Defining what makes a QB Clutch | PFF

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • PFF's Sam Monson and Steve Palazzolo are joined by Arif Hasan and discuss Arif's latest research on what makes a NFL QB "clutch".
    📲 Download the PFF App: apps.apple.com....
    ✅ Subscribe to PFF+: www.pff.com/su...
    📧 Join our newsletter: forms.gle/maqT...
    🏈 NFL/NCAA Player Grades: www.pff.com/gr...

Комментарии • 19

  • @chrismiddleton4733
    @chrismiddleton4733 3 месяца назад +7

    Did they really just talk about clutch QBs for an entire episode and forgot the very embodiment of clutch, Patrick Mahomes?

    • @DaveyMH
      @DaveyMH 3 месяца назад +1

      They put him as the thumbnail...

  • @e2rqey
    @e2rqey 3 месяца назад +3

    Clutch is seizing the moment. The ability to pull victory from the jaws of defeat. When everyone on both sides of the ball knows the game hinges on a moment and they are able to succeed despite the pressure and adversity. Even when they really shouldn't be able to.
    Clutch would have been Brock Purdy hitting that throw in the Superbowl against the Chiefs, despite the blitz and the O-lineman blowing his block against Chris Jones.
    It would have been him being able to escape the pressure and score either on the scramble or by hitting a reciever on the second reaction throw while the pass protection is braking down or getting hit by the pass rush.
    It's doing the Patrick Mahomes thing. That he did like that whole game, or that scramle and escape to lobbing that ridiculous pass to Kelce which Travis was able to somehow dive and catch.

  • @thatstheway2429
    @thatstheway2429 3 месяца назад +2

    Think Dak Prescott. Now imagine the opposite.

  • @eric-xl4pl
    @eric-xl4pl 3 месяца назад +1

    is he tho 180 yards passing in the super bowl terry bradshaw had more yards n wasn't saved by a punt return or a flag

  • @andrewjazdzyk1215
    @andrewjazdzyk1215 3 месяца назад +2

    "Clutch" also feels like its just part of making a narrative, so while it might be somewhat defineable its all somewhat confirmation bias defined i think

  • @TripleG12398
    @TripleG12398 2 месяца назад

    wins definitely matter when it comes to clutch gene, but at the same time, wins are still a team stat. as a quarterback, what matters more in terms of clutch gene is what they do INDIVIDUALLY. josh allen in 2021 played flawless against the chiefs down the stretch of the game and the bills still lost. there's many other examples.

  • @Bl00dwerK
    @Bl00dwerK 3 месяца назад

    When you’re watching a team with the ball, game close to over, and you fully expect him to score? That’s clutch.

  • @JayDaMan420
    @JayDaMan420 3 месяца назад +4

    A clutch QB is a QB that in high pressure games or situations can play the same or, for a handful of guys, Elevate their play.. Playoff Games, Primetime games, and game winning drives are examples.. another way I look at clutch is how well you perform in situations where everyone knows you have to pass (still high pressure situations).. some examples are down multiple possessions, 3rd and long, 2 minute drill, and of course, game winning drives.
    I do believe that Eye Test has to play a big part in it cuz stats do not tell the whole story.

    • @andrewjazdzyk1215
      @andrewjazdzyk1215 3 месяца назад +1

      They covered that statistically no one actually gets better in high pressure situations, just more people get worse less

    • @JayDaMan420
      @JayDaMan420 3 месяца назад +2

      @@andrewjazdzyk1215 i watched Mahomes in the superbowl run and throw a perfect game winning drive.. but then we also saw a superbowl where mahomes threw a sideways throw for an incompletion on 4th down. what the stats dont show IMO is the eye test along with seeing a QB in those moments.. if a QB goes 0-4 but all 4 throws were dimes that were dropped then the stats dont show that

    • @confirmingpriors1137
      @confirmingpriors1137 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@JayDaMan420 yes they do. It's expected completion %.

    • @JayDaMan420
      @JayDaMan420 3 месяца назад +1

      @@confirmingpriors1137 whats considered expected? Is it based in the throw or the catch? If a bad pass is caught does it count as an expected completion? Is it the same as a dropped bad pass or is it the same as a completed good pass?

    • @confirmingpriors1137
      @confirmingpriors1137 3 месяца назад +1

      @@JayDaMan420 it's based off completions and "good throws" as u put it. I'm sure pff and espn will have an official explanation.

  • @b.c.7799
    @b.c.7799 3 месяца назад

    13 min of word salad

  • @IGI_Media
    @IGI_Media 3 месяца назад

    Cause and Effect - The very scenarios we sports junkies attribute to be clutch moments, also redefine the parameters.
    Therefore, any/all QB's are going to receive these restrictive factors.
    Examples:
    Shorter time frames
    Adverse conditions
    Anomalies to the regular game
    . . .
    . . .
    Therefore, these new criteria and new factors affect all QB's
    As Arif stated: it is the QB's that reduce the impact of these and suck less, often get the "clutch" moniker

  • @mrsam4113
    @mrsam4113 3 месяца назад

    Mahomes clutch cause his O-line gets to hold in big games

  • @pristinedecision1877
    @pristinedecision1877 2 месяца назад

    Tom Brady was clutch because he didn’t do dumb shit when the game was on the line.
    He took was the defense gave him and kept the chains moving and when an opportunity presented itself he didn’t let it pass by without capitalizing on it in some way.