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  1. #151
    Live by what you Speak. DarkReign's Avatar
    Post Count
    10,571
    Tebow isn't the first guy to win with a great defense and running game and limit turnovers. But good for him for doing so because there have been guys who aren't as successful.
    Kyle Orton comes to mind.
    The biggest benefactor I can think of in modern history is the Bucs quarterback on their Superbowl team.

    , my memory is failing me....cant believe I have to google this...

    Brad Johnson.

  2. #152
    Allenhu Joshbar DeadlyDynasty's Avatar
    My Team
    Buffalo Bills
    Post Count
    27,972
    The biggest benefactor I can think of in modern history is the Bucs quarterback on their Superbowl team.

    , my memory is failing me....cant believe I have to google this...

    Brad Johnson.
    Trent Dilfer in 2000 and Ben Roethlisberger in 2005 were also caretaker QBs that come to mind

  3. #153
    we rang stretch's Avatar
    My Team
    Oakland Raiders
    Post Count
    17,070
    Eli in 2008

  4. #154
    Veteran pawe's Avatar
    My Team
    Arizona Cardinals
    Post Count
    4,876
    5-1 as a starter. Go Tebow!
    Show the haters how the power of prayer works.

  5. #155
    I ♥ adrienne&ashbeeigh vato loco's Avatar
    Post Count
    440
    The biggest benefactor I can think of in modern history is the Bucs quarterback on their Superbowl team.

    , my memory is failing me....cant believe I have to google this...

    Brad Johnson.
    i don't think the comparison to brad johnson or trent dilfer has much merit other than the fact that they weren't great passers, just like tebow

    other than that i think both the buc's and raven's D were clearly better, those two defenses were some of the best we've seen over the past 20 yrs...denver's D has been solid since tebow took over but i don't think they're as dominant as those two were

    also tebow is much more of a leader than those two were, and has more playmaking ability especially with his legs...the comparison to 05' big ben is somewhat more accurate imo, which isn't all that bad.

  6. #156
    Their new aggy has been doing absolute work too.

  7. #157
    right about pizzagate Blake's Avatar
    My Team
    Baltimore Ravens
    Post Count
    83,732
    i don't think the comparison to brad johnson or trent dilfer has much merit other than the fact that they weren't great passers, just like tebow

    other than that i think both the buc's and raven's D were clearly better, those two defenses were some of the best we've seen over the past 20 yrs...denver's D has been solid since tebow took over but i don't think they're as dominant as those two were

    also tebow is much more of a leader than those two were, and has more playmaking ability especially with his legs...the comparison to 05' big ben is somewhat more accurate imo, which isn't all that bad.
    those teams also had great running games.

  8. #158
    ಥ﹏ಥ DAF86's Avatar
    My Team
    Kansas City Chiefs
    Post Count
    47,238
    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...&sct=hp_t11_a2

    The Cold, Hard Football Facts are not just drinking the Tim Tebow Kool-Aid. We're mixing up big batches, grabbing innocent football fans off the street and pumping tubes of it down their throats -- much like French farmers force-feed geese to fatten the bird's liver and make tasty foie gras.

    OK, that's overstating the case a bit. Foie gras is not so tasty.

    But the Cold, Hard Football Fact of the matter is that there is a fundamentally solid statistical foundation beneath the success of the Denver Broncos with Tebow at quarterback.

    Put most simply, Tebow consistently outplays the other team's quarterback, often by wide margins. This superior play is the No. 1 reason for Denver's sudden success -- now 5-1 with Tebow at QB this year after a dismal 1-4 start. But these superior performances seem lost on even the most knowledgeable football minds, like that of Broncos executive and Hall of Fame quarterback John Elway, for example.

    Elway was asked last week on Denver sports radio 102.3 The Ticket if the Broncos were "any closer" to having its proverbial QB of the future on the field. He replied with a blunt "no" and added later, "we gotta get better in the passing game."

    Tebow's career completion percentage of 47.1 in the NFL is well below modern standards. But completion percentage is only one small part of the story and not a very meaningful one at that.

