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I have been working on gathering a wide variety of data for some small analytical projects I have been working on this off-season. So far, I have posted the results of two of these analyses to this board, linked here and here. Today, we are going to be doing the same exact thing, but we are looking at wide receivers. We are going to talk about who has had the best individual season in franchise history, and who is the best career wide receiver in franchise history. There is mathematical backing behind this, but it is all for fun - this isn't meant to END ALL ARGUMENTS (not that I could do that anyway) but I will say that the results aren't far off of what I was expecting. Which, is nice.
Let's just begin by saying this took FOREVER. Guys, I have been working on this for weeks. I have essentially built a workbook of all NFL receiving statistics going back to 1968. That aggregation and organization took long enough by itself. Then, when I finally finished that, I had to do all of my calculations. I did not want to do that by hand, so I chose not to. I wrote a program to go through the Excel workbook and calculate all of the data for me. The reason being is that I wanted to filter for only WR's only, so going page-by-page, filtering and inserting the formulas was just too tedious. Now, in the end, automating that process may have taken me just as long as it would have by hand due to little bugs and some unfamiliarity with the library I used, but...
Alright, you don't give a shit about any of that. Let's get to the list. Just like before, I will post some methodology at the bottom for those interested. Let's jump into looking at who had the best individual season in franchise history. There are three metrics we are looking at to define this; receptions, yards and touchdowns. Pretty simple. We have to keep it simple because older NFL data doesn't track some of the metrics we are used to (targets, for example). With that explained, the best individual season in franchise history goes to...
Ja'Marr Chase.
That's for real, folks. Chase came in as a rookie and had the best season a wide receiver has ever had in franchise history. With a statline of 81 catches for 1455 yards and 13 TDs, he razzled and dazzled to the top. This time last year, arguments were raging about Sewell vs. Chase, whether it was the right pick or not and if it isn't apparent by now, Chase was the right pick (dammit Goose, here we go again). A lethal offensive weapon, he already has the makings of a top five WR after his rookie year, and it isn't out of the realm of possibility that he could be challenging for the top spot in just a couple of seasons time. Here is a look at the top 10 seasons in franchise history, as defined by my analysis.
- Ja'Marr Chase
- Carl Pickens - 1995
- Carl Pickens - 1996
- A.J. Green - 2013
- Chad Johnson - 2003
- Chad Johnson - 2005
- A.J. Green - 2012
- T.J. Houshmandzadeh - 2007
- Isaac Curtis - 1973
- Cris Collinsworth - 1986
It feels like Chad is a little underrepresented here, but don't worry, he comes in at 11th and 13th as well. He barely missed out on a third top 10 season. Carl Pickens is a fun one to look at, as he had a couple of seasons of domination in the mid-90s. In 1995, Carl logged 99 catches for 1,234 yards and 17 TDs. He followed that up in 1996 by notching another 1,000 yard season and an additional 12 TDs. Personally, I am happy to see Housh on here. He wasn't a very flashy player, but I remember him fondly from the mid-2000's and he was fantastic in 2007. Now, onto the best career receivers here, and this may have some controversial results...
Best Overall Wide Receiver - Career
- Chad Johnson
- Cris Collinsworth
- A.J. Green
- Tyler Boyd
- T.J. Houshmandzadeh
- Carl Pickens
- Eddie Brown
- Isaac Curtis
- Marvin Jones
- Brandon LaFell
....yeah? Collinsworth is the 2nd best receiver in franchise history? Over Green? And Pickens? Curtis? Apparently so, yes. At least with this methodology. Collinsworth didn't have any real eye popping seasons, but he was just consistently good. For most of his career, if he was healthy, he was going to get you right around 1,000 yards and between five and eight touchdowns. Even for the time period, this wasn't crazy, but the consistency was good enough to land him at the #2 spot. Pickens had a fantastic mid-career but disappointing beginning and end. Here is a crazy fact for you; Carl Pickens won offensive rookie of the year in 1992 on 26 catches for 326 yards and ONE touchdown.
I envy no one that had to rank these guys that year.
