New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

NFL on pace to set scoring record in the 2020 season

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After getting gashed by Cleveland for nearly 500 yards and six touchdowns and still coming out on top in a high-scoring, back-andforth thriller, Baltimore star linebacker Matthew Judon summed it up well.

“That’s how football is, man,” he said after the Ravens won 47-42 on Dec. 14. “You leave enough time (against) a good offense, and they go right back and score.”

That’s NFL football in 2020, where no lead is safe, no point total high enough and offensive records are getting shattered weekly in what’s on pace to be the most prolific scoring season in a century of pro football.

The reasons for the scoring spree are numerous. The virtual offseason made building defensive cohesion more difficult. The lack of fans in the stands made life easier on road quarterbac­ks. Rule changes that seemed to de-emphasize offensive holding, while cracking down on defensive pass interferen­ce only made scoring easier. Analytics friendly coaches were more aggressive than ever on fourth downs, creating short fields for defenses that managed to make a stop or gave offenses an extra chance at success.

It has all added up to teams averaging 24.7 points per game heading into Week 17, more than a point higher than the previous NFL record of 23.4 set in 2013 and even slightly ahead of the highest-scoring season in the wide-open AFL (24.5 ppg in 1961).

While all those factors conspired against defenses, Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr prefers to look at it a different way.

“I think we can all agree there’s been a lot of good quarterbac­k play this season,” he said. “You go around, you look at a lot of teams, you look at a lot of guys and you’re like, wow, a lot of these teams that are scoring, well they have a quarterbac­k that has been in the system a while or someone that’s there guy or a young guy that’s playing well, whatever it is. I think we’re seeing more of that.”

While a quarterbac­k crediting his fellow passers for the runaway scores may seem predictabl­e, there is more than a bit of truth to the theory.

A league that struggled to find competent quarterbac­ks not too long ago is having a much easier time filling spots of late. With NFL teams adopting more of the spread concepts that have proliferat­ed through the college game, rookies are more able to step right in and thrive, as evidenced by the Chargers’ Justin Herbert throwing a rookie record 28 TD passes this season.

Herbert is not alone, joined by others in the 25and-under crowd like Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen, Deshaun Watson, Lamar Jackson and Kyler Murray having nearly immediate success.

The increase in younger quarterbac­ks also means more mobile ones as the

NFL has already shattered the record for QB running with 8,754 yards and 118

TDs. That’s more than 3,000 yards ahead the quarterbac­k rushing total from 2010, the year before Cam Newton entered the NFL, and 38 TDs more than the next highest season, which was last year.

“They’ve been given opportunit­ies to do it early in their career,” Raiders coach Jon Gruden said. “The old school method was to let them sit for a year and watch. I think that’s part of the reason. Secondly, a lot of these guys are very talented. They’re way further along throwing the football, understand­ing how to attack defenses. They do it yearround. A lot of these guys have their own private, quarterbac­k coach. So, they’re further along, I think, in terms of training and in terms of the overall passing game nowadays as opposed to 20, 25 years ago.”

Quarterbac­ks are coming into the league more prepared, making it easier than ever to play young guys. Improved training and nutrition, coupled with fewer hits on quarterbac­ks, has helped older ones like Tom Brady, Drew Brees, Philip Rivers and Aaron Rodgers stick around at a high level, giving more teams quality options.

 ?? David Richard / Associated Press ?? Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Marquise Brown runs after catching a pass, on the way to a 44-yard touchdown during the second half against the Cleveland Browns in December.
David Richard / Associated Press Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Marquise Brown runs after catching a pass, on the way to a 44-yard touchdown during the second half against the Cleveland Browns in December.

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