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Offensive Film Grades From Miami Dolphins' 29-17 Week 16 Victory Over San Francisco 49ers

Offensive Film Grades From Miami Dolphins' 29-17 Week 16 Victory Over San Francisco 49ers

Funny, the difference a functional offensive line can make...

Kyle Crabbs's avatar
Kyle Crabbs
Dec 24, 2024
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Touchdown, Miami!
Touchdown, Miami!
Offensive Film Grades From Miami Dolphins' 29-17 Week 16 Victory Over San Francisco 49ers
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The Week 15 offensive film grading experience was, frankly a disaster. Consider me somewhat impressed that the team followed suit with perhaps their most complete offensive effort of the season in Week 16 at home against the San Francisco 49ers. Big time yards on the ground were the highlight after two months of *waves hand in the air*. So how did it happen?

I’ve graded the All-22 coaches’ film for each player and play. Here’s what I’ve found.


Methodology

I am implementing a portion of the grading process used by Pro Football Focus this year to quantify player performance.

“The PFF grading system evaluates every player on every play during a football game…did the quarterback make a great throw, but it was dropped? The quarterback contributed to positive production and will receive a positive grade for that effort, even though the receiver let him down, earning a negative grade.

Each player is given a grade of -2 to +2 in 0.5 increments on a given play, with 0 generally being the average or “expected” grade. There are a few exceptions, as each position group has different rules, but those are the basics. The zero grade is essential as most plays feature many players doing their job at a reasonable, or expected, level, so not every player on every play needs to earn a positive or a negative.”

— Pro Football Focus on their grading methodology

This is where my implementation of the PFF approach ends, however. Pro Football Focus converts this scoring into a number on a 0-100 scale while factoring in the weighted value of certain types of reps for certain positions. That isn’t what I intend to produce. I’m much less interested in an “adjusted” consumable score for a player than a true reflection of their net excellent and bad contributions relative to the reps they are assigned throughout a game.

I intend to grade each game for the Dolphins this season with this approach. This will allow us to see the full scope of spectacular and game-changing plays from players, ascertain who are models of consistency, and help further amplify poor player performances by the cumulative sum and per-play average in 2024.

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Offensive Grades Vs. San Francisco

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All-22 Coaches Film Analysis

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