Methodology - So, this part will be fairly short, I think. This is using Z-Score, just like the other two were. We are wanting to era adjust and I think this is one of the best methods of doing so. For those who don't remember, Z-Score is a figure we calculate in order to figure out how much better or worse a particular value is from the average of a population. You might remember that earlier in the post, I said we are using receptions, yards, and TDs. So, for each season, I calculated the average for each of those three categories and then calculated the standard deviation. From there, we can use the players metrics from that season to figure out how they compared to the rest of the league during that time. Z-Score tells you how many standard deviations a value is from the average.
A Z-Score of 1 is pretty good. Not elite, but pretty good. A Z-Score of 2 is elite category. This player is dominating if they are putting up numbers like this. A Z-Score of 3 is ridiculous, and not only the best in any given year but likely one of the best seasons, ever. Anything higher than that would be historic and unprecedented. For example, Randy Moss had a touchdown Z-Score of 4.55 in 2007 when he set the record. Jerry Rice had a touchdown Z-Score of 5.23 in 1987, when he scored 22 touchdowns. So, yeah, ridiculous seasons.
How I ended up ranking these players was by weighting each of the three categories. There is no real mathematical backing behind the weights, just trying to line up what I thought fit right. The weights, in order from heaviest to lightest go...
- Touchdowns
- Yards
- Receptions
Using the weight figures, I was able to calculate a rating. I originally just added them all up, but it treated them all the same. Is a normal reception worth as much as a TD? No, I don't think so, not normally. I didn't want to represent it that way, either. I am sure my weights could be improved, but this will do for now.
And that's it! Happy to answer questions or provide more info if requested. Thanks for reading.
2
1
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How did you use z-scores for career numbers?
Or did you just add up the individual season z-scores?
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I realize that no one mathematical formula is perfect, but I think Eddie Brown had one of the best seasons in Bengal history in 88. I am sure it did not make your list because he only had 53 receptions, but his 24.0 average per catch is one of the highest ever in the league, and his 1273 and 9 tds are high on the Bengals all-time list.
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I love the vindication when I get into a discussion about Curtis NOT being the best receiver in team history (and not even close, going by Goose's methodology).
Many of us still say Chad is the best ever and this backs it up; I can only imagine if he didn't leave after 2010...
Great stuff, Goose! I'm sure after 5 seasons or so, ESPECIALLY with Joe throwing to him, Ja'Marr will be high up on the list.
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I was surprised by two things
1. I guessed Chad or AJ would have had the best single season.
2. I never would have guessed Collinsworth would be 2nd best career.
Chase very easily could end up our best WR off all time.
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(06-19-2022, 10:18 AM)KillerGoose Wrote: I have been working on gathering a wide variety of data for some small analytical projects I have been working on this off-season. So far, I have posted the results of two of these analyses to this board, linked here and here. Today, we are going to be doing the same exact thing, but we are looking at wide receivers. We are going to talk about who has had the best individual season in franchise history, and who is the best career wide receiver in franchise history. There is mathematical backing behind this, but it is all for fun - this isn't meant to END ALL ARGUMENTS (not that I could do that anyway) but I will say that the results aren't far off of what I was expecting. Which, is nice.
Let's just begin by saying this took FOREVER. Guys, I have been working on this for weeks. I have essentially built a workbook of all NFL receiving statistics going back to 1968. That aggregation and organization took long enough by itself. Then, when I finally finished that, I had to do all of my calculations. I did not want to do that by hand, so I chose not to. I wrote a program to go through the Excel workbook and calculate all of the data for me. The reason being is that I wanted to filter for only WR's only, so going page-by-page, filtering and inserting the formulas was just too tedious. Now, in the end, automating that process may have taken me just as long as it would have by hand due to little bugs and some unfamiliarity with the library I used, but...
Alright, you don't give a shit about any of that. Let's get to the list. Just like before, I will post some methodology at the bottom for those interested. Let's jump into looking at who had the best individual season in franchise history. There are three metrics we are looking at to define this; receptions, yards and touchdowns. Pretty simple. We have to keep it simple because older NFL data doesn't track some of the metrics we are used to (targets, for example). With that explained, the best individual season in franchise history goes to...
Ja'Marr Chase.