    So Elway and most observers seem to treat Tebow like a circus freak, a statistically deformed football curiosity who wins games in spite of his own feeble ability to pass the football.

    You can win one or maybe two games in the NFL with some kind of fluky effort at QB. But the statistical length and breadth of NFL history shows that teams that win consistently do the same things well over and over -- and those same things begin and end with the quarterback position.

    And the Broncos are no exception.
    Superior All-Around Production At QB

    There's no doubt that Tebow's passing accuracy has been spotty at times. At the end of the day, though, he has consistently outplayed the other team's quarterbacks. The problem is that most analysts are limited in their ability to analyze and compare quarterbacks with anything more concrete than the old eye test. Or they look at stats that simply do not matter at the end of the day, such as passing yards, and can't figure out how Tebow is winning games.

    Smarter analysts might know to look at critical measures of passing success, such as yards per attempt or passer rating -- indicators that traditionally have a very high correlation to victory. But even those indicators fail to tell the whole story of Tim Tebow.

    Enter Cold, Hard Football Facts.com's Real Quarterback Rating, which we introduced over the summer and which has quickly proven itself the most important indicator in football outside of final score.

    CHFF Real Quarterback Rating measures all aspects of quarterback play, passing, rushing, sacks, fumbles, etc., and spits it out in a number substantially similar to passer rating and that uses the same formula as passer rating. (Passer rating, while extraordinarily useful in its own right, measures only passing and nothing else -- even if many fans and analysts erroneously refer to it as "quarterback rating.")

    Our introduction of Real QB Rating this year has proven fortuitous. After all, it provides a perfect way to compare Tebow to opposing passers. (Get a full explanation of Real Quarterback Rating in the footnotes below.)

    Here's how Tebow stacks up against each opposing quarterback this year in traditional passer rating and in Real Quarterback Rating.

    Week 7 -- Denver 18, Miami 15
    Matt Moore: 92.6 passer rating; 69.6 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 91.7 passer rating; 80.5 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+10.9)

    Week 8 -- Detroit 45, Denver 10
    Matt Stafford-Shaun Hill: 126.0 passer rating; 118.2 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 56.8 passer rating; 48.2 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Stafford (+70.0)

    Week 9 -- Denver 38, Oakland 24
    Carson Palmer: 79.7 passer rating; 69.4 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 98.1 passer rating; 108.2 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+38.8)

    Week 10 -- Denver 17, Kansas City 10
    Matt Cassel-Tyler Palko: 73.2 passer rating; 67.9 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 102.6 passer rating; 122.7 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+54.8)

    Week 11 -- Denver 17, N.Y. Jets 13
    Mark Sanchez: 67.9 passer rating; 62.2 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 61.3 passer rating; 87.1 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+24.9)

    Week 12 -- Denver 16, San Diego 13
    Philip Rivers: 77.1 passer rating, 68.8 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 95.4 pass rating, 94.4 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+25.6)

    In other words, Tebow is no statistical circus freak winning in spite of himself. Tebow's Broncos are winning because he consistently outperforms the opposing quarterback when you take into account all aspects of production: passing, running, sacks, total touchdowns, interceptions and fumbles. In fact, he consistently outperforms them by a wide margin.

    Denver is 5-0 when Tebow produces a higher Real QB Rating than the opposing quarterback and 0-1 when the other team has the advantage. And those results are no coincidence.

    After all, it turns out that no stat in football outside final score -- indeed, maybe no stat in North American sports, period -- is more important than Real QB Rating this season when it comes time to separate winners and losers.

    At Cold, Hard Football Facts.com Insider, for example, we track the Correlation to Victory of Real Quarterback Rating, all of our "Quality Stats" and many other indicators: we tell you often teams win games when they win each statistical battle. Real QB Rating is easily the most important indicator in football.

    Here's the Correlation to Victory of several notable indicators through Week 12 of the 2011 season.

