National Post

FATAL FLAWS ON DISPLAY

NEIL GREENBERG OFFERS UP REASONS WHY YOUR FAVOURITE TEAM MAY NOT WIN THE SUPER BOWL.

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The quest for a Super Bowl ring starts on Saturday and as the post-season opens, the New England Patriots occupy the role of odds-on favourites.

Coach Bill Belichick saw his team win 14 games this season despite quarterbac­k Tom Brady and tight end Rob Gronkowski missing time. But they aren’t perfect.

The Pats’ passing game has been exceptiona­l t his season. Brady emerged as an MVP candidate, despite missing four games, by throwing 28 touchdowns against two intercepti­ons, breaking the NFL’s touchdownt­o-intercepti­on record set by Philadelph­ia Eagles quarterbac­k Nick Foles in 2012 ( 27- to-2). Brady’s two intercepti­ons were the only ones thrown by the Patriots all season, beating the previous record, held by the 1990 Kansas City Chiefs, by three.

The running game is another matter. New England managed 3.9 yards per carry this season ( league average was 4.2), ranking them 25th in the NFL. The 2011 New York Giants were the last champion to rank lower and three of the last four Super Bowl winners were all above average. The lone outlier? The 2014 Patriots.

But in addition to the low yards per carry, this year’s New England squad was the 18th most- efficient rushing team and their offensive line helped convert just 41 per cent of runs on third or fourth down, two yards or less to go, into a first down or touchdown, for the fourth- lowest rate in the NFL. Only the Minnesota Vikings, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Green Bay Packers were worse in 2016.

The Patriots also struggle rushing the passer, and have to overcome some of the best offensive lines in the league if they are going to appear in their second Super Bowl in three years. Even with these flaws, the betting markets give the Patriots the highest chance to win Belichick and Brady their fifth Super Bowl ring ( 31 per cent chance). The rest of the league won’t be as lucky.

If these teams fall short, these will be the most likely causes.

AFC KANSAS CITY CHIEFS

The Chiefs’ offensive line allowed an above- average sack rate after adjusting for down, distance and opponent (6.4 per cent compared to a league average 6.1 per cent) with right tackle Mitchell Schwartz allowing nine sacks, the most among tackles this season. Overall, Kansas City’s offensive line was held responsibl­e for 21 of the team’s 32 sacks allowed during the 2016 regular season ( running backs, tight ends or quarterbac­k Alex Smith’s own decision making accounted for the rest).

The trickle- down effect is significan­t. Smith has a 98.2 passer rating in a clean pocket compared to 65.5 under pressure. His completion percentage also drops from 71.5 to 50.5 per cent when facing a pass rush.

PITTSBURGH STEELERS

The Steelers allowed 4.3 yards per carry this season, but were extremely vulnerable once an opposing running back got beyond the line of scrimmage. Pittsburgh surrendere­d 1.22 second- level yards per carry ( yards earned by opposing running backs against a team between 5-10 yards past the line of scrimmage) and 0.90 yards per carry in the open field (more than 10 yards past the line of scrimmage), ranking them No. 20 and No. 27, respective­ly, in the NFL. Since 2002, the year the NFL went back to an even number of teams ( 32), only the 2006 Indianapol­is Colts managed to win the Super Bowl while being below average ( ranked 16 or worse) in both categories.

HOUSTON TEXANS

Considerin­g the Texans’ big defensive liability they may have received a big break by getting the Oakland Raiders and their banged- up collection of QBs. ( More on that later.) In four of Houston’s seven losses this season, opposing quarterbac­ks have thrown for multiple touchdowns with one or fewer intercepti­ons. Three of those four losses have come on the road. As the No. 4 seed, the Texans will host a wild-card game against the Raiders, but will have to succeed away from NRG Stadium to have a deep playoff run.

The weak spot those quarterbac­ks keep picking on? Cornerback Kareem Jackson. Jackson has allowed 1.57 yards per cover snap this season — sixth- most among corners — and a 106.8 passer rating against while in primary coverage. Brock Osweiler will start at QB for the Texans.

OAKLAND RAIDERS

The Raiders will have to make a championsh­ip run without their MVP- calibre starting quarterbac­k, Derek Carr.

Carr required surgery to repair a right fibula broken during the Raiders’ Week 16 victory over the Indianapol­is Colts and backup Matt McGloin suffered an injury to his left shoulder in the Raiders’ 24- 6 Week 17 loss to the Broncos, forcing Jack Del Rio to turn to rookie Connor Cook in the playoffs.

Cook, Oakland’s fourth-round draft pick out of Michigan State, completed 14 of 21 passes for 150 yards, with one touchdown and one intercepti­on in relief of McGloin.

According to ESPN, Carr was worth 20.4 points above an average QB. If we subtract those 20 points from their total points scored and keep the defence unchanged, based on Bill James’ Pythagorea­n expectatio­n, we would expect the Raiders to win eight games, making them barely a playoff team.

MIAMI DOLPHINS

Miami’s offensive line doesn’t pro- tect its QB that well (6.3 per cent adjusted sack rate, No. 22 in the NFL), and there has been just one Super Bowl champion in the last five years to rank worse in pass protection: the Seattle Seahawks.

