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Football Outsiders

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Football Outsiders
Available inEnglish
Created byAaron Schatz
URLwww.footballoutsiders.com
LaunchedAugust 2003; 22 years ago (2003-08)

Football Outsiders (FO) was a website started in July 2003 which focused on advanced statistical analysis of theNational Football League (NFL). The site was run by a staff of regular writers, who produced a series of weekly columns using both the site's in-house statistics and their personal analyses of NFL games.

In 2005 and 2006, the site partnered withFOXSports.com to cross-publish many of the Outsiders' regular features, including power rankings based on a "weighted" version of the DVOA (Defense-adjusted Value Over Average) statistic. In 2007, Football Outsiders content appeared on FOXSports.com (in a reduced capacity) along withAOL Sports andESPN.com. Since 2008, the site has partnered exclusively withESPN and provides mostly ESPN Insider content. In 2009, Football Outsiders began analyzing college football using similar statistical principles.

As of 2023, after financial mismanagement,[1] the site seems to have been abandoned by its owners. As of September 1, 2023, the website was no longer accessible. DVOA statistics have been moved toFTN Fantasy, which is owned by FTN Network. Aaron Schatz joined FTN Network as Chief Analytics Officer on August 29, 2023.[2]

History

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Football Outsiders was launched in August 2003 by Aaron Schatz, with two regular columns, one of which used an early version of the proprietary DVOA statistic. The original purpose of the site was to disprove a statement byBoston Globe reporterRon Borges that the 2002New England Patriots failed to make the postseason because they could not establish the run.[citation needed] Over the course of time, the site added more writers, and hostedGregg Easterbrook for part of 2003.

Between 2004 and 2005, the site introduced new statistics such as Defense-adjusted Points Above Replacement (DPAR, later Defense-adjustedYards Above Replacement, DYAR) and Adjusted Line Yards (ALY). In 2005, the site began to cross-publish many of its columns on FOXsports.com. In 2005, Football Outsiders also took over publication ofPro Football Prospectus, a book giving a preview of the upcoming NFL season. In 2009, the annual was renamedFootball Outsiders Almanac.[3]

Currently, the site has incorporated the 1981–2022 NFL seasons into their statistics.

Key Metrics

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Football Outsiders has devised a series of proprietary formulas to calculate differentadvanced metrics.

DVOA

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DVOA (Defense-adjusted Value Over Average) calculates a team's success based on the down-and-distance of each play during the season, then calculates how much more or less successful each team is compared to the league average. According to Football Outsiders, DVOA "breaks down every single play of the NFL season to see how much success offensive players achieved in each specific situation compared to the league average in that situation, adjusted for the strength of the opponent. ... Football has one objective -- to get to the end zone -- and two ways to achieve that, by gaining yards and getting first downs. These two goals need to be balanced to determine a player's value or a team's performance."[4]

There is a separate DVOA measurement forspecial teams, which "compare[s] each kick or punt to the league average for based on the point value of field position at the position of each kick, catch, and return."[5]

DYAR

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DYAR (Defense-adjusted Yards Above Replacement) calculates each player's cumulative value above or below a "replacement-level" alternative. DYAR differs from DVOA in calculating a player's total value through the course of a year, and not on a play-for-play rate. States Football Outsiders, "DVOA, by virtue of being a percentage or rate statistic, doesn’t take into account the cumulative value of having a player producing at a league-median level over the course of an above-average number of plays. By definition, a median level of performance is better than that provided by half of the league and the ability to maintain that level of performance while carrying a heavy work load is very valuable indeed."[6]

Adjusted Line Yards

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Adjusted Line Yards (ALY) "differentiate[s] between the contribution of the running back and the contribution of the offensive line." ALY attempts to "separate the effect that the running back has on a particular play from the effect of the offensive line (and other offensive blockers) and the effect of the defense. ... Yardage ends up falling into roughly the following combinations: Losses, 0-4 yards, 5-10 yards, and 11+ yards. In general, the offensive line is 20% more responsible for lost yardage than it is for yardage gained up to four yards, but 50% less responsible for yardage gained from 5-10 yards, and not responsible for yardage past that. Thus, the creation of Adjusted Line Yards."[7]