    Real QB Rating -- 156-20 (.886)
    Passer rating -- 135-41 (.767)
    Real Passing YPA (which includes sacks) -- 124-52 (.705)
    Passing YPA -- 121-55 (.688)
    Rush yards -- 119-56 (.680)
    Rush YPA -- 89-87 (.506)
    Passing yards -- 80-96 (.455)

    The numbers are extraordinarily telling: gaudy passing days do not help you win football games and a more prolific day pounding out yards on the ground is only slightly more important. Instead, more effective all-around play at quarterback wins football games -- regardless of how many yards a quarterback produces through the air. And right now, Tebow gives Denver more effective all-around play at quarterback almost every week.

    Can Tebow do it over the long haul? Can he consistently pad his stats and performances by running the football like a college quarterback?

    Probably not. Sooner or later he'll have to pass the ball better, like Elway said. But that doesn't change the fact that, right now, Denver's 5-1 record is easy to explain: Tebow is consistently better and more productive than the other team's quarterback.
    Tebow's Quietly Historic Production

    There are two underlying reasons why Tebow is so effective, two reasons that explain his impressive Real Quarterback Rating week after week.

    1. He gets the ball in the end zone more often than any QB in football today
    2. He protects the football better than any QB in football today

    The Broncos clearly have not scored a lot of points with Tebow at quarterback. In fact, Denver has averaged just 19.3 points per game in Tebow's six starts and has scored 18 points or fewer in five of those games. And clearly, the defense has improved dramatically in recent weeks, either purely as coincidence or as a by-product of the fact that Tebow has helped the team improve in all areas by protecting the football.

    But Tebow himself has been deadly with the ball in his hands. He produces touchdowns at an amazing clip, better than any quarterback in football in his brief career. Here's a comparison of Tebow vs. some of the more prolific quarterbacks in recent history.

    Career percentage of touches that result in a TD:
    Tim Tebow -- 6.0 percent
    Aaron Rodgers -- 5.7 percent
    Peyton Manning -- 5.5 percent
    Tom Brady -- 5.1 percent
    Drew Brees -- 4.7 percent
    John Elway -- 3.9 percent

    Wow. Tebow may not pass the ball effectively. But he's produced an incredible 22 touchdowns (13 passing, nine rushing) in just 368 touches (225 pass attempts, 121 rush attempts, 22 sacks). Nobody in football gets the ball in the end zone more often.

    More importantly, Tebow takes incredibly good care of the football. We track something at Cold, Hard Football Facts called the "interception ladder." It shows us that every interception decreases your chances of winning by about 20 percentage points. In other words, interceptions are destructive plays that severely limit a team's ability to win games.

    But the Broncos are winning not just because Tebow protects the football, but because he protects it better than any QB in the game today. Here's how he stacks up against some of the more prolific QBs in the game today.

    Career interception percentage:
    Tim Tebow -- 1.78 percent
    Aaron Rodgers -- 1.83 percent
    Tom Brady -- 2.2 percent
    Drew Brees -- 2.71 percent
    Peyton Manning -- 2.75 percent
    John Elway -- 3.1 percent

    Add in that Tebow has lost just one fumble in his career (with four INT) and his turnover rate is an incredibly miniscule 1.4 percent.

    Tebow has suffered just two turnovers all year, one interception and one fumble. Both of those turnovers came in the Detroit game, his lone loss this year. He has a clean slate, zero turnovers, in Denver's five victories this year.

    We're not trying to extrapolate too much out on Tebow's career. Clearly, he's played only a handful of games. The other passers on those lists played over the long haul. A lot can change between here and the end of his career -- whenever and wherever that may come.

    But for right here, and right now, Denver is winning because Tebow is consistently the best and most productive quarterback on the field.

  9. #159
    One of the most best jag's Avatar
    My Team
    Dallas Cowboys
    Post Count
    13,882
    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...&sct=hp_t11_a2

    The Cold, Hard Football Facts are not just drinking the Tim Tebow Kool-Aid. We're mixing up big batches, grabbing innocent football fans off the street and pumping tubes of it down their throats -- much like French farmers force-feed geese to fatten the bird's liver and make tasty foie gras.

    OK, that's overstating the case a bit. Foie gras is not so tasty.

    But the Cold, Hard Football Fact of the matter is that there is a fundamentally solid statistical foundation beneath the success of the Denver Broncos with Tebow at quarterback.

