WR Playmaker scores from football outsiders.(good read)

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RamsJunkie

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Baily was the top WR 2 years ago by this score with a score of 399. Heres the Article



02 Apr 2015

Playmaker Score 2015
Guest column by Nathan Forster

You can probably deduce whether your team had a good draft in 2014 if you can answer "yes" to one of the following two questions: 1) "Did your team draft Aaron Donald?" 2) "Did your team draft a wide receiver in the first round?" Last year's wide receiver class is only a year old, but it may be on track to be the best ever. Ten rookie wide receivers gained more than 500 yards receiving in their initial season. Three of those went over 1,000 yards. Although the success of these players is incredible, it can hardly be called surprising. Conventional wisdom anticipated that the 2014 draft class was chock full of wide receivers who were likely to be successful -- and so did Playmaker Score, Football Outsiders' system for projecting wide receivers

So can the 2015 draft class match its immediate predecessor's accomplishments? According to Playmaker Score, probably not. Although the 2015 class includes some strong prospects and a sprinkling of interesting sleepers, there are also a number of players with bust potential, rated higher by scouts than by Playmaker Score. It adds up to a potentially good, but not great, class of pass catchers.

Playmaker Score is based on a statistical analysis of all Division I wide receivers drafted in the years 1996-2012. Playmaker Score consists of the following elements, which are the factors that historically correlate to NFL success:

  • The wide receiver prospect's best or "peak" season for receiving yards per team attempt (i.e., a wide receiver with 1,000 receiving yards whose team passed 400 times would score a "2.50")
  • The wide receiver prospect's peak season for receiving touchdowns per team attempt
  • The difference between the prospect's peak season for receiving touchdowns per team and the prospect's most recent season for receiving touchdowns per team attempt (this factor is simply "0" for a player whose peak season was his most recent season)
  • The wide receiver's vertical jump from pre-draft workouts
  • A binary variable that rewards players who enter the draft as underclassmen and punishes those who exhaust their college eligibility
  • The wide receiver's college career yards per reception
  • The wide receiver's rushing attempts per game during their peak season for receiving yards per team attempt.
Playmaker Score has two outputs: "Playmaker Rating" and "Playmaker Projection." Playmaker Rating is the "purest" output for Playmaker Score: it is expressed as a percentage that measures how highly the player ranks historically based on the factors evaluated by Playmaker Score. For example, a player with a 75 percent Playmaker Rating scores more highly than 75 percent of wide receiver prospects drafted since 1996. Playmaker Projection is a more realistic measurement. Playmaker Projection acknowledges that a player with a first-round grade and a mediocre Playmaker Score is more likely to succeed than a seventh-rounder that Playmaker Score loves. Thus, in addition to the Playmaker Score factors, Playmaker Projection also incorporates a transformed variable based on the player's projected draft position from NFLDraftScout.com.

Here are the Playmaker Scores for the top wide receiver prospects available in the 2015 NFL Draft.


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Amari Cooper, Alabama
Playmaker Projection: 643 Yards
Playmaker Score: 95.4%

Amari Cooper is head-and-shoulders the best wide receiver prospect in this class, and he hits most of Playmaker's buttons. Cooper had an impressive junior campaign, gaining 1,727 receiving yards and 16 touchdowns. Moreover, there is also nothing about Cooper's situation that gives reason to doubt Playmaker's numbers. Unlike many wide receiver prospects in this year's draft, Cooper did not play in the spread, and he faced some of the toughest college defenses in the country. The one knock on Cooper is that his combine numbers were just OK, and his vertical leap of 32.5 inches is below average for a drafted wide receiver. However, the correlation between the combine workouts and wide receiver success is surprisingly weak.

Historically, Cooper probably best compares to Indianapolis Colts great Marvin Harrison as a prospect; Cooper was not quite as dominant as Harrison was at Syracuse, but the mid-'90s Big East wasn't a match for today's SEC, either.

Jaelen Strong, Arizona State
Playmaker Projection: 514 Yards
Playmaker Score: 80.7%

Jaelen Strong's No. 2 spot on the Playmaker Projection list has more to do with the weakness of the clear first-round picks available in this draft than with his own merits. Strong's projection is nearly exactly average -- the average Playmaker Score for a first-round wide receiver prospect is 80.5 percent, only two ticks below Strong's score.

Overall, Strong's production was good but not great, given that the Arizona State Sun Devils passed the ball a healthy 467 times. Strong had a nice combine, but that only helps his projection a little.

Sammie Coates, Auburn
Playmaker Projection: 507 Yards
Playmaker Score: 89.9%

Sammie Coates' Playmaker numbers are favorable. However, there are also ample reasons to be skeptical of his prospects.

