Toronto Star

The fault in their teams

Even the top-seeded Ravens and 49ers have flaws uncharacte­ristic of a Super Bowl team

- NEIL GREENBERG

The last 8 teams in the NFL playoffs have some flaws to work through,

If defence wins championsh­ips, many of the eight teams remaining in the NFL playoffs are in trouble. Some struggled in the red zone this season, while others had issues with forcing opponents into three-and-outs; strength in those metrics is often indicative of a potential Super Bowl champion. Two of the weakest defences in the field reside in the AFC, giving the conference’s top seed, the Baltimore Ravens, a relatively easy path to this year’s Super Bowl.

AFC

No. 1 Baltimore Ravens Fatal flaw: Pass defence

The Ravens, however, have defensive issues of their own. Their defensive line has had trouble generating pressure with a traditiona­l four-man pass rush, forcing coach John Harbaugh and defensive co-ordinator Don Martindale to blitz a league-high 55 per cent of the time. (The league average is 28 per cent.) That can leave the Baltimore secondary vulnerable.

The remaining playoff teams that faced Baltimore this season produced an 84.6 passer rating against its blitz but just a 68.9 passer rating against its traditiona­l pass pressure, with significan­t difference­s in completion rate and yards per attempt.

That difference might not be dramatic, but it’s easy to imagine how giddy Tennessee Titans quarterbac­k Ryan Tannehill is at the thought of facing plenty of blitzes Saturday night. Tannehill averaged 11 yards per attempt against the blitz this season, with eight touchdowns, no intercepti­ons and a 133.9 passer rating. No. 2 Kansas City Chiefs Fatal flaw: Rush defence

The Chiefs stopped just 14 per cent of opposing rushers at or behind the line of scrimmage during the regular season (the third-lowest stuff rate of 2019) and allowed 71 per cent of runs on third or fourth down needing two yards or less to achieve a first down or touchdown, the fifth-worst rate in the league. Those numbers limited Kansas City’s overall rush defence, after adjusting for opponent, to 29th in the NFL, with opponents going three-and-out a league-low 22 per cent of the time.

Over the past16 years, only the 2006 Colts won the Super Bowl after a regular season in which they forced opponents to go three-and-out less than 30 per cent of the time. No. 4 Houston Texans Fatal flaw: Pass coverage

Houston’s defensive component of Defense-adjusted Value Over Average (a measure of team efficiency based on comparing success on every play to a league average based on situation and opponent) ranked 26th, per Football Outsiders, putting the Texans precarious­ly close to a worrisome line of futility. The only time a Super Bowl champion ranked 26th or lower in defensive DVOA was when the Colts, who also ranked 26th, won it all after the 2006 season.

Houston has also allowed the most touchdown passes (33) of any playoff team. Of the five Houston cornerback­s playing at least 25 per cent of the team’s defensive snaps, just one, Bradley Roby, has more intercepti­ons (two) than touchdowns allowed (one). Two of those five corners, Vernon Hargreaves III and Lonnie Johnson Jr., allowed a passer rating of more than 130 in coverage. No. 6 Tennessee Titans Fatal flaw: Red zone defence

The Titans, like the Chiefs, struggled to force three-andouts (33 per cent, ranking 22nd), but they also allowed more than two-thirds of drives to end in a touchdown, with a 68 per cent defensive efficiency in the red zone during the regular season. Only the Texans were worse. Since 2002, when the NFL expanded to 32 teams, no Super Bowl winner has ended the regular season with an opponent red-zone efficiency higher than 60 per cent.

NFC

No. 1 San Francisco 49ers Fatal flaw: Ball security

It should come as no surprise that the team with a positive turnover margin wins a majority of playoff games. From 2002 to 2019, a positive turnover margin has led to a 118-36 record in the post-season. And just five teams over that span appeared in the Super Bowl despite losing the turnover battle in the post-season.