    Put most simply, Tebow consistently outplays the other team's quarterback, often by wide margins. This superior play is the No. 1 reason for Denver's sudden success -- now 5-1 with Tebow at QB this year after a dismal 1-4 start. But these superior performances seem lost on even the most knowledgeable football minds, like that of Broncos executive and Hall of Fame quarterback John Elway, for example.

    Elway was asked last week on Denver sports radio 102.3 The Ticket if the Broncos were "any closer" to having its proverbial QB of the future on the field. He replied with a blunt "no" and added later, "we gotta get better in the passing game."

    Tebow's career completion percentage of 47.1 in the NFL is well below modern standards. But completion percentage is only one small part of the story and not a very meaningful one at that.

    So Elway and most observers seem to treat Tebow like a circus freak, a statistically deformed football curiosity who wins games in spite of his own feeble ability to pass the football.

    You can win one or maybe two games in the NFL with some kind of fluky effort at QB. But the statistical length and breadth of NFL history shows that teams that win consistently do the same things well over and over -- and those same things begin and end with the quarterback position.

    And the Broncos are no exception.
    Superior All-Around Production At QB

    There's no doubt that Tebow's passing accuracy has been spotty at times. At the end of the day, though, he has consistently outplayed the other team's quarterbacks. The problem is that most analysts are limited in their ability to analyze and compare quarterbacks with anything more concrete than the old eye test. Or they look at stats that simply do not matter at the end of the day, such as passing yards, and can't figure out how Tebow is winning games.

    Smarter analysts might know to look at critical measures of passing success, such as yards per attempt or passer rating -- indicators that traditionally have a very high correlation to victory. But even those indicators fail to tell the whole story of Tim Tebow.

    Enter Cold, Hard Football Facts.com's Real Quarterback Rating, which we introduced over the summer and which has quickly proven itself the most important indicator in football outside of final score.

    CHFF Real Quarterback Rating measures all aspects of quarterback play, passing, rushing, sacks, fumbles, etc., and spits it out in a number substantially similar to passer rating and that uses the same formula as passer rating. (Passer rating, while extraordinarily useful in its own right, measures only passing and nothing else -- even if many fans and analysts erroneously refer to it as "quarterback rating.")

    Our introduction of Real QB Rating this year has proven fortuitous. After all, it provides a perfect way to compare Tebow to opposing passers. (Get a full explanation of Real Quarterback Rating in the footnotes below.)

    Here's how Tebow stacks up against each opposing quarterback this year in traditional passer rating and in Real Quarterback Rating.

    Week 7 -- Denver 18, Miami 15
    Matt Moore: 92.6 passer rating; 69.6 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 91.7 passer rating; 80.5 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+10.9)

    Week 8 -- Detroit 45, Denver 10
    Matt Stafford-Shaun Hill: 126.0 passer rating; 118.2 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 56.8 passer rating; 48.2 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Stafford (+70.0)

    Week 9 -- Denver 38, Oakland 24
    Carson Palmer: 79.7 passer rating; 69.4 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 98.1 passer rating; 108.2 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+38.8)

    Week 10 -- Denver 17, Kansas City 10
    Matt Cassel-Tyler Palko: 73.2 passer rating; 67.9 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 102.6 passer rating; 122.7 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+54.8)

    Week 11 -- Denver 17, N.Y. Jets 13
    Mark Sanchez: 67.9 passer rating; 62.2 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 61.3 passer rating; 87.1 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+24.9)

    Week 12 -- Denver 16, San Diego 13
    Philip Rivers: 77.1 passer rating, 68.8 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 95.4 pass rating, 94.4 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+25.6)

    In other words, Tebow is no statistical circus freak winning in spite of himself. Tebow's Broncos are winning because he consistently outperforms the opposing quarterback when you take into account all aspects of production: passing, running, sacks, total touchdowns, interceptions and fumbles. In fact, he consistently outperforms them by a wide margin.

    Denver is 5-0 when Tebow produces a higher Real QB Rating than the opposing quarterback and 0-1 when the other team has the advantage. And those results are no coincidence.