When Coates was a sophomore, 2.5 percent of Auburn's pass attempts were touchdown passes to Coates. Coates similarly dominated his team's passing attack as a junior, gaining 3.16 yards per team attempt. Coates also averaged a superb 21.4 yards per catch and is entering the draft as an underclassman.

However, Playmaker may be overstating Coates' prospects because, while his rate stats were good, his total stats were not that impressive -- only 741 receiving yards and four touchdowns as a junior. Auburn averaged less than 300 passing attempts per year while Coates was on the roster. Indeed, Coates' numbers may simply be a function of an offense where a few deep passes to Coates served as a change-of-pace, rather than a true reflection of Coates' ability as a wide receiver. In that regard, Coates is hauntingly similar to Stephen Hill, a huge bust that Playmaker loved. Coates' scouting report is similar: like Hill, Coates is a limited route-runner with inconsistent hands.

Not surprisingly, there are disagreements in the draftnik community about where Coates will be chosen. These projections are based on NFLDraftScout.com's forecast that Coates will go in the late first or early second round, but Scouts Inc. projects Coates as an early third-rounder.

Breshad Perriman, Central Florida
Playmaker Projection: 491 Yards
Playmaker Score: 87.7%

Breshad Perriman, the son of former Detroit Lions wideout Brett Perriman, was a consistently productive receiver for the Central Florida Knights during his career, with a stellar junior year that included a huge drop-off at quarterback from Blake Bortles to Justin Holman. Perriman enters the draft as an underclassman, has an impressive 19.5 yards per catch average, and his other Playmaker numbers are solid.

Nelson Agholor, USC
Playmaker Projection: 454 Yards
Playmaker Score: 88.6%

USC has been a bit snakebitten when it comes to sending wide receivers to the NFL, producing first-round busts such as Mike Williams and R. Jay Soward. Indeed, since sending Keyshawn Johnson to the NFL in 1996, USC has seen 16 of its wide receivers drafted, and its most successful pass catcher was one-hit-wonder Steve Smith (although the jury is still out on Marqise Lee and possibly Robert Woods).

That said, while Agholor is far from a sure-fire prospect, there is also reason to believe that he could be USC's most successful product in years. Agholor was a reasonably productive receiver in college, with 1,313 receiving yards, 12 receiving touchdowns, and four rushing attempts. Although it may seem silly, history has demonstrated conclusively that wide receiver prospects who are athletic enough to at least garner a few opportunities to contribute on the ground are more likely to succeed at the NFL level. Moreover, while still talented, USC's roster is no longer filled top-to-bottom with all-world prospects as a result of the NCAA's sanctions. Therefore, to the extent USC's prior receivers seemed better than they were because they were surrounded by so much talent, those problems are less likely to affect Agholor.

Dorial Green-Beckham, Missouri/Oklahoma
Playmaker Projection: 438 Yards
Playmaker Score: 67.7%

Assuming that Green-Beckham is drafted in the first round as expected, Playmaker projects him to under-perform his draft position. Although Green-Beckham's Playmaker Rating of 67.7 percent means that he is a stronger prospect than the average "drafted" wide receiver, wide receivers drafted in the first round average a Playmaker Rating of 80 percent.

Green-Beckham receives credit for entering the draft as an underclassman, as underclassmen are more likely to succeed than senior entrants even after controlling for draft position. However, Playmaker is skeptical because Green-Beckham was not particularly impressive in either of his two seasons of college football. During his best season, his sophomore year, Green-Beckham had only 883 receiving yards, even though the Missouri Tigers passed a healthy 414 times. Green-Beckham was not even the Tigers' No. 1 receiver: his teammate L'Damian Washington edged him out with 893 receiving yards. In contrast to Green-Beckham's high grade this year, Washington went undrafted in 2014, and has been since kicking around various practice squads.

None of this means that Green-Beckham is a surefire bust. Indeed, Playmaker sometimes has trouble with players like Beckham who have had limited college action, and thus, are less likely to produce a sample size sufficiently meaningful to forecast their futures. That said, given Green-Beckham's relatively low Playmaker Rating, NFL scouts should be doubly sure that Green-Beckham has a skill set that is likely to translate into NFL success.

Kevin White, West Virginia
Playmaker Projection: 406 Yards
Playmaker Score: 39.1%

Kevin White may be the first wide receiver selected in the NFL Draft, but Playmaker is down on his prospects.

The case against White begins with the fact that he is entering the NFL as a senior, rather than an underclassman. White's total numbers for his senior year were good: he had 1,447 receiving yards and 10 touchdowns. However, the numbers for the senior wide receivers who actually succeed are often much better than White's, especially considering that the West Virginia Mountaineers were a somewhat pass-happy offense with 534 attempts. Kendall Wright, for example, entered the draft as a senior, but had more impressive totals: 1,663 receiving yards in only 424 team passing attempts. Last year's Jordan Matthews (who also came out as a senior) had similar total yards numbers (1,477), but did so in fewer team passing attempts (376).