Drive Stats

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Drive Stats calculate a team's average success rate on a possession-by-possession basis: "[E]ach team's total number of drives as well as average yards per drive, points per drive, touchdowns per drive, punts per drive, and turnovers per drive, interceptions per drive, and fumbles lost per drive. LOS/Drive represents average starting field position (line of scrimmage) per drive from the offensive point of view. Drive stats are given for offense and defense, with NET representing simply offense minus defense."[8]

Pythagorean projection

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Main article:Pythagorean expectation

Another metric Football Outsiders uses isPythagorean projection, which estimates wins in a season by a formula originally conceived by baseball analystBill James, that takes the square of team points, and divides it by the sum of the squares of team points scored and allowed.

The 2011 edition ofFootball Outsiders Almanac[9] states, "From 1988 through 2004, 11 of 16Super Bowls were won by the team that led the NFL in Pythagorean wins, while only seven were won by the team with the most actual victories. Super Bowl champions that led the league in Pythagorean wins but not actual wins include the2004 Patriots,2000 Ravens,1999 Rams and1997 Broncos."

Although Football Outsiders Almanac acknowledges that the formula had been less-successful in picking Super Bowl participants from 2005 to 2008, it reasserted itself in2009 and2010.

Furthermore, "[t]he Pythagorean projection is also still a valuable predictor of year-to-year improvement. Teams that win a minimum of one full game more than their Pythagorean projection tend to regress the following year; teams that win a minimum of one full game less than their Pythagorean projection tend to improve the following year, particularly if they were at or above .500 despite their underachieving. For example, the2008 New Orleans Saints went 8-8 despite 9.5 Pythagorean wins, hinting at the improvement that came with thenext year's championship season."

DVOA results

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Each year, Football Outsiders calculates the best and worst teams, per play, with the DVOA metric (see above). Below is a list of the highest- and lowest-rated teams in the league in each year from 1978 to 2019.

Since Football Outsiders shut down in 2023, DVOA stats have been moved to FTN Fantasy; a historical archive of DVOA rankings dating back to 1978 is available.[10]