    After all, it turns out that no stat in football outside final score -- indeed, maybe no stat in North American sports, period -- is more important than Real QB Rating this season when it comes time to separate winners and losers.

    At Cold, Hard Football Facts.com Insider, for example, we track the Correlation to Victory of Real Quarterback Rating, all of our "Quality Stats" and many other indicators: we tell you often teams win games when they win each statistical battle. Real QB Rating is easily the most important indicator in football.

    Here's the Correlation to Victory of several notable indicators through Week 12 of the 2011 season.

    Real QB Rating -- 156-20 (.886)
    Passer rating -- 135-41 (.767)
    Real Passing YPA (which includes sacks) -- 124-52 (.705)
    Passing YPA -- 121-55 (.688)
    Rush yards -- 119-56 (.680)
    Rush YPA -- 89-87 (.506)
    Passing yards -- 80-96 (.455)

    The numbers are extraordinarily telling: gaudy passing days do not help you win football games and a more prolific day pounding out yards on the ground is only slightly more important. Instead, more effective all-around play at quarterback wins football games -- regardless of how many yards a quarterback produces through the air. And right now, Tebow gives Denver more effective all-around play at quarterback almost every week.

    Can Tebow do it over the long haul? Can he consistently pad his stats and performances by running the football like a college quarterback?

    Probably not. Sooner or later he'll have to pass the ball better, like Elway said. But that doesn't change the fact that, right now, Denver's 5-1 record is easy to explain: Tebow is consistently better and more productive than the other team's quarterback.
    Tebow's Quietly Historic Production

    There are two underlying reasons why Tebow is so effective, two reasons that explain his impressive Real Quarterback Rating week after week.

    1. He gets the ball in the end zone more often than any QB in football today
    2. He protects the football better than any QB in football today

    The Broncos clearly have not scored a lot of points with Tebow at quarterback. In fact, Denver has averaged just 19.3 points per game in Tebow's six starts and has scored 18 points or fewer in five of those games. And clearly, the defense has improved dramatically in recent weeks, either purely as coincidence or as a by-product of the fact that Tebow has helped the team improve in all areas by protecting the football.

    But Tebow himself has been deadly with the ball in his hands. He produces touchdowns at an amazing clip, better than any quarterback in football in his brief career. Here's a comparison of Tebow vs. some of the more prolific quarterbacks in recent history.

    Career percentage of touches that result in a TD:
    Tim Tebow -- 6.0 percent
    Aaron Rodgers -- 5.7 percent
    Peyton Manning -- 5.5 percent
    Tom Brady -- 5.1 percent
    Drew Brees -- 4.7 percent
    John Elway -- 3.9 percent

    Wow. Tebow may not pass the ball effectively. But he's produced an incredible 22 touchdowns (13 passing, nine rushing) in just 368 touches (225 pass attempts, 121 rush attempts, 22 sacks). Nobody in football gets the ball in the end zone more often.

    More importantly, Tebow takes incredibly good care of the football. We track something at Cold, Hard Football Facts called the "interception ladder." It shows us that every interception decreases your chances of winning by about 20 percentage points. In other words, interceptions are destructive plays that severely limit a team's ability to win games.

    But the Broncos are winning not just because Tebow protects the football, but because he protects it better than any QB in the game today. Here's how he stacks up against some of the more prolific QBs in the game today.

    Career interception percentage:
    Tim Tebow -- 1.78 percent
    Aaron Rodgers -- 1.83 percent
    Tom Brady -- 2.2 percent
    Drew Brees -- 2.71 percent
    Peyton Manning -- 2.75 percent
    John Elway -- 3.1 percent

    Add in that Tebow has lost just one fumble in his career (with four INT) and his turnover rate is an incredibly miniscule 1.4 percent.

    Tebow has suffered just two turnovers all year, one interception and one fumble. Both of those turnovers came in the Detroit game, his lone loss this year. He has a clean slate, zero turnovers, in Denver's five victories this year.

    We're not trying to extrapolate too much out on Tebow's career. Clearly, he's played only a handful of games. The other passers on those lists played over the long haul. A lot can change between here and the end of his career -- whenever and wherever that may come.