In White's defense, part of the reason that he exhausted his eligibility is because he played his first two years at junior college. Although the sample of drafted junior college wide receivers is limited, the data available suggests that the underclassman factor does not cause Playmaker to under- or overproject junior college wide receivers to any significant degree.

White may have impressed with a 4.35-second 40-yard dash, but among combine participants the 40-yard dash has historically had about as much bearing on success as a wide receiver's skill at needlepoint or pastry making. The vertical jump is actually the more important drill, and even the vertical jump's predictive value is miniscule. Although Playmaker certainly could be off on White, do not be surprised to see White's name, along with Marquise Goodwin and Jacoby Jones, in the inevitable stream of articles around the 2018 combine about players who ran fast 40-yard dashes but made little impact in the NFL.

DeVante Parker, Louisville
Playmaker Projection: 404 Yards
Playmaker Score: 45.9%

The appropriate question might not be why Parker's Playmaker is so low, but why Parker is even considered a first-round candidate in the first place. Parker is coming out as a senior and he does not have White's excuse that he was in junior college for two seasons: Parker has been playing college football for a full four years. Parker has never topped 1,000 yards once in those four years.

It's not as if he had a weak supporting cast either: as a junior he had the benefit of catching passes from first-round pick Teddy Bridgewater at his pre-NFL peak. A future star NFL wide receiver should have put up video game-like numbers in these conditions, but Parker produced only 885 yards. Although Parker put up some decent per-game numbers as a senior after returning from an early injury, prospects with a similar pattern of production have typically not fared well. The list of drafted wide receivers who played in less than ten games as a senior with an average of more than 100 yards per game includes Ryan Broyles, Eugene Baker, Will Blackwell, Kelley Washington, Peter Warrick, and Chase Lyman.

In any event, senior performance is arguably moot. If Parker had the talent level of a Julio Jones, he would already be in the NFL.

Tyler Lockett, Kansas State
Playmaker Projection: 387 Yards
Playmaker Score: 80.7%

As a contrast to Parker, Tyler Lockett is a good example of the level of college production that is necessary to overcome the historical trends that run against senior wide receivers. During his best season, Lockett averaged 4.02 receiving yards every time his team attempted a pass. That figure is nearly twice as large as Parker's. Although Parker had some impressive per-game numbers in a shortened senior year, Lockett actually sustained his numbers over the course of both his junior and senior years, which is an arguably more impressive feat.

Lockett's advantages over Parker's prospects from a purely analytical standpoint are not quite enough to trump the equally strong historical bias in favor of players with high draft projections. Lockett is projected to come off the board in either round two or three, while Parker is a near lock to go in the middle of the first round.

Top Sleepers
Titus Davis, Central Michigan
Playmaker Projection: 306 Yards
Playmaker Score: 85.9%

Davis rates highly due to his ability to score touchdowns. He scored 13 touchdowns as a senior even though the Chippewas passed fewer than 400 times, giving him a peak touchdown/attempt metric that beats all wide receivers in this draft class save Amari Cooper and Tyler Lockett. Davis also produced no shortage of big plays, averaging 18.2 yards per catch over the course of his career. And he had 15 career rushing attempts, which is fairly high for a player who was consistently rostered as a wide receiver.

The knock on Davis is an overall lack of explosiveness (further corroborated by a mediocre combine performance), which could cause problems getting open or gaining yards after the catch. The scouting report on Davis, however, stands in stark contrast to his numbers, which suggest that he is a playmaker capable of gaining large chunks of yards and scoring touchdowns.


Stefon Diggs, Maryland
Playmaker Projection: 306 Yards
Playmaker Score: 89.5%

Stefon Diggs, a five-star recruit out of high school, had a great freshman season, catching 54 passes for 848 yards and six touchdowns, while also rushing for 114 yards on 20 attempts. These numbers are more impressive in context, as Maryland only attempted 304 passes that year and Diggs was catching passes from a trio of freshman quarterbacks. Diggs is only regarded as a mid- to late-round prospect by conventional wisdom because his sophomore and junior years were marred by injury and inconsistency. However, one of Playmaker's lessons is that a wide receiver's "peak" season in college is a better indicator of success than the sum total of the wide receiver's career. Playmaker includes a penalty for Diggs' fall-off from his freshman heights, but that penalty is comparatively small to the penalty apparently imposed by more traditional evaluators, who generally see him as a mid-round afterthought.

Potentially encouraging for Diggs is that he maintained fairly strong per-game numbers in the latter two-thirds of his college career, and that his total numbers only suffered due to games missed for a broken leg and a lacerated spleen. It's true that these injury concerns could return to haunt Diggs' professional career, but at the low price of a fourth-round pick, the upside that Diggs teased as a freshman is well worth the gamble.

