Thank you sir.Your memory is far better than mine.Saints game
-Forced one in there, got picked. Goff's fault.
Patriots game
-Kendricks drops a ball that hits him in the chest, INT. Not Goff's fault.
-Pocket collapses, DE hits Jared's arm as he throws, picked off. Not really his fault imo.
Falcons game
-Ball hits Britt in the chest... dropped.. picked off. Once again, not Goff's fault.
-Goff throws slant to Britt, but didn't see the LB. Goff's fault.
2/5 were his fault.
The one where he forced it in there.was suspect as far as fault goes. He did indeed force it in to tight coverage, but it was in the hands of the receiver. And then yanked out by the defender. The second one against the Falcons was 150% his fault though.
and Bradford.I am going to use the same standard that was applied to Keenum.....
They were all his fault.
Haha, exactly.and Bradford.
Balls that bounced off a receiver's hands were his fault because "he doesn't have any touch".
Problem is it is not that easy to judge a lot of times. If they are reads, the WR decides based on coverage to, for example, break in or out. The QB has to read it the same way or they will miss each other by 5 yards.There needs to be a stat that gets attributed to a receiver when they cause an interception. A wrong route or brick hands too many times gets credited to the QBs screw up when in all reality it's the receiver.
There is nothing that I hate more than pinning a W/L record on one player. It's a team sport.Haha, exactly.
Goff is missing the deep passes because he doesn't have arm strength.
Now, to employ the Bradford Standard....he is 0-4 as a starter.....BUST.
Agreed.There is nothing that I hate more than pinning a W/L record on one player. It's a team sport.
It that was Keenum, it would look like this.