Tom Brady, 315 yards, 4 TDs 137 Passer Rating

Mazz22

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Brady is playing at a level that no QB has through 4 games. And today was not easy with the pounding he took. There is no one close to him right now for MVP.
 
His movement in the pocket was really good today as well as his throws while moving. Rex sent the blitz a lot and Brady picked his spots. I liked his toughness today. Between him and the defense, this was a physical game we needed IMO.
 
This article puts the current Pats team in perspective.

The NFL is the New England Patriots' playground with the other 31 teams allowed to play in it. Right now, quarterback Tom Brady is the face that runs the place, while tight end Rob Gronkowski is the bully no one wants to cross.
Ironically, New England's current standing comes after Patriots faithful continued to believe the league was out to get their team, because Brady finally served his four-game suspension due to deflated footballs from the 2015 AFC Championship Game. Twenty-one months have passed, yet the Patriots are as good as they've ever been.
Sunday's 41-25 victory over the 4-4 Buffalo Bills at New Era Field shows how dominant the Patriots have been since Brady returned with Gronkowski finally healthy.
Ten seasons ago, the Patriots chased perfection but fell short. In some ways, this year's squad might even be better.
At 39 years old, Brady is the game's best quarterback and playing near-flawless football.
"I don't know if I've ever seen him better," Bills head coach Rex Ryan said before Sunday's contest, per Newsday's Bob Glauber. "Like I keep thinking if I stay in this conference long enough, that maybe that dude will retire, but I don't see that happening anytime soon."
After the game, Ryan reiterated that point, telling reporters, "I don't think I've ever seen him this hot."
Brady shredded Ryan's defense. He completed 66.7 percent of his passes for 315 yards and four touchdowns. The performance fell in line with his phenomenal play since returning to the lineup, as ESPN.com's Field Yates noted:
Tom Brady through 4 games played this season: 98-of-134 (73.1%), 1,319 yards, 12 TD, 0 INT.

Patriots have won all 4 games by 10+ points.
— Field Yates (@FieldYates) October 30, 2016
This year's Bills defense isn't as dominant as other Ryan units from seasons past, but it's still a talented group that ranked 11th league-wide in pass defense coming into Week 8.
Brady wasn't deterred. He finished with as many passing touchdowns Sunday as the Bills had previously surrendered all season, per NFL Research:
.@Patriots Tom Brady has 4 pass TD vs the Bills in less than 3 quarters