That's for real, folks. Chase came in as a rookie and had the best season a wide receiver has ever had in franchise history. With a statline of 81 catches for 1455 yards and 13 TDs, he razzled and dazzled to the top. This time last year, arguments were raging about Sewell vs. Chase, whether it was the right pick or not and if it isn't apparent by now, Chase was the right pick (dammit Goose, here we go again). A lethal offensive weapon, he already has the makings of a top five WR after his rookie year, and it isn't out of the realm of possibility that he could be challenging for the top spot in just a couple of seasons time. Here is a look at the top 10 seasons in franchise history, as defined by my analysis.
- Ja'Marr Chase
- Carl Pickens - 1995
- Carl Pickens - 1996
- A.J. Green - 2013
- Chad Johnson - 2003
- Chad Johnson - 2005
- A.J. Green - 2012
- T.J. Houshmandzadeh - 2007
- Isaac Curtis - 1973
- Cris Collinsworth - 1986
It feels like Chad is a little underrepresented here, but don't worry, he comes in at 11th and 13th as well. He barely missed out on a third top 10 season. Carl Pickens is a fun one to look at, as he had a couple of seasons of domination in the mid-90s. In 1995, Carl logged 99 catches for 1,234 yards and 17 TDs. He followed that up in 1996 by notching another 1,000 yard season and an additional 12 TDs. Personally, I am happy to see Housh on here. He wasn't a very flashy player, but I remember him fondly from the mid-2000's and he was fantastic in 2007. Now, onto the best career receivers here, and this may have some controversial results...
Best Overall Wide Receiver - Career
- Chad Johnson
- Cris Collinsworth
- A.J. Green
- Tyler Boyd
- T.J. Houshmandzadeh
- Carl Pickens
- Eddie Brown
- Isaac Curtis
- Marvin Jones
- Brandon LaFell
....yeah? Collinsworth is the 2nd best receiver in franchise history? Over Green? And Pickens? Curtis? Apparently so, yes. At least with this methodology. Collinsworth didn't have any real eye popping seasons, but he was just consistently good. For most of his career, if he was healthy, he was going to get you right around 1,000 yards and between five and eight touchdowns. Even for the time period, this wasn't crazy, but the consistency was good enough to land him at the #2 spot. Pickens had a fantastic mid-career but disappointing beginning and end. Here is a crazy fact for you; Carl Pickens won offensive rookie of the year in 1992 on 26 catches for 326 yards and ONE touchdown.
I envy no one that had to rank these guys that year.
Methodology - So, this part will be fairly short, I think. This is using Z-Score, just like the other two were. We are wanting to era adjust and I think this is one of the best methods of doing so. For those who don't remember, Z-Score is a figure we calculate in order to figure out how much better or worse a particular value is from the average of a population. You might remember that earlier in the post, I said we are using receptions, yards, and TDs. So, for each season, I calculated the average for each of those three categories and then calculated the standard deviation. From there, we can use the players metrics from that season to figure out how they compared to the rest of the league during that time. Z-Score tells you how many standard deviations a value is from the average.
A Z-Score of 1 is pretty good. Not elite, but pretty good. A Z-Score of 2 is elite category. This player is dominating if they are putting up numbers like this. A Z-Score of 3 is ridiculous, and not only the best in any given year but likely one of the best seasons, ever. Anything higher than that would be historic and unprecedented. For example, Randy Moss had a touchdown Z-Score of 4.55 in 2007 when he set the record. Jerry Rice had a touchdown Z-Score of 5.23 in 1987, when he scored 22 touchdowns. So, yeah, ridiculous seasons.
How I ended up ranking these players was by weighting each of the three categories. There is no real mathematical backing behind the weights, just trying to line up what I thought fit right. The weights, in order from heaviest to lightest go...
- Touchdowns
- Yards
- Receptions
Using the weight figures, I was able to calculate a rating. I originally just added them all up, but it treated them all the same. Is a normal reception worth as much as a TD? No, I don't think so, not normally. I didn't want to represent it that way, either. I am sure my weights could be improved, but this will do for now.
And that's it! Happy to answer questions or provide more info if requested. Thanks for reading.
Ja'Marr is gonna challenging for the top spot in the league this year. Adams will fall off a bit with Carr... I think Chase's main competition this season will be his old college teammate in Minnesota.
Edit... Annnd I totally forgot about Kupp. He'll be right up there too.
I'm gonna break every record they've got. I'm tellin' you right now. I don't know how I'm gonna do it, but it's goin' to get done.
