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tworoosters

Some BPFL season one defensive numbers

October 09, 2011 at 04:34PM View BBCode

Sacks per team per game: 2.43
NFL average last decade: 2.27

Interceptions per team per game: just under 1
NFL average last decade: just over 1

Fumbles per game : .63
NFL average last decade: 1.56

Small samples I know but it looks like fumbles, or lack of, are an issue .
RichNYC1

October 09, 2011 at 04:54PM View BBCode

I thought my team fumbled a lot
lancereisen

October 09, 2011 at 05:46PM View formatted

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There has been some discussion about receivers not fumbling. Also about WRs and break tackle.
When watching NFL games, I notice fumbles sometimes occur while the ball carrier is struggling for the extra yard or to break a tackle [Carrier is stood up and another defender aplies a devastating hit or the ball is clawed out].
We could make break tackle a double edged sword by having a slight possibility of fumble come into play when high break tackle is applied in the code.
Lower break tackle = less fumble chance.
This would allow GMs to draft aggressive receivers with a chance of fumble, or to draft a safe, 'hands' reciever that would get little YAC.
I suppose that carry and hands would have also figure in somehow.

[Edited on 10-9-2011 by lancereisen]
redcped

October 09, 2011 at 06:04PM View BBCode

NFL defenders have become far more aggressive at trying to force fumbles than they used to. It's becoming something of an art form to try to strip the ball while tackling. It would not surprise me if the past 5 years have higher totals than previous years.
tworoosters

October 09, 2011 at 06:56PM View BBCode

Actually it was slightly higher in the '90s averaging just over 1.6 fumbles a game for the decade .
redcped

October 09, 2011 at 08:00PM View BBCode

Originally posted by tworoosters
Actually it was slightly higher in the '90s averaging just over 1.6 fumbles a game for the decade .


I suppose this is why anecdotal evidence and reading articles about defense don't really do as much good as finding actual numbers.
tworoosters

October 09, 2011 at 08:03PM View BBCode

Originally posted by redcped
Originally posted by tworoosters
Actually it was slightly higher in the '90s averaging just over 1.6 fumbles a game for the decade .


I suppose this is why anecdotal evidence and reading articles about defense don't really do as much good as finding actual numbers.


But we should never let the facts get in the way of a good story :spin:
RichNYC1

October 09, 2011 at 11:40PM View BBCode

Originally posted by tworoosters
Originally posted by redcped
Originally posted by tworoosters
Actually it was slightly higher in the '90s averaging just over 1.6 fumbles a game for the decade .


I suppose this is why anecdotal evidence and reading articles about defense don't really do as much good as finding actual numbers.


But we should never let the facts get in the way of a good story :spin:


I liked that avatar that you had up about two days ago better than this one. (the girl holding the board). Just wanted to say that

[Edited on 10/04/06 by RichNYC1]
tworoosters

October 10, 2011 at 01:01AM View BBCode

Taste is subjective .
lancereisen

October 10, 2011 at 02:03AM View BBCode

Wasn't the nineties the decade of 'the Bears defense'? The whole league started doing it Hold up the carrier while he got yards and try to strip the ball away before he fell down. A team had 5-6 tries for the fumble before the offense scored.:P
KLKRTR

October 10, 2011 at 03:33PM View BBCode

I really like the idea of tying in 'Break Tackle' with fumbling after the catch.
Admin

October 10, 2011 at 04:53PM View BBCode

Originally posted by lancereisen
There has been some discussion about receivers not fumbling. Also about WRs and break tackle.
When watching NFL games, I notice fumbles sometimes occur while the ball carrier is struggling for the extra yard or to break a tackle [Carrier is stood up and another defender aplies a devastating hit or the ball is clawed out].
We could make break tackle a double edged sword by having a slight possibility of fumble come into play when high break tackle is applied in the code.
Lower break tackle = less fumble chance.
This would allow GMs to draft aggressive receivers with a chance of fumble, or to draft a safe, 'hands' reciever that would get little YAC.
I suppose that carry and hands would have also figure in somehow.

[Edited on 10-9-2011 by lancereisen]


I am also thinking of making this a setting... basically a whole page of "aggressiveness" settings where you would decide how safe to play it on both offense and defense: throwing into traffic, covering a receiver extra closely (risking pass interference but stopping/intercepting more), blocking strategies (block longer risking more holding calls), etc. Basically these would act as modifiers on aggressiveness in some cases, and be different lookup tables in others. I'm picturing it as a page of sliders, although like the Run More/Pass More the sliders would probably need to be more than halfway toward one end or the other to really make a difference (maybe set them up so they range from -2 to +2 rather than 0 to 100).

--Chris

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