The Bills had allowed 4 pass TD in their first 28 quarters combined
— NFL Research (@NFLResearch) October 30, 2016
At the halfway point of the season, this is merely the beginning for Brady and Co.
As long as the Patriots stay healthy, they'll continue to improve. Against the Bills, Brady threw touchdown passes to Danny Amendola, Chris Hogan and Julian Edelman. Prior to Sunday, he hadn't thrown a touchdown pass to one of his wide receivers since Week 14 of the 2015 campaign, per ESPN Stats & Info.
Defenses can't just concentrate on Gronkowski and fellow tight end Martellus Bennett in the scheme of offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels, because Brady will spread the wealth to any open target.
With such a talented surrounding cast, Brady's projected stats even after sitting out the first four games are staggering, as The MMQB's Albert Breer noted:
Tom Brady's on pace to throw for 3957 yards, 36 touchdowns and 0 picks in 12 games, with a 133.9 rating.
— Albert Breer (@AlbertBreer) October 30, 2016
Since his return, the two-time MVP has displayed deadly accuracy and tremendous ball placement while avoiding any major mistakes.
"[My teammates and coaches] all trust me to do the right thing when I'm out on the field, and I don't ever want to let them down," Brady told reporters prior to torching the Bills. "That's where my motivation comes from."
He neglected to mention the gigantic boulder on his shoulder from his Deflategate suspension that stoked his competitive fire.
These things drive him to play with precision and dedication to his craft. ESPN Stats & Info also noted that Brady is the third player in NFL history—along with Peyton Manning and Don Meredith—to throw 12 touchdowns and no interceptions during the first four games of their season.
Having the game's biggest mismatch helps Brady.
When Gronkowski rumbled into the end zone with a 53-yard score, the tight end broke New England's franchise record with his 69th touchdown. Brady discussed his favorite target after the game, per ESPN.com's Mike Reiss:
It's a great accomplishment and he's a dynamic player for us, there's no doubt. He makes great plays in the pass game—down the field, intermediate, short—and he's tough to tackle. He's got a great enthusiasm about him. He's just done an amazing job since he's been here. It's a credit to him and his mental toughness; I've always talked about that with him, to overcome the difficulties that he's faced in his career to get to this point.
Gronk is the NFL's version of the Incredible Hulk, presenting a unique blend of athleticism and physicality. Not only is the 6'6", 265-pound target the NFL's most dangerous pass-catching tight end, but he doubles as one of the best blockers, too.
"Rob does a good job, he competes hard, makes plays in the passing game, blocks in the running game, and does whatever you ask him to do. A very unselfish player," Patriots head coach Bill Belichick told reporters after the game. "He's great to coach."
It took multiple weeks for Gronk to get up to speed. After missing the first two games with a strained hamstring and being brought along slowly in the next two contests, he's finally healthy and back to being an unstoppable force of nature.
Since Brady's return, Gronkowski has been exceptional, as Reiss detailed:
Rob Gronkowski's last four games, coinciding with Brady's return and Gronkowski's return to health: 21 catches, 473 yards, 3 TDs.
— Mike Reiss (@MikeReiss) October 30, 2016
This duo built a symbiotic relationship over the years, and it continues to get better. In 2007, Brady set records with Randy Moss as his primary target. Moss is a surefire Hall of Fame inductee and the greatest vertical threat in NFL history. However, his influence only extended over half a field depending on where he lined up.
Gronkowski is a monster as a receiver, blocker, deep threat down the seam or a red-zone target, as no linebacker or defensive back can match up with him one-on-one. He affects every phase of the Patriots offense.
This may be considered sacrilege in New England, but Gronkowski's current dominance has a bigger all-around impact than Moss did in his prime as Brady's top target.
"I love being part of this organization," Gronk said after the game, per CBS Boston's Bob Socci. "I love being part of the Brady era."
He should. Brady has been better than ever. But he wouldn't be as good without Gronkowski.
These two form the NFL's best battery. As a pair, they're unstoppable—which makes the Patriots unstoppable in an offense-driven league.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...onkowski-new-england-patriots-are-unstoppable
 

I loved this part. So true. Gronk effects every phase of the offense. This is why he is also better/more valuable than Antonio Brown IMO.

This duo built a symbiotic relationship over the years, and it continues to get better. In 2007, Brady set records with Randy Moss as his primary target. Moss is a surefire Hall of Fame inductee and the greatest vertical threat in NFL history. However, his influence only extended over half a field depending on where he lined up.
Gronkowski is a monster as a receiver, blocker, deep threat down the seam or a red-zone target, as no linebacker or defensive back can match up with him one-on-one. He affects every phase of the Patriots offense.
This may be considered sacrilege in New England, but Gronkowski's current dominance has a bigger all-around impact than Moss did in his prime as Brady's top target.
 
Barnwell had a good article at ESPN - B

Tom Brady enters uncharted waters

10:00 AM ET

The Tom Brady we're seeing in 2016 isn't at all like the one we were expecting, but maybe we shouldn't be surprised.

Popular opinion pushed Brady projections after he missed the first four games of the season into two camps. The pessimistic camp saw a 39-year-old quarterback who would be coming off an abbreviated training camp and a four-week absence from football and reasonably expected Brady to be rusty. The optimistic side expected Brady to be a vengeful, hyperaggressive gunner, something more akin to the "screw you" Brady of 2007 -- throwing deep into the fourth quarter and racking up points against desperately overmatched competition.

In reality, the Brady of 2016 is neither of those guys. He certainly hasn't been rusty, and while he's been wildly effective, there hasn't been a real hint of venom to his performance so far. Against a series of average-or-worse defenses per DVOA, Brady has been extremely efficient. There's a reason Rex Ryan said that he has "[never] seen Brady this hot," after Sunday's 41-25 thumping of the Bills in Buffalo. Brady doesn't appear angry, but he does appear close to untouchable.

And so the questions mount. Is this as good as he has been, and is he going where no QB his age has gone before? And when all is said and done, is he an MVP?