- Ja'Marr Chase
April 2021
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(06-19-2022, 11:57 AM)Truck_1_0_1_ Wrote: I love the vindication when I get into a discussion about Curtis NOT being the best receiver in team history (and not even close, going by Goose's methodology).
Many of us still say Chad is the best ever and this backs it up; I can only imagine if he didn't leave after 2010...
Great stuff, Goose! I'm sure after 5 seasons or so, ESPECIALLY with Joe throwing to him, Ja'Marr will be high up on the list.
I too consider Chad as the best of all time, but we must remember the defense could molest the WR in Isaac's day. If he was playing in today's rules with his world-class speed, exceptional hands, and elite size; he quite possibly could eclipse Chad's numbers
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And think that Chase was a lineman holding their block for a split-second longer to give Burrow enough time to throw him the game-winning touchdown.
Chase will destroy all of these records and no one will even dare to question who the GOAT is.
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Wild seeing Brandon Lafell on there...
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Interesting study, but it doesn't seem to account for QB play or injuries. I would have liked to have the Z score as a per game statistic instead of a full season, as not doing so heavily weights the ratings towards the players that were able to stay healthy, not necessarily the best players. For example, Tyler Boyd is #4 on the All Time list with only 2 1000 yard seasons in 6 years and having never had a double digit TD season. Compare that to Carl Pickens, who had 4 1000 yard seasons and 3 double digit TD seasons in 8 years as a Bengal with worse QB play. I mean, Boyd has 24 TD's for his career, while Pickens had 17 TD's in '95 alone.
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Wow. Boyd is where?
That's the one that surprises most. I love Boyd but wtf?
Great post btw.
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I think Killer Goose did a awesome job and should be
Commended. The Bengals have had a rich history of DRAFTING WRs. It's so hard to pick who is the best etc etc
I think it's important to keep.in mind the era, the QB and his
Value to the team success
Issac Curtis may never get the credit he is due
From 1973 to 76, he was a Top 10 NFL WR.
But when Kenny got hurt in 77 and his play
Went down In the years after ,Curtis's numbers suffered
Then when Collinsworth got drafted , Curtis became
The Number #2 WR. Danny Ross affected Ike's targets Also
I think Carl Pickens will be always under rated in Bengals
History. It's easy to forget how dominant he was in a 2 ,3 year
Span. If memory serves me correct , the Bengals had no effective running game to balance the offense
Defenses knew Carl and Darnay were the offense.
You don't score 16 TDs in one year by accident
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I don’t need to see stats. It’s Chad Johnson.
He is the best WR we ever had. If AJ gave us more years then he’d probably be it but Chad is the best.
-Housh
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(06-19-2022, 11:59 AM)bengalfan74 Wrote: I was surprised by two things
1. I guessed Chad or AJ would have had the best single season.
2. I never would have guessed Collinsworth would be 2nd best career.
Chase very easily could end up our best WR off all time.
Honestly, and I know it sounds crazy after just one year, but I'd say Chase is already up there.
We wouldn't have made the run and Super Bowl appearance we had if it weren't for Chase. I think you have to take Super Bowl, playoff wins, etc into account when ranking players.
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(06-19-2022, 11:04 PM)Housh Wrote: I don’t need to see stats. It’s Chad Johnson.
He is the best WR we ever had. If AJ gave us more years then he’d probably be it but Chad is the best.
I agree with this. Chad brought both tangibles and intangibles to the team that made him so damn good. People forget just how awesome he was. Such a beast.
The boys are just talkin' ball, babyyyy
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(06-19-2022, 05:26 PM)Whatever Wrote: Interesting study, but it doesn't seem to account for QB play or injuries. I would have liked to have the Z score as a per game statistic instead of a full season, as not doing so heavily weights the ratings towards the players that were able to stay healthy, not necessarily the best players. For example, Tyler Boyd is #4 on the All Time list with only 2 1000 yard seasons in 6 years and having never had a double digit TD season. Compare that to Carl Pickens, who had 4 1000 yard seasons and 3 double digit TD seasons in 8 years as a Bengal with worse QB play. I mean, Boyd has 24 TD's for his career, while Pickens had 17 TD's in '95 alone.