DeAndre Smelter, Georgia Tech
Playmaker Projection: 235 Yards
Playmaker Score: 86.4%

In this post-Stephen Hill world, it is hard to get too excited about Georgia Tech wide receivers. Hill, like Smelter, played in a unique offense which consisted of mostly running plays and a limited passing game that funnels its few passes to a singular wide receiver. This same dynamic led to Hill receiving a massive Playmaker Score, even though he was not very good. Smelter is not nearly as exciting as Hill, despite enjoying many of the same advantages, which makes it hard to read his Playmaker Score as anything other than a statistical quirk.

Below is a table with Playmaker Projection and Playmaker Rating for every qualifying wide receiver who was invited to the NFL combine:


Name, College, Projected Round, Playmaker Projection, Playmaker Rating
Amari CooperAlabama 1 643 95.4%
Jaelen Strong Arizona St. 1 514 80.7%
Sammie Coates Auburn 1–2 507 89.9%
Breshad Perriman UCF 1–2 491 87.7%
Nelson Agholor Southern California 2 454 88.6%
Dorial Green-Beckham Missouri 1 438 67.7%
Kevin White West Virginia 1 406 39.1%
DeVante Parker Louisville 1 404 45.9%
Tyler Lockett Kansas St. 2–3 387 80.7%
Devin Smith Ohio St. 2 381 73.8%
Devin Funchess Michigan 2 356 71.2%
Phillip Dorsett Miami (FL) 2–3 309 61.3%
Titus Davis Central Mich. 5 306 85.9%
Stefon Diggs Maryland 5–6 306 89.5%
Rashad Greene Florida St. 2 288 38.2%
Tony Lippett Michigan St. 3–4 278 67.7%
Darren Waller Georgia Tech 4–5 235 69.7%
DeAndre Smelter Georgia Tech UDFA 235 86.4%
Chris Conley Georgia 4 207 52.1%
Justin Hardy East Carolina 3 203 28.8%
Ty Montgomery Stanford 5 190 59.6%
Kenny Bell Nebraska 4 180 40.0%
Jamison Crowder Duke 4–5 171 42.0%
Antwan Goodley Baylor 6–7 153 62.9%
Jamarcus Nelson UAB 6–7 134 56.5%
Da'ron Brown Northern Ill. UDFA 112 56.5%
Dres Anderson Utah 6 105 36.5%
Josh Harper Fresno St. 5–6 91 24.0%
Mario Alford West Virginia 7 90 40.0%
Rannell Hall UCF 6 81 25.9%
Vince Mayle Washington St. 5 80 15.2%
Devante Davis UNLV 7–UDFA 80 44.6%
Ezell Ruffin San Diego St. UDFA 51 31.9%
Davaris Daniels Notre Dame 7–UDFA 50 26.6%
Geremy Davis Connecticut 7–UDFA 26 17.8%
Deon Long Maryland 7–UDFA 24 18.2%
Chris Jones Alabama UDFA 0 4.2%
DeAndrew White Alabama UDFA 0 9.5%
Cam Worthy East Carolina UDFA 0 15.8%
Keith Mumphery Michigan St. UDFA 0 11.2%
Kaelin Clay Utah UDFA 0 9 .5%
 
Last edited:

12intheBox

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Wil Fay
I get the fascination with wanting to numerically qualify prospects, but it seems like these things just go further and further down the rabbit hole.

I wonder how much of an emphasis any of these metrics - whether its this mallarky, sparq, or otherwise actually carry in an NFL War Room. I'm guessing not very much, but I am, of course, just guessing.
 

Athos

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OMG.

Another BS statistic an idiot with a pencil and a calculator could rummage up. Ugh. I stopped reading after Strong.
 

leoram

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I would like to see their evaluations from last year.
 

RamsJunkie

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  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
  • #5
07 May 2014

Playmaker Score 2014
Guest Column by Nathan Forster

Long-time followers of Playmaker Score may notice a different name now connected to Football Outsiders' projection system for college wide receivers. I'm Nathan Forster, the creator of SackSEER, which is a similar model used to identify likely successes and failures on defensive edge rushers. Vince Verhei, creator of Playmaker Score, has retired from updating the system, and I'm talking over to rebuild Playmaker so it has the same dual-output as SackSEER, with both a "Playmaker Projection" and a "Playmaker Rating."

Playmaker Projection projects the wide receiver prospect's average NFL regular season receiving yards per season through the first five years of the player's career. Playmaker Projection incorporates the projected draft round per NFL Draft Scout as an additional factor in order to create a list of prospects that balances conventional wisdom with the factors identified by Playmaker. Playmaker Rating, on the other hand, uses the statistical trends identified by Playmaker only. Playmaker Rating is expressed in terms of the percentage of historical prospects that the player beats in terms of these statistical trends. So, for example, a Playmaker Rating of 75 percent would mean that the prospect is stronger than 75 percent of the prospects in Playmaker's database based on the trends identified by Playmaker.

