As I scroll through these boards I continue to hear competing claims from many on whether the many sacks and knockdowns to have affected the Browns offense this year are mainly a problem with Frye holding the ball to long, or the offensive line's pure pass protection. I decided to try to find a quantitative solution, by timing how long Frye is holding the ball on every passing play vs. how long a similar QB (Rivers, first year starter, but 3rd year in league) holds onto the ball. I also track the times at which pressure first affects the quarterback (these times relate to when the QB is forced to move or react to an oncoming blitzer. While it sounds flaky, it is very obvious when the QB makes an escape move, or suddenly jerks to avoid a rusher.)
Also note, the last 1:40 of the game didn't come with my torrent for some reason, so I don't have data for that.
Procedure:
Using Multitrack Stopwatch (
http://www.download.com/MultiTrack-Stopwatch/3000-2350_4-10146154.html?tag=lst-0-1) and the torrent of the Chargers game. I timed from the snap to the release of each passing play for both QBs. If the dropback did not end in a pass i timed to the point where there was either a sack (QBs arms were wrapped by defender), run (QB crossed the line of scrimmage), Fumble (ball left QB's hands), or throwaway (QB threw ball)
I also timed to the point where the QB first had to make some movement to avoid pressure. This does not include stepping up into the pocket if it is done with the QBs regular passing beat (i.e. the QB slides into the open area, as opposed to jerking to avoid an iminant threat) Although it sounds hard to define, watching the footage it is pretty obvious, and it was done equally for both QBs, so any errors should equal out.
Each time was checked twice, and if the times disagreed by more than 0.1 seconds, more datapoints were taken until a consensus was reached (I got really good at this near the end, and usually two datapoints agreed to within 0.02 or so.)
Data:
Charlie Frye ?
21 pressures in 55 dropbacks (38%)
Average time of pressure: 2.28s
Average time to passes before pressure: 2.43s (how long did he hold onto the ball on plays he got rid of the ball before pressure got to him?)
Philip Rivers -
6 pressures in 33 dropbacks (18%)
Average time of pressure: 2.24s
Average time to passes before pressure: 2.55s
Apparently, Frye is holding onto the ball about the same amount of time (and even a little bit shorter) than Rivers hold onto the ball, despite this fact, Frye is forced to flee from defenders more than twice as often. (Obviously Rivers gets to hold onto the ball against a mostly anemic Browns pass rush as well) however, San Diego rarely blitzed Frye this entire game, and in fact, every pass but one where Frye holds onto the ball over 3 seconds came at the very end of the game when San Diego is playing the prevent defense.
Here are the first half stats in comparison:
Charlie Frye ?
11 pressures in 23 dropbacks (48%)
Average time of pressure: 2.28s
Average time to passes before pressure: 2.18s (how long did he hold onto the ball on plays he got rid of the ball before pressure got to him?)
Philip Rivers -
3 pressures in 19 dropbacks (16%)
Average time of pressure: 2.34s (only 3 datapoints though)
Average time to passes before pressure: 2.62s
And we see that in a balanced part of the game, Frye is getting rid of the ball significantly earlier than Rivers, and still facing significantly more pressure.
Watching the plays in this way provided even more striking evidence than just the numbers themselves. Rivers had much more time than Frye in the pocket (due both to a better OL and an anemic Browns pass rush) and Frye never had much time at all until the end of the game when San Diego went into the prevent defense. Remember this is a San Diego defense without Merriman as well, they should not have been getting to Frye this early, or forcing him to throw this quickly.
There are obviously a lot of hard to keep track of variables in here (how many blockers were left back etc.) but the purpose of this is to show that Frye is not getting a lot of time in the pocket. (Hopefully I will be able to analyze a non-Browns game soon, to see what QBs get in the average NFL game. A quick run through of 20 plays from the first quarter of the Indy/Philly game tonight seemed to show it is far longer than 2.18 seconds that most QBs are holding the ball. You're free to interpret the data however you want of course, and if you have a better idea on how to quantitatively do this, I'm open to suggestions. I can also provide anybody a complete sheet of every play, if you want it, just PM me.
~Lyuokdea