So, I spent some time this morning gathering the results for per game numbers. Overall, I agree with you. I originally started down this path, but I ended up deciding against it and going the way that I did. Here are the results...
- Cris Collinsworth
- A.J. Green
- Chad Johnson
- T.J. Houshmandzadeh
- Carl Pickens
- Tyler Boyd
- Eddie Brown
- Isaac Curtis
- Marvin Jones
- John Ross (lol)
I do have QB data, but I am not entirely sure how I could go about incorporating QB play metrics there. I can put some thought into it. One thing that this analysis has taught me is that Collinsworth is way better than I have ever seen him get credit for. He didn't have the ceiling that some of these other guys have had, but he was just consistently good. I don't know if I agree that he is THE best, but he deserves to be in the conversation. Also, Isaac Curtis seems to be fairly overrated by some Cincinnati fans. I have toyed with the formulas just to see the results and I have never seen him higher than 7th. The gap between Boyd and Pickens is also surprisingly small.
Finally, Ross at 10th is a big lul result. Darnay Scott comes in at 11th, so he would really fit that 10th spot.
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(06-19-2022, 10:26 AM)fredtoast Wrote: How did you use z-scores for career numbers?
Or did you just add up the individual season z-scores?
Yep. More accurately, I just averaged them up but yes, it is an aggregation of individual seasons.
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(06-19-2022, 11:04 PM)Housh Wrote: I don’t need to see stats. It’s Chad Johnson.
He is the best WR we ever had. If AJ gave us more years then he’d probably be it but Chad is the best.
Agree and I wasn't the biggest Chad fan especially when he changed his name but he was the crispest route runner and best toe
tapper I think I have ever witnessed in all of football. AJ had the talent to be better but injuries prevented it. Ja'Marr could be better
though and I truly hope and believe he will be but as of now Chad is our best WR in franchise history.
Just wish he was more clutch like Housh, Ja'Marr and Boyd are. Chad didn't seem to show up in the biggest moments when we really
needed him to, that was Housh at that time.
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(06-19-2022, 03:33 PM)BFritz21 Wrote: And think that Chase was a lineman holding their block for a split-second longer to give Burrow enough time to throw him the game-winning touchdown.
Chase will destroy all of these records and no one will even dare to question who the GOAT is.
Unless Chase leaves in FA to become the highest-paid WR in the league
Zac Taylor 2019-2020: 6 total wins
Zac Taylor 2021-2022: Double-digit wins each season, plus 5 postseason wins
Zac Taylor 2023: 9 wins despite losing Burrow half the season
Zac Taylor 2024: Started 1-4. If he can turn this into a playoff appearance, it will be impressive.
Sorry for Party Rocking!
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(06-19-2022, 10:18 AM)KillerGoose Wrote: I have been working on gathering a wide variety of data for some small analytical projects I have been working on this off-season. So far, I have posted the results of two of these analyses to this board, linked here and here. Today, we are going to be doing the same exact thing, but we are looking at wide receivers. We are going to talk about who has had the best individual season in franchise history, and who is the best career wide receiver in franchise history. There is mathematical backing behind this, but it is all for fun - this isn't meant to END ALL ARGUMENTS (not that I could do that anyway) but I will say that the results aren't far off of what I was expecting. Which, is nice.
Let's just begin by saying this took FOREVER. Guys, I have been working on this for weeks. I have essentially built a workbook of all NFL receiving statistics going back to 1968. That aggregation and organization took long enough by itself. Then, when I finally finished that, I had to do all of my calculations. I did not want to do that by hand, so I chose not to. I wrote a program to go through the Excel workbook and calculate all of the data for me. The reason being is that I wanted to filter for only WR's only, so going page-by-page, filtering and inserting the formulas was just too tedious. Now, in the end, automating that process may have taken me just as long as it would have by hand due to little bugs and some unfamiliarity with the library I used, but...
Alright, you don't give a shit about any of that. Let's get to the list. Just like before, I will post some methodology at the bottom for those interested. Let's jump into looking at who had the best individual season in franchise history. There are three metrics we are looking at to define this; receptions, yards and touchdowns. Pretty simple. We have to keep it simple because older NFL data doesn't track some of the metrics we are used to (targets, for example). With that explained, the best individual season in franchise history goes to...