Many of the factors that make-up New Playmaker Score will be familiar to long-time followers, but others are new. There will be a much longer article in Football Outsiders Almanac 2014 explaining the reasoning behind these changes and why they will make Playmaker Score more accurate going forward, but for now let's just go over the basics. The new Playmaker Score consists of the following elements:


  • The wide receiver prospect's best or "peak" season for receiving yards per team attempt (i.e. a wide receiver with 1,000 receiving yards whose team passed 400 times would score a "2.50");
  • The wide receiver prospect's peak season for receiving touchdowns per team attempt;
  • The difference between the prospect's peak season for receiving touchdowns per team and the prospect's most recent season for receiving touchdowns per team attempt (this factor is simply "0" for a player whose peak season was his most recent season");
  • The wide receiver's vertical jump from pre-draft workouts;
  • A binary variable that rewards players who enter the draft as underclassmen and punishes those who exhaust their college eligibility;
  • The wide receiver's college career yards per reception; and
  • The wide receiver's rushing attempts per game during their peak season for receiving yards per team attempt.
Some other things that we looked at that did not improve the model are:

  • Forty-yard dash time;
  • Height and weight;
  • More holistic measures of the prospect's college career, as opposed to just the prospect's "peak" season. It turns out that the prospect's peak season (with an adjustment for players who regressed from the peak season in their final year) is the best way to measure wide receiver prospects;
  • Yards per team reception and touchdowns per team reception;
  • A number of measures to adjust for the quality of quarterbacks; and
  • Measurements for strength of conference.
The previous version of Playmaker had an r-squared of 0.25, meaning that 25 percent of the variation for wide receiver success was accounted for by the model. New Playmaker Rating increases that r-squared to 0.345. Playmaker Projection increases the r-squared to 0.434.

Here is a list of the top 20 wide receivers from 1996-2011 by Playmaker Rating (we will add receivers to the database from the 2012 and 2013 drafts once we are three years removed from those drafts):

Top 20 Wide Receivers by Playmaker Rating, 1996-2011
Player
Year Rnd Pick College Actual NFL Yards/Season
(through Y5 only)

Randy Moss 1998 1 21 Marshall 1348.6
Demaryius Thomas 2010 1 22 Georgia Tech 862.5
Terry Glenn 1996 1 7 Ohio St. 893.0
Larry Fitzgerald 2004 1 3 Pittsburgh 1195.0
Charles Rogers 2003 1 2 Michigan St. 88.0
Calvin Johnson 2007 1 2 Georgia Tech 1174.4
Percy Harvin 2009 1 22 Florida 663.8
Golden Taint 2010 2 60 Notre Dame 509.7
Reidel Anthony 1997 1 16 Florida 369.2
Dez Bryant 2010 1 24 Oklahoma St. 957.8
Player Year Rnd Pick College Actual NFL Yards/Season
(through Y5 only)

David Terrell 2001 1 8 Michigan 320.4
Nate Burleson 2003 3 71 Nevada 535.0
Hakeem Nicks 2009 1 29 North Carolina 924.4
Andre' Davis 2002 2 47 Virginia Tech 323.0
Marvin Harrison 1996 1 19 Syracuse 1110.8
David Boston 1999 1 8 Ohio St. 923.8
Santonio Holmes 2006 1 25 Ohio St. 916.2
Koren Robinson 2001 1 9 North Carolina St. 702.8
Antonio Bryant 2002 2 63 Pittsburgh 605.0
Chris Henry 2005 3 83 West Virginia 365.2


There are a couple of lessons from this chart. One is that Playmaker Rating, despite being completely ignorant about draft position, rarely breaks too strongly from conventional wisdom. Except for two third-round picks and three second-round picks, the list is composed completely of players who were taken in the first-round of the NFL Draft. Indeed, the most highly rated fourth-rounder is Justin McCareins, Playmaker's 37th highest ranked player.

Second, Playmaker is only okay at identifying great players. The list above includes future Hall of Famers like Randy Moss, Calvin Johnson, Marvin Harrison, and Larry Fitzgerald, but is nonetheless missing greats such as A.J. Green, Torry Holt, and Andre Johnson, whose Playmaker Ratings were respectable but not nearly as strong as their draft position and talent level warranted. There are also several clunkers in this list, most notably David Terrell and Charles Rogers. You can also probably add Stephen Hill to that list too-he had a top ten Playmaker Rating and already looks like a bust with the New York Jets.

