Atlanta gets.3 more yards per carry than their opponent normally allows and.9 passing
yards per attempt more
Not exact matches
Running the ball is key for the Bears, and they are averaging
more than 131 rushing
yards per game on an average of 30.5
attempts.
Comparing him to this year's prospects, you can think of it this way: statistically, Josh Allen is DeShone Kizer if Kizer threw less passes, completed a lower percentage of those passes he threw, threw for fewer
yards and fewer
yards per attempt, for fewer touchdowns,
more interceptions and did it against worse competition.
He was sacked twice but still averaged a solid 8.0
yards per pass
attempt, including sacks; this is even
more impressive when you factor in the fact that Penn State couldn't run the ball to save its life (Zach Zwinak and Bill Belton: 30 carries, 80
yards) and he faced a lot of second - and third - and - longs.
65.6 - percent completions, 3,200
yards, 20 TD, 5 INT, 8.1
yards per attempt and a QBR of 71.41 thanks in large part to 815 rushing
yards and seven
more touchdowns.
Must have the lowest
yards per attempt of any QB that has been a starter
more than one year in the NFL today.
Newton is throwing the ball less often
per game (28.3
attempts vs. 33) and accumulating fewer passing
yards (186.8 vs. 229.1), but he's scoring
more touchdowns (2.16 vs. 1.63), throwing far fewer interceptions (0.17 vs. 1.38), and running for way
more yardage (64.7 vs. 31.9).
When teams send five or
more at him, Wilson is 20 - for - 26 for 352
yards with six touchdowns, no interceptions, and 13.5
yards per attempt (
per PFF).
That's a differentiation we can't make with
more standard stats like
yards per attempt.