= Team WonSuper Bowl
= Team AwardedFirst Overall Draft Pick in following year'sdraft
SeasonBest DVOA ratingDVOAWorst DVOA ratingDVOANotes
2024Baltimore Ravens41.4%Cleveland Browns-39.9%Philadelphia Eagles wonSuper Bowl LIX,Tennessee Titans got #1 pick[11]
2023Baltimore Ravens45.5%Carolina Panthers-35.3%Kansas City Chiefs wonSuper Bowl LVIII; Panthers finished with worst record, but #1 pick was owned byChicago Bears[11]
2022Buffalo Bills38.9%Indianapolis Colts-29.3%Kansas City Chiefs wonSuper Bowl LVII,Chicago Bears got #1 pick.[11]
2021Dallas Cowboys29.3%New York Giants-31.4%Los Angeles Rams wonSuper Bowl LVI,Jacksonville Jaguars got #1 pick[11]
2020New Orleans Saints32.0%Jacksonville Jaguars-31.1%Tampa Bay Buccaneers wonSuper Bowl LV[11]
2019Baltimore Ravens38.5%Miami Dolphins-37.4%Kansas City Chiefs wonSuper Bowl LIV,Cincinnati Bengals got #1 pick.[12]
2018Kansas City Chiefs34.8%Arizona Cardinals-37.6%New England Patriots wonSuper Bowl LIII.[13]
2017Minnesota Vikings33.0%New York Giants-28.7%Philadelphia Eagles wonSuper Bowl LII,Cleveland Browns got #1 pick[14]
2016Atlanta Falcons31.0%Cleveland Browns-33.8%New England Patriots wonSuper Bowl LI[15]
2015Seattle Seahawks35.4%San Francisco 49ers-31.2%Denver Broncos wonSuper Bowl,Tennessee Titans got #1 pick.[16]
2014Denver Broncos32.6%Jacksonville Jaguars-34.2%New England Patriots wonSuper Bowl,Tampa Bay Buccaneers got #1 pick.[17]
2013Seattle Seahawks35.8%Jacksonville Jaguars-37.5%Houston Texans received #1 overall pick in2014 draft.[18]
2012Denver Broncos35.6%Kansas City Chiefs-40.7%Baltimore Ravens wonSuper Bowl.[19]
2011New Orleans Saints28.3%Indianapolis Colts-36.4%New York Giants wonSuper Bowl.[20]
2010New England Patriots45.7%Carolina Panthers-41.2%Green Bay wonSuper Bowl[21]
2009New England Patriots26.7%Detroit Lions-48.3%New Orleans Saints wonSuper Bowl,St. Louis Rams got#1 overall pick[22]
2008Philadelphia Eagles28.9%Detroit Lions-43.9%Pittsburgh Steelers wonSuper Bowl[23]
2007New England Patriots52.3%San Francisco 49ers-35.4%New York Giants wonSuper Bowl,Miami Dolphins got#1 pick[24]
2006San Diego Chargers29.7%Oakland Raiders-31.5%Indianapolis Colts wonSuper Bowl[25]
2005Indianapolis Colts30.7%San Francisco 49ers-49.7%Pittsburgh Steelers wonSuper Bowl,Houston Texans got#1 pick[26]
2004New England Patriots35.9%San Francisco 49ers-42.0%[27]
2003Kansas City Chiefs27.5%Arizona Cardinals-41.3%New England Patriots wonSuper Bowl,San Diego Chargers got#1 pick[28]
2002Tampa Bay Buccaneers30.7%Houston Texans-39.9%Cincinnati Bengals got#1 overall pick[29]
2001St. Louis Rams31.2%Carolina Panthers-24.4%N.E. Patriots wonSuper Bowl, Panthers had#2 pick (to expansionHouston Texans)[30]
2000Tennessee Titans31.2%Cincinnati Bengals-39.4%Baltimore Ravens wonSuper Bowl,San Diego Chargers got#1 pick[31]
1999St. Louis Rams36.4%Cleveland Browns-41.0%[32]
1998Denver Broncos34.9%Philadelphia Eagles-35.0%Philadelphia had worst record, got#2 pick after expansionCleveland Browns[33]
1997Green Bay Packers33.9%Chicago Bears-31.1%Denver Broncos wonSuper Bowl,Indianapolis Colts got#1 pick[34]
1996Green Bay Packers39.7%New York Jets-30.9%[35]
1995San Francisco 49ers39.0%Jacksonville Jaguars-33.9%Dallas Cowboys wonSuper Bowl,New York Jets got#1 pick[36]
1994Dallas Cowboys33.9%Houston Oilers-27.9%San Francisco 49ers wonSuper Bowl, Oilers picked #3 behind expansionCarolina/Jacksonville.[36]
1993San Francisco 49ers27.8%Indianapolis Colts-36.6%Dallas Cowboys wonSuper Bowl,Cincinnati Bengals got#1 overall pick[37]
1992Dallas Cowboys35.3%New England Patriots-42.5%[38]
1991Washington Redskins49.5%Indianapolis Colts-49.5%[39]
1990New York Giants29.1%New England Patriots-41.0%[40]
1989San Francisco 49ers34.9%Dallas Cowboys-32.5%Dallas had the league's worst record, but forfeited their first round pick[41]
1988San Francisco 49ers23.7%Kansas City Chiefs-27.6%Dallas Cowboys got #1 overall pick[42]
1987San Francisco 49ers41.5%Atlanta Falcons-34.3%Washington Redskins won Super Bowl[43]
1986Chicago Bears30.5%Tampa Bay Buccaneers-42.8%New York Giants won Super Bowl[44]
1985Chicago Bears45.8%Houston Oilers-36.6%Tampa Bay Buccaneers got #1 overall pick[45]
1984San Francisco 49ers33.8%Minnesota Vikings-35.7%Buffalo Bills got #1 overall pick[46]
1983Washington Redskins35.8%Houston Oilers-32.4%Los Angeles Raiders won Super Bowl,Tampa Bay Buccaneers got #1 overall pick[47]
1982New York Jets27.4%Houston Oilers-42.3%Washington Redskins won Super Bowl,Baltimore Colts got #1 overall pick[48]
1981Philadelphia Eagles22.3%Baltimore Colts-32.9%San Francisco 49ers won Super Bowl,New England Patriots got #1 overall pick[49]
1980Philadelphia Eagles24.6%New York Giants-26.2%Oakland Raiders won Super Bowl,New Orleans Saints got #1 overall pick
1979Pittsburgh Steelers30.9%Detroit Lions-25.7%
1978Dallas Cowboys26.9%San Francisco 49ers-31.5%Pittsburgh Steelers won Super Bowl

