robinson, who totaled four pressures and five stops against his former squad.

Wonnum made a big splash in his Panthers debut, notching a team-high five pressures.

Josey Jewell has been an excellent free agent acquisition 

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17 hours ago, TheSpecialJuan said:

Best of the offense

 

1. RG Robert Hunt: 84.9
2. RT Taylor Moton: 78.8
3. LG Damien Lewis: 77.3
4. OL Chandler Zavala: 74.0
5. QB Bryce Young: 71.4

The hog mollies put their hard hats on in Germany, allowing just one sack of Young and opening up holes for running back Chuba Hubbard’s career-high 153 rushing yards. If we were to extend this list to six players, center Cade Mays (67.7) would enter the discussion thanks to his admirable showing against Giants defensive lineman Dexter Lawrence II.

Young completed 15 of his 25 throws for 126 yards, a touchdown and no interceptions. His 71.4 mark is second-highest in a start this season.

https://pantherswire.usatoday.com/lists/panthers-giants-week-10-pff-grades/

I dont know if anyone has paid access but do good teams typically have top 5s all in the 90s seems like a 71.4 making the top 5 is pretty low and not even sure how he got that high as his qbr was really low for the game

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5 hours ago, fanpanther said:

I dont know if anyone has paid access but do good teams typically have top 5s all in the 90s seems like a 71.4 making the top 5 is pretty low and not even sure how he got that high as his qbr was really low for the game

I mean his QB rating was 86.4 and his QBR was 58.4, both of which are among his best so far. They're also above average (QBR of ~60 is top 10 in the league across a season). As to his 71.4, a 70 is considered "above average."  80 is "good" and 90 is "elite", 60 being "average."

So, do you think that on a game-by-game basis most good teams have 5 elite players? Maybe, but I'd bet that more often than not they've just got one or two and a bunch of 80s. Hubbard, for instance, is the 5th best RB in their run grading at 86.4.  But his overall offensive grade is 76.4

 

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9 hours ago, fanpanther said:

I dont know if anyone has paid access but do good teams typically have top 5s all in the 90s seems like a 71.4 making the top 5 is pretty low and not even sure how he got that high as his qbr was really low for the game

I seriously doubt this.  PFF doesn't just throw 90s around.

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