1. Is this the best Tom Brady we've ever seen?

If it's not the best four-game stretch Brady has ever put together, it isn't far off. What he has done over the first four games of his 2016 season has been scary: Brady is 98-of-134 for a 73.1 completion percentage, throwing for 1,319 yards and averaging 9.84 yards per attempt. He leads all qualifying passers in both of those rate statistics. Perhaps most impressively (albeit unsurprisingly): Brady has thrown 12 touchdowns without an interception.
In all, Brady has posted a passer rating of 133.9 through four games. 133.9! That's unreal. We would say those are video game numbers, but if the game was that easy, you would raise the difficulty level because it almost wouldn't be fun if you were that good. To compare, you can split Brady's career up into 181 four-game stretches without crossing over seasons. There's some overlap because Brady put together two incredible six-game runs, but of those 181 four-game stretches, Brady posted a passer rating higher than 133.9 just seven times:
•During the first four weeks of the 2007 season, when Brady's connection with Randy Moss and Wes Welker in a newly spread-happy Patriots attack took defenses by surprise.
•Three different times from Weeks 5 through 11 of the 2007 season, as what was then regarded as the greatest offense in NFL history hit its peak around New England's Week 10 bye. Brady peaked with a 138.9 rating during that stretch, culminating in a 56-10 win over these same Bills. The Pats averaged 41.1 points through that Bills game and a much more reasonable 29.7 points per game afterward.
•Three more times during a stretch from Weeks 10 through 15 of the 2010 season, when Brady followed up a 20-point loss in Cleveland to Eric Mangini's Browns by going 6-0 and throwing for 1,735 yards with 17 touchdowns against zero picks in a six-game span, peaking with a 138.6 passer rating.​

QBR only exists through the 2006 campaign, but given how Brady's numbers took a dramatic leap during the 2007 season, it's safe to use it as a comparison here as well. It agrees with passer rating. According to ESPN Stats & Information, Brady posted 96.4 QBR during a four-game stretch from Weeks 7 through 11 of the 2007 season, which is just absurd; it suggests that an average team with an average defense and average luck would win 96.4 percent of the time if it had a quarterback playing like Brady under center.

Brady also had a stretch with a 92.9 QBR that season, and two consecutive 2010 four-game runs with a 92.1 QBR, all of which are adjusted for quality of competition. Through four games this year, Brady has posted a 91.6 QBR, which is the fifth-best run of his professional career. Brady has averaged 11.6 adjusted yards per attempt (AY/A) through these four games; he has had only three previous stretches in his career with a better AY/A -- and they were all in 2010.

No matter what broad measure of quarterback play you use, the results are roughly the same: We're looking at one of the best quarter-seasons of Brady's career, and it's almost certainly the best stretch since the 2010 season, when Rob Gronkowski was a rookie and only became the fourth option in the passing attack once the Patriots traded Moss away in midseason. Just eight Patriots from that team are on the 2016 roster. It's been awhile since Brady was this great.

2. How is he different from the Brady of the recent past?

The biggest difference is volume, which may very well be influencing Brady's efficiency. He may be more effective than he has been in years because Brady is throwing less frequently than he typically would. Brady has thrown 134 passes during his first four games this year, an average of 33.5 passes per contest. That's remarkably low for the future Hall of Famer: The only previous four-game stretches in which his attempt totals were that low include runs from 2014, including the Chiefs game (in which Brady was removed in the fourth quarter for his own safety behind a porous offensive line) and the final four weeks of 2014 and 2015, when Brady took limited snaps in Week 17.

2010 is really the last time the Patriots put this little stress on Brady. He has averaged 616 pass attempts per 16 games over the past five years and never posted fewer than 582 passes over that span. If Brady averaged 33.5 pass attempts per game over a full 16-game season, he would hit 536 tries. You might imagine that low total is due to the fact that the Patriots are blowing teams out and just running the ball more frequently, but they were beating other teams up and still throwing the ball a ton in years past.

The answer is more complex. First, they are definitely running the ball more frequently in passing situations. From 2013 to 2015, on first-and-10, Brady's Patriots threw the ball 53.1 percent of the time, the eighth-highest rate in the league. This year, since Brady's return to the lineup, they're throwing the ball on only 45.5 percent of first-and-10 plays, which ranks 24th.

The Patriots are also operating at a slower tempo than they did under Belichick and Josh McDaniels in years past. From 2013 to 2015, again with Brady at the helm, they used 26.6 seconds of possession per play, which was the third-highest rate in the league behind the Eagles and Jaguars. This year, since Brady's return, they've run a play once every 28.3 seconds of possession, which is right around the league average (28.4). They're slower and more methodical, but when Brady throws, he's staggeringly effective.