The next chart shows the first-round picks with the worst Playmaker Ratings from 1996-2011:

Worst First-Round Wide Receivers by Playmaker Rating, 1996-2011
Player
Year Rnd Pick College Playmaker Rating Actual NFL Yards/Season
(through Y5 only)

Craig Davis 2007 1 30 LSU 24.3% 111.6
Kevin Dyson 1998 1 16 Utah 32.9% 462.0
Travis Taylor 2000 1 10 Florida 34.5% 551.6
Bryant Johnson 2003 1 17 Penn St. 37.8% 535.0
R. Jay Soward 2000 1 29 USC 43.7% 30.8
Marcus Nash 1998 1 30 Tennessee 45.6% 15.2
Reggie Wayne 2001 1 30 Miami 55.6% 832.8
Rod Gardner 2001 1 15 Clemson 57.7% 599.4
Dwayne Bowe 2007 1 23 LSU 60.5% 985.4
Michael Jenkins 2004 1 29 Ohio St. 64.1% 474.4
Mark Clayton 2005 1 22 Oklahoma 66.4% 623.2
Santana Moss 2001 1 16 Miami 67.4% 779.8
Yatil Green 1997 1 15 Miami 69.3% 46.8
Keyshawn Johnson 1996 1 1 USC 69.5% 996.4
Rae Carruth 1997 1 27 Colorado 70.7% 160.8
Reggie Wayne and Santana Moss are two of the most obvious misses by the new Playmaker Score, but it's not a coincidence that they both played for the University of Miami at the same time. The 2001 Hurricanes were loaded with NFL talent. They are the only team in the data set with two first-round wide receivers in the same draft, and moreover, the team also included tight end Jeremy Shockey and a very young Andre Johnson. Moss and Wayne each stole receptions from one another, and so it's unsurprising that they are considerably underrated by Playmaker. This "double prospect" effect is something we're looking to study more in the future.


One thing that Playmaker's best and worst lists teach us is that Playmaker Score is not, and can never be, the be-all-end-all of wide receiver analysis. The numbers may be a good starting point in setting a baseline as to the strength of a wide receiver prospect, but the evaluator should not turn off his common sense.

This year, Playmaker agrees with conventional wisdom that this year's Draft is an exceptionally strong class for finding wide receiver talent. Indeed, Playmaker likes all of the receivers that are likely to be selected in the first round. However, according to Playmaker, the real strength of this wide receiver class is not the players on the top, but rather, its unprecedented depth. This year, there may be as many as 15 wide receivers drafted that have Playmaker Ratings of 80 percent or more. No other year has had more than eight such players.

Here's a look at Playmaker Score for five projected first-round picks, plus a player who stands out as a potential bust and one who stands out as a potential sleeper.

Brandin Cooks, Oregon State
Playmaker Projection: 638.0 Yards
Playmaker Score: 95.8%

The hype around Brandin Cooks has been growing over the past couple of weeks, and Playmaker believes that it is well-deserved. (How appropriate of our good friend Robert Mays to writea nice big feature on Cooks at Grantland today.) Cooks recorded 1,730 receiving yards his junior year, which is still a strong number even though the Oregon State Beavers dropped back to pass 625 times. Moreover, Cooks had 32 rushing attempts last year, more than any other prospect in his class, suggesting that his receiving numbers would have been even higher had he not proven to be so versatile.

The knock on Cooks is his small-ish frame, but he is heavier than both DeSean Jackson and Steve Smith were when they were drafted. A greater concern is his reported inability to get off the line cleanly, as he reportedly has trouble with physical defenders and NFL cornerbacks will be much more physical than those native to the pass-happy Pac-12.

(Ed. Note: a number of people have asked how the top of this year's class compares to the All-Time Playmaker Top 20 listed above. Cooks is the only player who would make the top 20; his Playmaker Score is narrowly ahead of Antonio Bryant (95.7%) and Chris Henry (95.5%).

Odell Beckham Jr., LSU
Playmaker Projection: 608.4 Yards
Playmaker Score: 93.6%

If there was ever a wide receiver who could be considered a sure first-round pick and still fly under the radar, it would be Odell Beckham Jr. Few are talking about Beckham because he is typically ranked behind Sammy Watkins, Mike Evans, and Marqise Lee, but he is a legitimate prospect in his own right.

Beckham had 1,152 receiving yards and eight touchdowns as a junior, which does not seem impressive until you consider that LSU passed the ball 326 times (and one of those pass attempts was Beckham's). As a result, Beckham actually outgunned his more highly regarded draftmates in yards per team attempt and touchdowns per team attempt last season (with the exception of Mike Evans, whom he tied in touchdowns per team attempt). Beckham also had a strong Combine performance and had a high average yards per catch.

None of the non-Playmaker factors seem to militate against drafting Beckham either. Beckham's domination of his passing game is all the more impressive considering that he shared the field with fellow pro prospect Jarvis Landry, who likely vultured a number of Beckham's catches and touchdowns. LSU's quarterback, Zach Mettenberger, is possibly an NFL talent, but he's certainly not a Peyton Manning-level quarterback who could make a talent-poor wide receiver look as good as Beckham did in 2013. A team in need of a wide receiver at the end of the first-round can draft Beckham with confidence.

