![]() Three of Lock’s eighteen deep completions resulted in touchdowns. Lock’s 65 deep attempts were tied for 7th among starters (with Ben Roethlisberger and Patrick Mahomes), but because he had fewer total attempts he led the league in percentage of passes that were deep throws. When you are the worst at both intermediate and deep throws, you tend to lose your starting QB job.įrom a volume perspective Tom Brady had the largest number of deep throws (83) among starters while Drew Brees had the smallest (16). The starting QB who completed the lowest percentage of his deep throws was Dwayne Haskins at 12.5 percent. He only had twenty deep passing attempts, but he completed twelve of them. The most accurate deep passer among starters (if you want to use completion percentage as a measure of accuracy) was Ryan Fitzpatrick. The best completion percentage on intermediate throws belonged to Alex Smith- 70.8 percent - while the worst among starting QBs belonged to Dwayne Haskins - 34.1 percent. On short passes Aaron Rodgers was deadly completing 85.4 percent of his throws (205 of 240) while Nick Mullens was terrible completing only 65.0 percent of his short throws. His 97.3 percent completion percentage is astounding. Ryan Tannehill had the worst completion percentage among starters on screen passes - 65.4 percent, while Derek Carr literally had two incompletions on screen passes in 73 attempts and one of those was a drop. ![]() There were some QBs who just were not very good at certain distance throws. The average starting QB in the NFL completed 39.1 percent of his deep passes in 2020. ![]() Average completion percentage decreased as you progressed further from the LOS. The average NFL QB was very good at completing screen passes (85 percent).
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