NFL: Who are the real franchise quarterbacks?
Saturday, January 28th, 2017 | Sport
The term “franchise quarterback” is thrown around a lot in the NFL. There is an official meaning: teams can use their franchise tag to keep one key player at the club. However, more often when referring to QBs it is used to label quarterbacks who people expect to be at the teams for a long-run without any enforcement.
But who exactly is a franchise quarterback?
Philip Rivers, for example, is probably not the first person to come to mind when you think about the legendary quarterbacks of the NFL. However, Rivers has now been at the San Diego Chargers for 12 years. Only Tom Brady has been at his current club for longer.
Quarterback tenure in data
Below, I have tabled all of the NFL teams and their starting quarterbacks. I have included the year that they joined the club, and the team’s 2016 record.
Note that this is slightly different to the year they became starting quarterback. Many sat on the bench for the first season, for example. However, as it is a measure of how long the teams have kept them around, tracking it from the time they joined the team makes more sense in this instance.
It also does not include how long they have been in the NFL. Alex Smith, for example, was at the San Francisco 49ers for several years before moving on to the Kansas City Chiefs. Again, this makes more sense for what we are discussing.
The data
Team
Starting QB
Year joined team
2016 record
Patriots
Tom Brady
2000
.875
Chargers
Philip Rivers
2004
.313
Giants
Eli Manning
2004
.688
Steelers
Ben Roethlisberger
2004
.688
Packers
Aaron Rodgers
2005
.625
Saints
Drew Brees
2006
.438
Falcons
Matt Ryan
2008
.688
Ravens
Joe Flacco
2008
.500
Lions
Matthew Stafford
2009
.563
Bears
Jay Cutler
2009
.188
Panthers
Cam Newton
2011
.375
Bengals
Andy Dalton
2011
.438
49ers
Colin Kaepernick
2011
.125
Colts
Andew Luck
2012
.500
Seahawks
Russell Wilson
2012
.656
Dolphins
Ryan Tannehill
2012
.625
Redskins
Kirk Cousins
2012
.531
Chiefs
Alex Smith
2013
.750
Cardinals
Carson Palmer
2013
.569
Raiders
Derek Carr
2014
.750
Jaguars
Blake Bortles
2014
.188
Titans
Marcus Mariota
2015
.563
Bills
Tyrod Taylor
2015
.438
Buccaneers
Jameis Winston
2015
.563
Jets
Bryce Petty
2015
.313
Vikings
Sam Bradford
2016
.500
Browns
Robert Griffin III
2016
.063
Texans
Brock Osweiler
2016
.563
Eagles
Carson Wentz
2016
.438
Broncos
Trevor Siemian
2016
.563
Rams
Jared Goff
2016
.250
Cowboys
Dak Prescott
2016
.813
Discussion
I was expecting to see some correlation between the length of quarterback tenture and the results of each team. However, this was difficult to fine.
Sure, a lot of the play-off teams have the longest-standing quarterbacks. But then, the Chargers and Saints did not make the playoffs, despite having had the same quarterback for ten years.
Similarly, while there are a lot of rubbish teams with new quarterbacks, there are also the Cowboys, with one of the best records in the NFL, who only replaced Tony Romo, their quarterback since 2003, this year.
Here is the data in a graph:
There is nothing there. As with most of the stats in the NFL it probably suffers from the same critical problem: small sample size. When you only play 16 games per year, and those games only involve 11 minutes of actual play, almost anything can be luck.
The term “franchise quarterback” is thrown around a lot in the NFL. There is an official meaning: teams can use their franchise tag to keep one key player at the club. However, more often when referring to QBs it is used to label quarterbacks who people expect to be at the teams for a long-run without any enforcement.
But who exactly is a franchise quarterback?
Philip Rivers, for example, is probably not the first person to come to mind when you think about the legendary quarterbacks of the NFL. However, Rivers has now been at the San Diego Chargers for 12 years. Only Tom Brady has been at his current club for longer.
Quarterback tenure in data
Below, I have tabled all of the NFL teams and their starting quarterbacks. I have included the year that they joined the club, and the team’s 2016 record.
Note that this is slightly different to the year they became starting quarterback. Many sat on the bench for the first season, for example. However, as it is a measure of how long the teams have kept them around, tracking it from the time they joined the team makes more sense in this instance.
It also does not include how long they have been in the NFL. Alex Smith, for example, was at the San Francisco 49ers for several years before moving on to the Kansas City Chiefs. Again, this makes more sense for what we are discussing.
The data
Team | Starting QB | Year joined team | 2016 record |
---|---|---|---|
Patriots | Tom Brady | 2000 | .875 |
Chargers | Philip Rivers | 2004 | .313 |
Giants | Eli Manning | 2004 | .688 |
Steelers | Ben Roethlisberger | 2004 | .688 |
Packers | Aaron Rodgers | 2005 | .625 |
Saints | Drew Brees | 2006 | .438 |
Falcons | Matt Ryan | 2008 | .688 |
Ravens | Joe Flacco | 2008 | .500 |
Lions | Matthew Stafford | 2009 | .563 |
Bears | Jay Cutler | 2009 | .188 |
Panthers | Cam Newton | 2011 | .375 |
Bengals | Andy Dalton | 2011 | .438 |
49ers | Colin Kaepernick | 2011 | .125 |
Colts | Andew Luck | 2012 | .500 |
Seahawks | Russell Wilson | 2012 | .656 |
Dolphins | Ryan Tannehill | 2012 | .625 |
Redskins | Kirk Cousins | 2012 | .531 |
Chiefs | Alex Smith | 2013 | .750 |
Cardinals | Carson Palmer | 2013 | .569 |
Raiders | Derek Carr | 2014 | .750 |
Jaguars | Blake Bortles | 2014 | .188 |
Titans | Marcus Mariota | 2015 | .563 |
Bills | Tyrod Taylor | 2015 | .438 |
Buccaneers | Jameis Winston | 2015 | .563 |
Jets | Bryce Petty | 2015 | .313 |
Vikings | Sam Bradford | 2016 | .500 |
Browns | Robert Griffin III | 2016 | .063 |
Texans | Brock Osweiler | 2016 | .563 |
Eagles | Carson Wentz | 2016 | .438 |
Broncos | Trevor Siemian | 2016 | .563 |
Rams | Jared Goff | 2016 | .250 |
Cowboys | Dak Prescott | 2016 | .813 |
Discussion
I was expecting to see some correlation between the length of quarterback tenture and the results of each team. However, this was difficult to fine.
Sure, a lot of the play-off teams have the longest-standing quarterbacks. But then, the Chargers and Saints did not make the playoffs, despite having had the same quarterback for ten years.
Similarly, while there are a lot of rubbish teams with new quarterbacks, there are also the Cowboys, with one of the best records in the NFL, who only replaced Tony Romo, their quarterback since 2003, this year.
Here is the data in a graph:
There is nothing there. As with most of the stats in the NFL it probably suffers from the same critical problem: small sample size. When you only play 16 games per year, and those games only involve 11 minutes of actual play, almost anything can be luck.