dead_poet wrote:I'm afraid I don't follow.
Sorry, maybe I didn't follow you?
I wrote: "I think the idea that he's markedly better from the shotgun is basically a myth at this point" and you provided info showing that this season (which is basically what I meant by "at this point") Bridgewater has improved under center. In fact, the numbers on that chart showed him with a slightly higher rating under center this season (but close enough to his 2015 rating from the shotgun that the difference is pretty negligible). He also averages more YPA.
In other words, the chart shows that this year, statistically, he's wasn't better from the shotgun.
Oh. My bad. I thought it was OK to view his stats as a whole, which would include the bad performances. Maybe we should just focus on the bad ones as whole representative of Teddy.

I was just pointing out the generalization. His stats for December are good but it's not as if a light comes on when the month begins and he just plays well. He's still up and down so I'm not sure "December" is terribly relevant, especially in terms of game-planning. If it is, maybe they can somehow convince him that December is a little over 5 months long?
He's also good at intermediate passes. I mentioned that.
I was including them as part of "short passes". I apologize for not being specific. Basically, I'd say his comfort zone is within about 15 yards of the line, but he has obviously made some nice throws beyond that distance.
I don't know what to tell you, Jim. Teddy has shown he can be effective with short/intermediate pass-specific game plans and he does more well than hit short-route wide-open receivers when he's being blitzed. This team is not built to stretch the field vertically, at least not consistently. It just isn't. Implementing a more vertically-oriented game plan would be the dumbest thing for Norv to do, especially against Seattle's front seven that's head-and-shoulders above this iteration of the Vikings' offensive line. I'm all for taking shots down the field but I personally think that needs to be kept to a minimum to protect the line (and Teddy) and the offense as a whole.
If you don't know what to tell me then we're basically in the same place on this. I agree that Teddy has shown he can sometimes be effective within short/intermediate pass-heavy game plans but again, what is Turner supposed to do when a defense can get his QB out of that comfort zone?
I'm not absolving Teddy but let's not simply dismiss excess pressure as an excuse for under-performance.
I didn't dismiss it, I said it's used an excuse too often, which isn't the same thing.
Some of that pressure is obviously very disruptive.
I'm not going to argue about the accuracy of the PFF stat. You know what I think of their credibility.
I apologize for not quoting the Cutler/Flacco stats. I read them and again, I'm not dismissing pressure. It's a factor but I also think some of the pressure Bridgewater finds himself under is self-induced. When he's indecisive, holds the ball too long, scrambles unnecessarily, etc. he sometimes contributes to the problem.