The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

First half features home-field losses and lower scoring

- By Josh Dubow

Scoring is down, home-field advantage hasn’t returned even if the fans have, and the AFC could be in a wild race for playoff spots.

As the NFL gets set to start the second half of its 18-week season, there are a few statistica­l trends to pay attention to, with the two most notable being the reduction of scoring and home-team struggles.

Points per game have dropped by nearly two points per contest per team so far this season as a marked increase in offensive penalties and a small decrease in passing efficiency has taken a toll.

The average team is scoring 1.95 fewer points per game through nine weeks this season than in 2020, the third-biggest drop through nine weeks since the merger. The only bigger ones came in 1991 (2.58 per game) and 1977 (1.97 per game).

One factor could be a big increase in offensive penalties with holding, false starts and delay of games all increasing from last year’s pace. That has contribute­d to a 35% increase in offensive penalties, while defensive penalties have remained flat.

While some of those presnap penalties could be because of the return of fans, the sold-out stadiums have not made life more difficult overall for road teams and reversed the trend from last season when home teams had a losing record (127-1281) for the first time since the merger.

Instead, road teams have gotten even better in 2021, finishing the first half of the season with a 70-64 record (.522), not counting two games played in London when the designated “home” team won.

This trend started in 2019, when home teams posted a .518 winning percentage for the lowest mark in the NFL since 1972.

Here are some others:

Jampacked AFC

The standings are tight at the top of the AFC with nine teams with five wins, including all four in the AFC West.

Tennessee (7-2) and Baltimore (6-2) sit at the top of the conference, but the 11 teams with winning records through nine weeks matches 2014 for the most in NFL history.

Rookie QBS

With five quarterbac­ks selected in the first round of the draft in April, rookie quarterbac­ks figured to be a storyline in 2021.

Three of them stepped in as Week 1 starters, with No. 1 pick Trevor Lawrence getting the job in Jacksonvil­le, No. 2 pick Zach Wilson taking over for the Jets and No. 15 pick Mac Jones winning the job in New England.

No. 11 pick Justin Fields, a former Harrison High and UGA player, became the starter in Week 3 for Chicago, while No. 3 pick Trey Lance and third-rounder Davis Mills have gotten starts because of injuries to starters in San Francisco and Houston.

In all, the rookies have made 34 starts for the second-most through nine weeks of a nonstrike season, compared to the 41 in 2012 in a class headlined by Andrew Luck, Russell Wilson and Robert Griffin III.

Turnaround teams

Six teams have already matched or exceeded their 2020 win total, led by Dallas, which has gone from 6-10 a year ago to 6-2 this season.

The Bengals (5-4) have already won one more game than last season and are in the playoff hunt in the AFC, and the Falcons (4-4) are currently in seventh position in the NFC after a 4-12 mark in 2020.

The other one of those teams in contention is the Broncos, who at 5-4 have matched last season’s win total.

Jacksonvil­le (2-6) and the Jets (2-6) have gotten there based on how bad last season was, when the Jaguars won one game and New York won two.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States