    But for right here, and right now, Denver is winning because Tebow is consistently the best and most productive quarterback on the field.



  10. #160
    Done with the NBA
    Post Count
    18,479
    But Tebow himself has been deadly with the ball in his hands. He produces touchdowns at an amazing clip, better than any quarterback in football in his brief career. Here's a comparison of Tebow vs. some of the more prolific quarterbacks in recent history.

    Career percentage of touches that result in a TD:
    Tim Tebow -- 6.0 percent
    Aaron Rodgers -- 5.7 percent
    Peyton Manning -- 5.5 percent
    Tom Brady -- 5.1 percent
    Drew Brees -- 4.7 percent
    John Elway -- 3.9 percent


    This is pretty amazing.

    Yet the media won't give him a break. Media keeps moving goal post with Tebow as well.

  11. #161
    I ♥ adrienne&ashbeeigh vato loco's Avatar
    Post Count
    440
    those teams also had great running games.
    mcgahee and the denver o-line are no slouches but saying they're great is a bit of a stretch

    tebow's ability to scramble and to run the option is the reason that running game has been great the past 6 weeks

  12. #162
    I ♥ adrienne&ashbeeigh vato loco's Avatar
    Post Count
    440
    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...&sct=hp_t11_a2

    The Cold, Hard Football Facts are not just drinking the Tim Tebow Kool-Aid. We're mixing up big batches, grabbing innocent football fans off the street and pumping tubes of it down their throats -- much like French farmers force-feed geese to fatten the bird's liver and make tasty foie gras.

    OK, that's overstating the case a bit. Foie gras is not so tasty.

    But the Cold, Hard Football Fact of the matter is that there is a fundamentally solid statistical foundation beneath the success of the Denver Broncos with Tebow at quarterback.

    Put most simply, Tebow consistently outplays the other team's quarterback, often by wide margins. This superior play is the No. 1 reason for Denver's sudden success -- now 5-1 with Tebow at QB this year after a dismal 1-4 start. But these superior performances seem lost on even the most knowledgeable football minds, like that of Broncos executive and Hall of Fame quarterback John Elway, for example.

    Elway was asked last week on Denver sports radio 102.3 The Ticket if the Broncos were "any closer" to having its proverbial QB of the future on the field. He replied with a blunt "no" and added later, "we gotta get better in the passing game."

    Tebow's career completion percentage of 47.1 in the NFL is well below modern standards. But completion percentage is only one small part of the story and not a very meaningful one at that.

    So Elway and most observers seem to treat Tebow like a circus freak, a statistically deformed football curiosity who wins games in spite of his own feeble ability to pass the football.

    You can win one or maybe two games in the NFL with some kind of fluky effort at QB. But the statistical length and breadth of NFL history shows that teams that win consistently do the same things well over and over -- and those same things begin and end with the quarterback position.

    And the Broncos are no exception.
    Superior All-Around Production At QB

    There's no doubt that Tebow's passing accuracy has been spotty at times. At the end of the day, though, he has consistently outplayed the other team's quarterbacks. The problem is that most analysts are limited in their ability to analyze and compare quarterbacks with anything more concrete than the old eye test. Or they look at stats that simply do not matter at the end of the day, such as passing yards, and can't figure out how Tebow is winning games.

    Smarter analysts might know to look at critical measures of passing success, such as yards per attempt or passer rating -- indicators that traditionally have a very high correlation to victory. But even those indicators fail to tell the whole story of Tim Tebow.

    Enter Cold, Hard Football Facts.com's Real Quarterback Rating, which we introduced over the summer and which has quickly proven itself the most important indicator in football outside of final score.

    CHFF Real Quarterback Rating measures all aspects of quarterback play, passing, rushing, sacks, fumbles, etc., and spits it out in a number substantially similar to passer rating and that uses the same formula as passer rating. (Passer rating, while extraordinarily useful in its own right, measures only passing and nothing else -- even if many fans and analysts erroneously refer to it as "quarterback rating.")

    Our introduction of Real QB Rating this year has proven fortuitous. After all, it provides a perfect way to compare Tebow to opposing passers. (Get a full explanation of Real Quarterback Rating in the footnotes below.)