By emphasizing the run, the Patriots also may have opened up an avenue which seemed lost and should terrify opposing teams: Brady suddenly has been able to throw downfield again this year. He's throwing downfield about as frequently as he has in years past, but this year those throws are far more effective. From 2013 to 2015, on throws which traveled 16 or more yards in the air (the NFL's definition of a "deep" pass), Brady's 80.0 passer rating was only good for 22nd in the league, while his 76.5 QBR was a similarly middling 23rd. Brady completed just 38.3 percent of his deep throws for 17 touchdowns against 13 picks.

In 2016, Brady has been nearly flawless on those same passes. He has thrown only 21 of them so far, but his QBR on those deep throws is a nice, neat 100 (a perfect QBR score). Brady is 13-of-21 on those passes for 521 yards with four touchdowns and zero picks. He has posted a 145.3 passer rating on those attempts. Nobody in the league has been better on deep passes this season than Brady, to which Chris Hogan can attest. Most 39-year-olds don't pick up fading arm strength and return the deep pass to their repertoire. And hey, speaking of age ...

3. Has anybody Brady's age ever played this well?

The short answer is no. The vast majority of Hall of Fame-caliber quarterbacks were done by their age-39 season. Peyton Manning just finished his age-39 campaign and was suddenly a sub-replacement quarterback, albeit one who was dragged by his defense to a Super Bowl title. Dan Marino, Joe Montana, Steve Young and Kurt Warner retired at 38. Johnny Unitas and Sonny Jurgensen were part-timers.

There are only three quarterbacks in league history who have started 10 games or more during their age-39 season, as Brady likely will if he stays healthy. One was Doug Flutie, who split time with Drew Brees and threw more interceptions than touchdowns for the 2001 Chargers. The second was Brett Favre, who was playing his lone year (2008) in New York with the Jets and threw as many interceptions (22) as touchdowns in a frustrating, injury-affected season.

The best age-39 passer was Warren Moon, who racked up numbers for the Vikings. Moon led the league in completions and threw 33 touchdowns against 14 picks while posting a 115 AY/A+ (in which league average is 100). Brady, through four weeks, has posted a 159 AY/A+. Moon played well and made the Pro Bowl, but nobody was suggesting he was the best quarterback in football. Brady's quite clearly in that discussion.

4. Is he the best quarterback in football right now?

Not only is Brady the best quarterback in the league, but I don't think it's particularly close. I'll get to the idea of which quarterback has accumulated the most value in a bit, but in terms of rate statistics, Brady's significantly ahead of all other qualifying passers in every major category:

Tom Brady is rolling
CATEGORY TOM BRADY RANK NEXT
Completion percentage 73.1% 1 Drew Brees (69.5%)
Yards per attempt 9.8 1 Matt Ryan (9.5)
Interception rate 0.0% 1 Brian Hoyer (0.0%)
Passer rating 133.9 1 Matt Ryan (115.8)
Total QBR 91.6 1 Matt Ryan (82.1)

I've seen arguments suggesting that Brady's performance should be taken with a grain of salt by virtue of the players around him and the success of Jimmy Garoppolo earlier this season, and that's just nuts. Garoppolo did have a similarly impressive QBR, but Brady's rate statistics are otherwise well ahead of Garoppolo's in the backup's two starts earlier this year.

In addition, it shouldn't seem like a coincidence that the offense has clicked even more with Brady at the helm. He's being pressured quite frequently -- 32.2 percent of the time, with just four passers bothered more often -- but Brady's taking an average of only 2.35 seconds to get the ball out for a safe throw, which is the sixth-quickest rate in football. Some fans suggest that Brady needs Gronkowski ambulatory to succeed, but it also should be pointed out how Gronk immediately got going once Brady returned to the lineup.

After the game, despite torching the Bills for 109 yards and a touchdown, Gronk didn't receive any praise from the Bills' defense: One player said that Gronk needed Brady to unlock the massive tight end's size for mismatches while another suggested that Martellus Bennett was the better tight end of the two. Sour grapes, perhaps, but Brady and Gronkowski do certainly make one another better without pushing either into some sort of fraud category.