The Seahawks, however, have Russell Wilson, one of the most mobile passers in the game. The Dolphins will suit up backup Matt Moore for the playoffs with Ryan Tannehill recovering from injury. In three regularsea­son starts in 2016, Moore has seen his completion rate drop from 70.7 to 48.3 per cent under pressure.

NFC DALLAS COWBOYS

It’s a risky propositio­n having a rookie quarterbac­k in the playoffs, but Dak Prescott did everything the Cowboys have needed him to do and more during the regular season. He’s completed 67.8 per cent of his passes for 3,667 yards and 23 touchdowns and ranks third in ESPN’s QBR rating, behind MVP front-runners Matt Ryan and Brady. But Prescott’s performanc­e against a top-10 pass defence per DVOA compared to everyone else is enlighteni­ng. He has a 86.9 passer rating against the better pass defences in the league ( 6.6 yards per pass, 7- to- 3 touchdown-to-intercepti­on ratio) but feasts on those outside the top 10 with a 122.1 rating ( 9.3 yards per pass, 16to-1 touchdown-to-intercepti­on ratio). Four potential playoff opponents are currently in the top 10: the New York Giants and Seattle Seahawks in the NFC and the Houston Texans and Kansas City Chiefs in the AFC. And just a reminder that he’s already lost twice to the Giants.

ATLANTA FALCONS

The Falcons, behind quarterbac­k Matt Ryan, have a high-flying offence that can score a lot of points. The problem is their defence allows a lot of points, too.

Atlanta allows 2.2 points per drive this season, seventh- highest in the NFL, and is especially poor in the red zone. Opponents have scored a league-high 5.9 points per trip inside the 20- yard line. Since the 2007 New York Giants, no eventual Super Bowl champion has ever ranked worse than 15th in red-zone points allowed.

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS

The Seattle Seahawks allow the fifth- lowest passer rating against ( 83.4), but because Pro Bowl corner Richard Sherman patrols just one side of the field a majority of the time and star safety Earl Thomas is out for the season, teams can hone in on Jeremy Lane in coverage. And that’s a very bad thing for the Seahawks.

Lane allows 1.32 yards per cover snap for a 123.7 passer rating against. For perspectiv­e, Matt Ryan leads the league in passer rating against with 115.5 and the highest rating in NFL history over the course of a season ( minimum 200 pass attempts) is by Aaron Rodgers, 122.5 in 2011. When asked to cover the slot receiver, Lane allows a 110.4 rating against. Sherman, meanwhile, allows 0.99 yards per cover snap and a 60.8 rating against.

Seattle held opposing quarterbac­ks to a 75.6 passer rating in wins this season, but saw that rise to 108.8 in their five losses. The Seahawks also averaged an intercepti­on per game in those 10 victories, but just one intercepti­on total in five losses. Quarterbac­ks completed 18 of 21 passes with three touchdowns when targeting Lane in those losses.

GREEN BAY PACKERS

The Packers, like the Falcons, struggle defending their red zone ( 5.36 points allowed per trip, fourth- most in the NFL). Green Bay also struggles in pass coverage — according to the game charters at Pro Football Focus, only the Indianapol­is Colts and New Orleans Saints, two non- playoff teams, were worse.

One of Green Bay’s corners, Quinton Rollins, leads the league in yards allowed per cover snap ( 1.63) and all three of their primary defensive backs — Rollins, Ladarius Gunter and Micah Hyde — allow an above- average passer rating in primary coverage.

NEW YORK GIANTS

The Giants did a below- average job at controllin­g the line of scrimmage when they chose to rush the ball. According to Football Outsiders, the team managed just 3.61 adjusted line yards per carry ( No. 24 in NFL), which assigns responsibi­lity to the offensive line after adjusting for down, distance, situation, opponent and the difference in rushing average between shotgun compared to standard formations. You have to go back to the 2011 Giants to find a champion that was worse during the regular season. Three out of the last four Super Bowl

winners all ranked in the Top 10.

DETROIT LIONS

Only two teams, the Atlanta Falcons and Los Angeles Rams, allowed more points per trip inside the 20- yard line than Detroit (5.38). No eventual Super Bowl champion since 2008 has ever ranked worse than 15th in red- zone points allowed. Most of the scoring is attributab­le to the Lions giving up the most passing TDs in the red zone (28) this season. The team’s pass coverage finished the season rated as the seventh-worst unit in the NFL. Three of their defensive backs playing at least 200 snaps — Johnson Bademosi, Rafael Bush and Quandre Diggs — were saddled with negative pass-coverage grades, as were linebacker­s Kyle Van Noy, Antwione Williams and Tahir Whitehead. Whitehead, it is worth noting, played the third- most pass- coverage snaps for Detroit and ended the season as the fourth-lowest rated linebacker at the position per Pro Football Focus.

 ?? RICH SCHULTZ/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Cowboys rookie QB Dak Prescott has exceeded expectatio­ns, but playoff football against elite teams is a different matter.
RICH SCHULTZ/ GETTY IMAGES Cowboys rookie QB Dak Prescott has exceeded expectatio­ns, but playoff football against elite teams is a different matter.

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