    Here's how Tebow stacks up against each opposing quarterback this year in traditional passer rating and in Real Quarterback Rating.

    Week 7 -- Denver 18, Miami 15
    Matt Moore: 92.6 passer rating; 69.6 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 91.7 passer rating; 80.5 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+10.9)

    Week 8 -- Detroit 45, Denver 10
    Matt Stafford-Shaun Hill: 126.0 passer rating; 118.2 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 56.8 passer rating; 48.2 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Stafford (+70.0)

    Week 9 -- Denver 38, Oakland 24
    Carson Palmer: 79.7 passer rating; 69.4 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 98.1 passer rating; 108.2 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+38.8)

    Week 10 -- Denver 17, Kansas City 10
    Matt Cassel-Tyler Palko: 73.2 passer rating; 67.9 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 102.6 passer rating; 122.7 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+54.8)

    Week 11 -- Denver 17, N.Y. Jets 13
    Mark Sanchez: 67.9 passer rating; 62.2 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 61.3 passer rating; 87.1 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+24.9)

    Week 12 -- Denver 16, San Diego 13
    Philip Rivers: 77.1 passer rating, 68.8 Real QB Rating
    Tim Tebow: 95.4 pass rating, 94.4 Real QB Rating

    Real QB Rating advantage: Tebow (+25.6)

    In other words, Tebow is no statistical circus freak winning in spite of himself. Tebow's Broncos are winning because he consistently outperforms the opposing quarterback when you take into account all aspects of production: passing, running, sacks, total touchdowns, interceptions and fumbles. In fact, he consistently outperforms them by a wide margin.

    Denver is 5-0 when Tebow produces a higher Real QB Rating than the opposing quarterback and 0-1 when the other team has the advantage. And those results are no coincidence.

    After all, it turns out that no stat in football outside final score -- indeed, maybe no stat in North American sports, period -- is more important than Real QB Rating this season when it comes time to separate winners and losers.

    At Cold, Hard Football Facts.com Insider, for example, we track the Correlation to Victory of Real Quarterback Rating, all of our "Quality Stats" and many other indicators: we tell you often teams win games when they win each statistical battle. Real QB Rating is easily the most important indicator in football.

    Here's the Correlation to Victory of several notable indicators through Week 12 of the 2011 season.

    Real QB Rating -- 156-20 (.886)
    Passer rating -- 135-41 (.767)
    Real Passing YPA (which includes sacks) -- 124-52 (.705)
    Passing YPA -- 121-55 (.688)
    Rush yards -- 119-56 (.680)
    Rush YPA -- 89-87 (.506)
    Passing yards -- 80-96 (.455)

    The numbers are extraordinarily telling: gaudy passing days do not help you win football games and a more prolific day pounding out yards on the ground is only slightly more important. Instead, more effective all-around play at quarterback wins football games -- regardless of how many yards a quarterback produces through the air. And right now, Tebow gives Denver more effective all-around play at quarterback almost every week.

    Can Tebow do it over the long haul? Can he consistently pad his stats and performances by running the football like a college quarterback?

    Probably not. Sooner or later he'll have to pass the ball better, like Elway said. But that doesn't change the fact that, right now, Denver's 5-1 record is easy to explain: Tebow is consistently better and more productive than the other team's quarterback.
    Tebow's Quietly Historic Production

    There are two underlying reasons why Tebow is so effective, two reasons that explain his impressive Real Quarterback Rating week after week.

    1. He gets the ball in the end zone more often than any QB in football today
    2. He protects the football better than any QB in football today

    The Broncos clearly have not scored a lot of points with Tebow at quarterback. In fact, Denver has averaged just 19.3 points per game in Tebow's six starts and has scored 18 points or fewer in five of those games. And clearly, the defense has improved dramatically in recent weeks, either purely as coincidence or as a by-product of the fact that Tebow has helped the team improve in all areas by protecting the football.

    But Tebow himself has been deadly with the ball in his hands. He produces touchdowns at an amazing clip, better than any quarterback in football in his brief career. Here's a comparison of Tebow vs. some of the more prolific quarterbacks in recent history.