Mike Evans, Texas A&M
Playmaker Projection: 558.4 Yards
Playmaker Score: 86.8%

Mike Evans may have an unusual combination of size and speed, but according to the factors that Playmaker Score cares about, Evans is a pretty typical first-round wide receiver prospect. Which is to say that his numbers were good, but not in any universe that would invite Calvin Johnson or Randy Moss comparisons.

What is more interesting about Evans are the potential factors that might cause Playmaker to overrate or underrate him. Evans might arguably be overrated because he had the privilege of playing for Johnny Manziel, who completed nearly 70 percent of his passes last season and may be the most highly drafted quarterback on Thursday. However, punishing wide receivers who had highly efficient quarterbacks does not seem to improve the model. Evans might arguably be underrated because, while Playmaker adjusts for underclassmen, Evans is really busting out early: Evans is a redshirt sophomore, rather than the more typical underclassman, who is a junior. Accordingly, the argument might be that Evans should get an extra bump in addition to the typical underclassman bump because he developed so quickly, and thus, would have likely been even more dominant had he stayed in school for one more year. The limited amount of data, however, does not exactly support that conclusion. Larry Fitzgerald, who entered the draft as a redshirt sophomore, has been truly excellent, but Charles Rogers and Mike Williams, two players who were effectively redshirt sophomores even though they may have technically been juniors when drafted, became humongous busts.

Sammy Watkins, Clemson
Playmaker Projection: 543.7 Yards
Playmaker Score: 83.8%

For someone familiar with Playmaker Score, Sammy Watkins might be the most inscrutable prospect in this draft. Has Playmaker identified trends that expose Watkins as being slightly overrated? Or is Playmaker giving evaluators an opportunity to overthink a prospect whose tape verifies that he is the best wide receiver prospect since A.J. Green and Julio Jones -- who, coincidentally, Playmaker also underestimated a little bit?

.

Watkins' 2013 numbers look good in the aggregate -- 1,464 yards and 12 touchdowns -- but are somewhat less impressive when you discover that Clemson put the ball in the air nearly 500 times. On the one hand, surely some of Watkins' potential catches went to Martavis Bryant, who broke out with 828 receiving yards as a junior and is a potential second-round pick in this year's draft. On the other hand, Bryant's 22.2 yards per catch put Watkins' 14.1 yards per catch to shame, suggesting that maybe it wasn't the style of offense at Clemson that gave Watkins numbers more appropriate to a possession receiver. An examination of Watkins' quarterback situation is similarly unavailing. Tajh Boyd has looked absolutely awful in pre-draft workouts and is probably, at best, a 50-50 shot to be drafted. However, given that most college quarterbacks do not even smell the end of the seventh round, it's perhaps being too charitable to Watkins to give him a bump just because his quarterback might not get drafted.

One caveat to add to Watkins' projection is that Playmaker Score uses his junior season but arguably should use his freshman season instead. Watkins was less prolific catching the ball as a freshman, but he had a many more rushing attempts. Thus, Watkins would have a stronger projection if his freshman year was used (600.2, 88.9%) but his junior year is used because Playmaker is designed to use a player's topreceiving season, not his top offensive season overall.

A team that is confident about what it sees on tape from Watkins should not hesitate to draft him. His Playmaker Scores are pretty good. They just happen to fall short of his hype, and a little short of the Playmaker Scores of other top prospects in his class.

Marqise Lee, USC
Playmaker Projection: 525.6 Yards
Playmaker Score: 90.8%

The most noteworthy factor for Marqise Lee is the difference between his production in his "peak" season and his production last year. As a sophomore, Lee recorded 1,721 receiving yards with 14 touchdowns and still managed to squeeze in 13 rushing attempts. That guy would undoubtedly be the strongest prospect in this class from a Playmaker perspective. However, that's not what teams are looking at here, as Lee crashed to the Earth in a big way in 2013, recording only 791 receiving yards with four touchdowns.

On balance, Playmaker likes Lee and only places him behind Evans and Watkins because his draft stock has slipped a bit in the eyes of draftniks recently (NFL Draft Scout projects him as a "1-2" rather than a "1"). However, scouts have been pretty good at sorting out receivers who turn in poor performances in their final seasons. Dez Bryant and Torry Holt were first-round picks, but lesser talents who experienced production drops, such as Lee Mays and Eugene Baker, were allowed to drop to the later rounds. So the fact that Lee is still in relatively high regards with scouts could suggest that he may be closer to the guy who had 1,721 receiving yards than the one who had only 791.