5. Should he be in the running/a favorite for league MVP?

Let's finish with this one, because I think it's fascinating. I'll get into the other candidates in a week or two, but when I ran through MVP choices at the beginning of October for my quarter-season awards, my pick was Matt Ryan. Ryan's now second to Brady in many rate categories and, by virtue of having played eight games, leads the league in passing yards (2,636) and passing touchdowns (19). Ryan's the quarterback for an undeniably successful team with an 80.3 percent chance of making the playoffs, per ESPN's Football Power Index.

Chase Stuart of Football Perspective wrote about the idea of winning an award despite failing to play a full slate because of an injury or suspension. The only player to win the AP's Most Valuable Player award while missing a notable amount of time was Joe Montana in 1989, who played 13 games and still managed to get the nod. (It helped that Steve Young happened to be the backup in San Francisco at the time.)

Montana was head-and-shoulders above the pack that year: He completed 70.2 percent of his passes when nobody else was above 63 percent, averaged 9.1 yards per throw when nobody else was above 8.3, and finished 20 points ahead of everyone else in passer rating. No other competitive player emerged, as the top running backs were in a narrow battle, while the top receiver was Jerry Rice, who was overseen for his quarterback. Chris Doleman had 21 sacks but didn't receive serious MVP consideration, apparently. And, crucially, the 49ers went 11-2 in Montana's starts and finished 14-2 in a league in which only one other team won as many as 12 games. They were clearly the best team in football.

Could Brady and the Patriots fit that bill? Absolutely.

There's no obvious counter candidate at a different position. Running backs are less important than ever before, and Ezekiel Elliott is more likely to be an Offensive Rookie of the Year candidate. There's no otherworldly defender like J.J. Watt suiting up this season, while there are so many incredible wide receivers that it would be almost impossible to vote for, say, Julio Jones over Antonio Brown and A.J. Green.

The dominant leads in various rate statistics are already in play, as I mentioned earlier, if Brady can keep them up over the course of the season. He might also need the Patriots to stand out as the best team in football, which is hardly likely to be a problem. The Pats have the the league's best record at 7-1, and with the AFC East looking limited at best, New England has a far easier path to postseason comforts. The Football Power Index gives the Patriots a staggering 78.8 percent chance of coming away with the top seed in the AFC.

The FPI also gives the Patriots a 9.9% chance of running the table, which would likely create an irresistible case for Brady. The Patriots would finish the year at 15-1, and Brady would have gone 12-0 as the team's starter. If Brady also led the league in every meaningful quarterback rate statistic, there's no way the electorate would vote for somebody else. Even if voters are typically exhausted of giving the award to prior winners and don't want to read or write another article about Deflategate, Brady would be too valuable of a passer to ignore.

He was gone, but after one month, Brady's service has been more than restored. It has been upgraded.
 
The run game and varied nature of his weapons are the biggest things to me. He's one of those ninja dudes, he can beat you a lot of ways. But he's best when he HAS a lot of ways. Having a run game he can go to on early and late downs is one, having the ability to see a matchup he likes ANYWHERE he looks is another. His field vision is unparalleled, which is why he is such a great (and quick) decision maker. I heard him recently say that he doesn't look at pictures much anyway, let alone the tablets. And it's true. His realtime field vision is so extraordinary, he sees it all as it is happening. That gift is probably one reason he's hell on wheels to play for and why he is so impatient and knows he wouldn't be a good coach.
 
The run game and varied nature of his weapons are the biggest things to me. He's one of those ninja dudes, he can beat you a lot of ways. But he's best when he HAS a lot of ways. Having a run game he can go to on early and late downs is one, having the ability to see a matchup he likes ANYWHERE he looks is another. His field vision is unparalleled, which is why he is such a great (and quick) decision maker. I heard him recently say that he doesn't look at pictures much anyway, let alone the tablets. And it's true. His realtime field vision is so extraordinary, he sees it all as it is happening. That gift is probably one reason he's hell on wheels to play for and why he is so impatient and knows he wouldn't be a good coach.

Speaking of a run game, so help me God on his smooth and fast 15 yard jaunt up the left side, he seemed for one brief shining moment as if he were a RUNNING QB. It was to me the most aesthetically pleasing a run as I have see since he juked Brian Urlacher. :shrug:
 
He might be the only QB who looks and plays MORE athletically than he did 17 years ago.
 
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