When it rains, it pours in Denver. The Broncos’ Craig Morton won Player
of the Week in TLL 79 Week 2 with an overtime victory over the Raiders
and a very impressive stat line:
11 / 16 330 Yards 5 TD 1 INT
With
statistics like those in any TLL game, it seems like voting for Morton
is a no-brainer. However, like many stellar quarterbacks, Morton has a
deadly deep target in WR/RB Haven Moses. Moses’ stat line is also
impressive:
5 Receptions 201 Yards 3 TD
6 Carries 26 Yards, 2pt conversion
When
looking at the statistics of both players, one could make a case for
either player winning player of the week. As coach of the TLL 79
Broncos, I considered both players to be valuable, but ultimately voted
for Moses as my choice for Player of the Week. Yet Morton won out after
other coaches voted. This compelled me ask the question, “How does one
choose who is to be Player of the Week?”
My initial choice of
Moses over Morton could come from the insider knowledge that I have from
being coach of the Broncos. I played the game, felt Moses was a
deciding factor in it, and voted appropriately. Coach TecSpectre may
have influenced my vote after the game, saying that when Moses came in
at running back, the Broncos were a different team and harder to stop.
However, it is unclear which player TecSpectre voted for, if either.
And then there are the other coaches. What do the other coaches use to determine a player’s Player of the Week status?
•
The simplest and perhaps most accurate way is for them to vote on
players who are either on their team or who they played against for the
week. This seems the most sensible since each coach was able to
experience the performance of the player on the field.
• There is
also the possibility, with the advent of most TLL games being recorded
for the season, that coaches go back over other teams’ game footage and
make a choice based on that. This seems unlikely because it can be
labor intensive and tedious to watch every single game for the week.
•
The likelihood is that most coaches will compare stat lines for players
they have not seen that week and decide from there. Whatever kinds of
stats that the coach deems to be important may sway his final decision.
•
In addition, other factors may be taken into consideration. What about
the strength of the team the player is playing against and the stats
that were put up? Four touchdowns versus the 79 Steelers defense
certainly looks more impressive than if it were against the 79 Seahawks.
Getting
back to Morton’s performance, I decided to revisit some of the plays
that both he and Haven Moses made in tandem and individually that may
shed light on the accuracy of the voting.
Morton and Moses hook
up 5 times in the game. The first was the first Denver pass of the
game, which was 36 yd TD pass. The two did not connect again until
under 3:39 left the 4th quarter, when the Broncos got the ball trailing
31-20. Clearly during these two drives, Moses was a force. In this
span, Moses had a 53 yard catch on 3rd and long, a shorter 17 yard catch
to bring the Broncos into FG range, and a 60+ yard catch with 3
defenders on him with seconds to go in the back of the end zone. In
addition, Denver was down 31-29 and needed a two-point conversion, which
Moses delivered on a run out of the backfield. Morton was 4 of 5
during that 4th quarter stretch, but 3 of those passes were crucial
gains to Moses. Morton was also sacked twice, which certainly hurt the
Broncos’ chances. In OT, Morton was sacked one more time, but still
completed two passes, one of which was a 35 yard game-winner to a diving
Moses in the end zone.
But perhaps I am making Moses look too
good. He only had 1 catch in the first half. He came in at RB in the
3rd quarter to provide a spark, especially after Riley Odom went down,
but only 3 of his 6 runs were for positive yardage. Also, Morton only
had 5 incompletions. One was an interception to end the first half on a
chuck-and-pray play, another was an overthrow. The other three were
not really his fault: two were deflected by Raiders’ defenders down the
field and the other was a drop by Upchurch. In essence, his passing
record was near perfect for the game: 3 of 5 passes could have been
caught; there was a garbage interception which does not take away from
his 5 TD passes. He also spread the ball around, hitting 5 different
receivers throughout the game.
What may be most telling for
Morton is that he was not even in the game for the first drive of the
3rd quarter. His backup, Norris Weese, moved the Broncos backwards.
Here are Weese’s plays on that drive:
1st down- Incompletion
2nd down- Incompletion Out of bounds (intended for Moses)
3rd down- Sacked
The
next drive, down 24-13, the game plan changes. Odoms is out, Morton
comes back in for Weese, but has lost a solid receiver. Moses switches
to the RB position, where he would switch back and forth from there and
WR. Clearly, the game plan (along with a fortunate onside kick) worked
for the offense.
So who is really the Player of the Week here,
Morton or Moses? Or is it someone else that coaches overlooked in other
games? There are so many factors in place that it is hard to isolate a
player. As many sportswriters claim, football is the ultimate team
sport, and it is truly challenging to pick out one player whose
performance would be dominant without the superb play of his teammates.
In the TLL, it might be easier to decide, but this is not to say that
the team factor is not present. Nor am I denying that there are
transcendent performances by players. There may be defining moments in
games where it is clear that without that player’s performance, the team
surely would have failed.
One thing seems certain is that it is
much easier to decide a Most Valuable Player for an entire season than
it is for just one week. Over the course of a long season, all coaches
are exposed to the performances of TLL’s best players. The more games
that are played, the more accurate the stats can be about a player’s
overall value. Yet it is still fun to talk about great performances
from week to week. But when deciding the Player of the Week, perhaps we
should take it with a grain of salt.
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