San Francisco has struggled with ball security; its 23 turnovers are the most of any remaining playoff team. Jimmy Garoppolo has thrown 13 intercepti­ons, the most of any of the remaining playoff starting quarterbac­ks, and also fumbled 10 times, losing five of those. (The NFC’s other three starting QBs threw a combined 15 intercepti­ons.) Minnesota, which San Francisco will host in the divisional round, was fourth in take-aways (31), with 19 forced fumbles (tied for fifth most) and 13 fumble recoveries (tied for third most). The other two remaining NFC playoff teams, the Seattle Seahawks and Green Bay Packers, ranked third and seventh in take-aways. No. 2 Green Bay Packers Fatal flaw: Receiver depth and passing efficiency

Aaron Rodgers is on the decline. The two-time MVP and nine-time Pro Bowl quarterbac­k was the 21st-most valuable passer of 2019, per ESPN’s Total Quarterbac­k Rating, after finishing1­6th in 2018 and fourth in 2016. (In 2017, he played just seven games because of injury.) Rodgers’ correspond­ing decline in his traditiona­l passer rating is also a red flag (he posted a 104.2 passer rating in 2016 but just a 95.4 passer rating in 2019, which is average), dragging down the team’s net passer rating to plus-14.2, the ninthbest differenti­al during the regular season.

Teams outside the top five in net passer rating face an uphill battle in the quest for a title. Since 2002, 23 of 34 Super Bowl participan­ts had a passer rating differenti­al among the top five in the league, including 11 of the 17 winners.

Perhaps Rodgers’ reduced efficiency is due to defences focusing on Green Bay’s No. 1 wideout, Davante Adams. On passes to Adams, Rodgers completed 83 of 124 targets for 997 yards, five touchdowns and just one intercepti­on, producing a101.4 passer rating on those throws. Rodgers managed a much lower 93.3 passer rating when targeting his other receivers. No. 5 Seattle Seahawks Fatal flaw: Pass protection

Russell Wilson was the highest-rated passer of 2019, per Pro

Football Focus, despite a porous offensive line that was deemed responsibl­e for more than half (27) of Wilson’s league-leading 48 sacks. After adjusting the team’s sack rate for strength of schedule, Seattle ranked 24th in pass protection, per Football Outsiders. Just one Super Bowl champion in the past seven years had an adjusted sack rate that ranked worse than 24th: Seattle in 2013. (Those Seahawks had a leaguewors­t 9.6 per cent adjusted sack rate.)

Wilson’s production also declined from a 115.2 passer rating in a clean pocket to 88.7 when facing pass pressure. To be fair, Wilson’s passer rating when facing pass pressure was the fourth highest of the season, but it is still a significan­t dropoff from his performanc­e in a clean pocket. To put that drop in perspectiv­e, it’s roughly the difference between how well Drew Brees performed during his record-setting romp through the regular season (116.3) and Daniel Jones’s rookie campaign for the New York Giants (87.7). No. 6 Minnesota Vikings Fatal flaw: Pass coverage

The Vikings’ cornerback­s are, for lack of a better word, weak. Out of 128 cornerback­s playing at least 25 per cent of their team’s snaps, only one Vikings player — slot corner Mackensie Alexander — ranked in the top 50 during the regular season, according to Pro Football Focus. But Alexander was inactive for Sunday’s game at the New Orleans Saints because of a knee injury, and he will reportedly be out against the 49ers. Mike Hughes ranked 68th but was also inactive Sunday with a neck injury that landed him on injured reserve. Trae Waynes ranked 79th, and Xavier Rhodes ranked 125th.

The quartet allowed a leaguehigh 72 per cent of targets to be caught, producing a107.7 passer rating against. The rest of the NFL’s cornerback­s allowed a 62 per cent completion rate and a93.7 passer rating. Rhodes and Waynes allowed an opponent passer rating of 110 or more when targeted in coverage.

When you have weak cornerback­s, you can’t play as much man-to-man coverage, forcing Minnesota to be a zone-heavy defence that drops back in coverage and yields the underneath area of the field. Seattle, San Francisco, Baltimore and Tennessee are four of the five best teams at exploiting this area. The Vikings already dispatched the league’s best in this regard, the Saints, but New Orleans completed 21 of 25 passes within nine yards of the line of scrimmage in its loss Sunday. The Seahawks were successful on 18 of 20 underneath passes against the Vikings in Week 13.

 ?? JONATHAN BACHMAN GETTY IMAGES ?? Jimmy Garoppolo led the San Francisco 49ers to the top seed in the NFC, but he also threw the most regular-season intercepti­ons among the eight starting quarterbac­ks left in the playoffs.
JONATHAN BACHMAN GETTY IMAGES Jimmy Garoppolo led the San Francisco 49ers to the top seed in the NFC, but he also threw the most regular-season intercepti­ons among the eight starting quarterbac­ks left in the playoffs.

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