Potential Bust Alert: Robert Herron, Wyoming
Projected Round: 3-4
Playmaker Projection: 171.2 Yards
Playmaker Score: 24.0%

Picking a potential bust this year was difficult, given that Playmaker is fairly high on all of the wide receivers slated to go in the first two rounds. So the award goes to Robert Herron, who scouts think should come off the board in the middle of the draft, but who Playmaker thinks should go at the end of the draft, if at all. Herron stayed in school for a full four years, which is typically a sign of a lesser talent at the wide receiver position. This could be forgivable potentially, given that Wyoming is a smaller school, but Herron also failed to put up impressive numbers against inferior competition. Herron failed to crack 1,000 receiving yards during his time at Wyoming, even during his senior year, when the Cowboys passed 473 times. Herron's yards per catch is also fairly low (13.4) despite only rarely being used in the running game.

Potential Sleeper Alert: Austin Franklin, New Mexico State
Projected Round: 7
Playmaker Projection: 245.1 Yards
Playmaker Score: 86.6%

Franklin weighs only 189 pounds and recorded only a 4.56 forty-yard dash. Add that to the less than stellar competition that Franklin faced playing for New Mexico State, and you have a recipe for indifference from NFL scouts. However, Franklin had a nice career statistically. During his best season, he had over three yards for every team attempt and had a peak touchdown per attempt season that was nearly as good as Sammy Watkins'. Moreover, Franklin was also used as a running threat, averaging nearly a rushing attempt per game in his peak season, and still managed a solid 15.2 yards per catch. Seventh- round picks are nearly throwaways anyway, and although Franklin will not likely amount too much due to his low draft position, a team could make much worse bets at the end of the draft.

What follows is a list of all of the FBS wide receivers who were invited to the Combine and their Playmaker Projections and Ratings, ordered by Playmaker Projection:

Playmaker Score for 2014 NFL Draft Prospects
Name
College Proj. Round Playmaker
Projection
Playmaker
Rating

Brandin Cooks Oregon St. 1 638.0 95.8%
Odell Beckham Jr. LSU 1 608.4 93.6%
Mike Evans Texas A&M 1 558.4 86.8%
Sammy Watkins Clemson 1 543.7 83.8%
Marqise Lee USC 1-2 525.6 90.8%
Allen Robinson Penn St. 1-2 496.0 88.2%
Kelvin Benjamin Florida St. 2 465.7 88.0%
Davante Adams Fresno St. 2-3 437.0 89.4%
Donte Moncrief Ole Miss 1-2 436.0 80.7%
Martavis Bryant Clemson 2 413.0 84.2%
Name College Proj. Round Playmaker
Projection
Playmaker
Rating

Paul Richardson Colorado 3 399.8 88.2%
Cody Latimer Indiana 2 382.6 76.2%
Bruce Ellington South Carolina 2-3 371.2 82.4%
Jordan Matthews Vanderbilt 2 366.1 64.7%
Jarvis Landry LSU 3-4 355.4 81.4%
Josh Huff Oregon 4-5 261.0 72.0%
Jared Abbrederis Wisconsin 3 259.6 44.5%
Brandon Coleman Rutgers 4 255.5 72.5%
Austin Franklin New Mexico St. 7-FA 245.1 86.6%
Willie Snead Ball St. UDFA 220.1 83.8%
Name College Proj. Round Playmaker
Projection
Playmaker
Rating

Devin Street Pittsburgh 4 181.6 38.4%
Robert Herron Wyoming 3-4 171.2 24.0%
Ryan Grant Tulane 5 153.1 38.8%
Jeremy Gallon Michigan UDFA 148.6 64.7%
Kevin Norwood Alabama 4 136.4 18.1%
Jalen Saunders Oklahoma 6-7 134.6 48.5%
Josh Stewart Oklahoma St. 7-FA 125.2 58.8%
Quincy Enunwa Nebraska 7-FA 122.4 53.6%
Tevin Reese Baylor 7-FA 118.0 58.1%
Damian Copeland Louisville UDFA 115.4 64.9%
Name College Proj. Round Playmaker
Projection
Playmaker
Rating

Corey Brown Ohio St. UDFA 107.5 46.6%
Mike Campanaro Wake Forest 5 98.2 20.7%
Chris Boyd Vanderbilt UDFA 97.7 56.5%
Mike Davis Texas 6-7 86.0 28.5%
L'Damian Washington Missouri 7-FA 80.6 32.9%
Allen Hurns Miami UDFA 64.6 26.4%
Bennie Fowler Michigan St. UDFA 14.0 16.7%
Cody Hoffman BYU 7-FA 13.5 9.2%
Shaq Evans UCLA 7-FA 10.1 11.3%
T.J. Jones Notre Dame 5-6 2.1 3.1%
Marcus Lucas Missouri 7-FA 0.0 6.1%
Isaiah Burse Fresno St. 7-FA 0.0 3.5%
Posted by: Guest on 07 May 2014
 

RamsJunkie

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  • #6
Looks like the system was spot on for last years WR class