Pro Football Prospectus and Football Outsiders Almanac

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From 2005 through 2008, Football Outsiders published thePro Football Prospectus book each year before the football season began. It included an essay for each team analyzing the previous season, evaluating off-season moves, and projecting future performance.

In 2009, Football Outsiders did not publish aPro Football Prospectus volume, but instead produced the self-publishedFootball Outsiders Almanac 2009. The reason for this is explained in the book:

So why the name change, and why aren’t we in bookstores?

For those who don’t know, our first four books were published through an agreement with Prospectus Entertainment Ventures, the company that ownsBaseball Prospectus (as well as the expansion projects Basketball Prospectus and Puck Prospectus). It was PEV that had the publishing contract (first withWorkman, thenPlume). This year, for various reasons, Plume decided they no longer wanted to publish books related to other sports besides baseball. Other publishers were interested in doing our book, but by the time Plume made their decision, it was too late to get on the publication schedule for 2009.[50]

Management

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Editor-in-Chief: Aaron Schatz
Senior Editor: Vince Verhei
Senior Writer: Mike Tanier

Books

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General references

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This article includes a list ofgeneral references, butit lacks sufficient correspondinginline citations. Please help toimprove this article byintroducing more precise citations.(May 2011) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

See also

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Citations

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  1. ^"The People Who Acquired Football Outsiders Are Screwing The People Who Built It | Defector".defector.com. 2023-04-27. Retrieved2024-12-15.
  2. ^Schatz, Aaron (August 29, 2023)."Announcement".Twitter.
  3. ^(ISBN 1448648459)
  4. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA explained
  5. ^Football Outsider: Special Teams
  6. ^Football Outsiders: DYAR explained
  7. ^Football Outsiders: Adjusted Line Yards explained
  8. ^Football Outsiders: Drive Stats
  9. ^Football Outsiders Almanac 2011 (ISBN 978-1-4662-4613-3), p.xviii
  10. ^NFL Archives - FTN (For the Numbers)
  11. ^abcdeTotal Team DVOA: NFL Football Stats | FTN
  12. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2019
  13. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2018
  14. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2017
  15. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2016
  16. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2015
  17. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2014
  18. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2013
  19. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2012
  20. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2011
  21. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2010
  22. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2009
  23. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2008
  24. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2007
  25. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2006
  26. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2005
  27. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2004
  28. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2003
  29. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2002
  30. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2001
  31. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 2000
  32. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1999
  33. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1998
  34. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1997
  35. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1996
  36. ^abFootball Outsiders: DVOA 1994
  37. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1993
  38. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1992
  39. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1991
  40. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1990
  41. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1989
  42. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1988
  43. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1987
  44. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1986
  45. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1985
  46. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1984
  47. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1983
  48. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1982
  49. ^Football Outsiders: DVOA 1981
  50. ^Allen, Bruce (July 29, 2009)."Football Outsiders Almanac 2009 Interview With Aaron Schatz".Boston Sports Media Watch.
  51. ^Much of this volume was written by Football Outsiders (FO) authors, but the book itself is not officially a FO publication. See"Pro Football Prospectus 2004: The Lost Year".

External links

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