Ja'Marr Chase.
That's for real, folks. Chase came in as a rookie and had the best season a wide receiver has ever had in franchise history. With a statline of 81 catches for 1455 yards and 13 TDs, he razzled and dazzled to the top. This time last year, arguments were raging about Sewell vs. Chase, whether it was the right pick or not and if it isn't apparent by now, Chase was the right pick (dammit Goose, here we go again). A lethal offensive weapon, he already has the makings of a top five WR after his rookie year, and it isn't out of the realm of possibility that he could be challenging for the top spot in just a couple of seasons time. Here is a look at the top 10 seasons in franchise history, as defined by my analysis.
- Ja'Marr Chase
- Carl Pickens - 1995
- Carl Pickens - 1996
- A.J. Green - 2013
- Chad Johnson - 2003
- Chad Johnson - 2005
- A.J. Green - 2012
- T.J. Houshmandzadeh - 2007
- Isaac Curtis - 1973
- Cris Collinsworth - 1986
It feels like Chad is a little underrepresented here, but don't worry, he comes in at 11th and 13th as well. He barely missed out on a third top 10 season. Carl Pickens is a fun one to look at, as he had a couple of seasons of domination in the mid-90s. In 1995, Carl logged 99 catches for 1,234 yards and 17 TDs. He followed that up in 1996 by notching another 1,000 yard season and an additional 12 TDs. Personally, I am happy to see Housh on here. He wasn't a very flashy player, but I remember him fondly from the mid-2000's and he was fantastic in 2007. Now, onto the best career receivers here, and this may have some controversial results...
Best Overall Wide Receiver - Career
- Chad Johnson
- Cris Collinsworth
- A.J. Green
- Tyler Boyd
- T.J. Houshmandzadeh
- Carl Pickens
- Eddie Brown
- Isaac Curtis
- Marvin Jones
- Brandon LaFell
....yeah? Collinsworth is the 2nd best receiver in franchise history? Over Green? And Pickens? Curtis? Apparently so, yes. At least with this methodology. Collinsworth didn't have any real eye popping seasons, but he was just consistently good. For most of his career, if he was healthy, he was going to get you right around 1,000 yards and between five and eight touchdowns. Even for the time period, this wasn't crazy, but the consistency was good enough to land him at the #2 spot. Pickens had a fantastic mid-career but disappointing beginning and end. Here is a crazy fact for you; Carl Pickens won offensive rookie of the year in 1992 on 26 catches for 326 yards and ONE touchdown.
I envy no one that had to rank these guys that year.
Methodology - So, this part will be fairly short, I think. This is using Z-Score, just like the other two were. We are wanting to era adjust and I think this is one of the best methods of doing so. For those who don't remember, Z-Score is a figure we calculate in order to figure out how much better or worse a particular value is from the average of a population. You might remember that earlier in the post, I said we are using receptions, yards, and TDs. So, for each season, I calculated the average for each of those three categories and then calculated the standard deviation. From there, we can use the players metrics from that season to figure out how they compared to the rest of the league during that time. Z-Score tells you how many standard deviations a value is from the average.
A Z-Score of 1 is pretty good. Not elite, but pretty good. A Z-Score of 2 is elite category. This player is dominating if they are putting up numbers like this. A Z-Score of 3 is ridiculous, and not only the best in any given year but likely one of the best seasons, ever. Anything higher than that would be historic and unprecedented. For example, Randy Moss had a touchdown Z-Score of 4.55 in 2007 when he set the record. Jerry Rice had a touchdown Z-Score of 5.23 in 1987, when he scored 22 touchdowns. So, yeah, ridiculous seasons.
How I ended up ranking these players was by weighting each of the three categories. There is no real mathematical backing behind the weights, just trying to line up what I thought fit right. The weights, in order from heaviest to lightest go...
- Touchdowns
- Yards
- Receptions
Using the weight figures, I was able to calculate a rating. I originally just added them all up, but it treated them all the same. Is a normal reception worth as much as a TD? No, I don't think so, not normally. I didn't want to represent it that way, either. I am sure my weights could be improved, but this will do for now.
And that's it! Happy to answer questions or provide more info if requested. Thanks for reading.
Brandon Lafell over Darnay Scott. Interesting
|