    Career percentage of touches that result in a TD:
    Tim Tebow -- 6.0 percent
    Aaron Rodgers -- 5.7 percent
    Peyton Manning -- 5.5 percent
    Tom Brady -- 5.1 percent
    Drew Brees -- 4.7 percent
    John Elway -- 3.9 percent

    Wow. Tebow may not pass the ball effectively. But he's produced an incredible 22 touchdowns (13 passing, nine rushing) in just 368 touches (225 pass attempts, 121 rush attempts, 22 sacks). Nobody in football gets the ball in the end zone more often.

    More importantly, Tebow takes incredibly good care of the football. We track something at Cold, Hard Football Facts called the "interception ladder." It shows us that every interception decreases your chances of winning by about 20 percentage points. In other words, interceptions are destructive plays that severely limit a team's ability to win games.

    But the Broncos are winning not just because Tebow protects the football, but because he protects it better than any QB in the game today. Here's how he stacks up against some of the more prolific QBs in the game today.

    Career interception percentage:
    Tim Tebow -- 1.78 percent
    Aaron Rodgers -- 1.83 percent
    Tom Brady -- 2.2 percent
    Drew Brees -- 2.71 percent
    Peyton Manning -- 2.75 percent
    John Elway -- 3.1 percent

    Add in that Tebow has lost just one fumble in his career (with four INT) and his turnover rate is an incredibly miniscule 1.4 percent.

    Tebow has suffered just two turnovers all year, one interception and one fumble. Both of those turnovers came in the Detroit game, his lone loss this year. He has a clean slate, zero turnovers, in Denver's five victories this year.

    We're not trying to extrapolate too much out on Tebow's career. Clearly, he's played only a handful of games. The other passers on those lists played over the long haul. A lot can change between here and the end of his career -- whenever and wherever that may come.

    But for right here, and right now, Denver is winning because Tebow is consistently the best and most productive quarterback on the field.



  13. #163
    Veteran pawe's Avatar
    My Team
    Arizona Cardinals
    Post Count
    4,876
    The confidence he's gaining this year in running the options will greatly benefit him next year...not really good for the team in the long term if he succeeds as they will tailor the system around his style of play.
    They might turn out to be Colts 2.0

  14. #164
    I cannot grok its fullnes leemajors's Avatar
    My Team
    Dallas Cowboys
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  15. #165
    Haven't seen Merril this butthurt over a player in a while.

  16. #166
    Done with the NBA
    Post Count
    18,479
    Tebow
    McGahee
    Denver coaches

  17. #167
    Clever got me this far... JMarkJohns's Avatar
    My Team
    Arizona Cardinals
    Post Count
    10,116
    When was the ground allowed to cause a fumble? I know it can negate prior reception ala the Megatron catch vs. Bears a few years back, but I've not seen such a clear-cut case of the ground causing a fumble that was allowed to stand as a "fumble"!

  18. #168
    Allenhu Joshbar DeadlyDynasty's Avatar
    My Team
    Buffalo Bills
    Post Count
    27,972
    Ok now THAT was impressive

  19. #169
    Done with the NBA
    Post Count
    18,479
    Tebow making plays. yeah!!!

  20. #170
    Done with the NBA
    Post Count
    18,479
    Denver defense is allowing too many 3rd down completions today.

    I also thought the ground couldn't cause a fumble. I want some clarification.

  21. #171
    Done with the NBA
    Post Count
    18,479
    Stupid.

  22. #172
    Done with the NBA
    Post Count
    18,479
    Denver doing everything possible to lose. Penalties and turnovers.

    Why they won't go for two is beyond me.
    Last edited by Nathan89; 12-04-2011 at 03:41 PM.

  23. #173
    Done with the NBA
    Post Count
    18,479
    Great f'in defense. I love it.

    Tbh, Petterson lost a couple of shades.

  24. #174
    Done with the NBA
    Post Count
    18,479
    Go for 2 you dip .

  25. #175
    Done with the NBA
    Post Count
    18,479
    Defense better step the up now.

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