Buffalo Rumblings
The six seed Buffalo Bills are set to take on the one seed Denver Broncos and the predictions are all steering toward a close matchup. Buffalo’s defense has a laundry list of injuries that should concern Bills Mafia. If there’s a silver lining, however, it’s that the Bills have faced tougher challenges so far.
To briefly recap my rule of four for the league’s 32 teams, the top four spots are considered “elite” in a metric, with spots 5-8 considered “good” or “above average.” Teams 9-24 being average. The 25-28 spots are “bad” or “below average” with the final four spots being considered “terrible” or some other antonym of “elite.” Got it? So let’s prove the statement in my heading.
My favorite metrics to discuss team quality are per-drive metrics. Denver’s points per drive sits at 2.05, which is 18th best in the league. They score on 37.8% of their drives, which is 20th. When it comes to avoiding turnovers, they’re actually in the realm of “good” coming in at the sixth spot with a turnover rate of 8.0% of drives.
I also like per-play metrics, so let’s look at some of those. The Broncos are 15th in total yards per play with 5.33 yards per play. They’re also 15th in rushing yards (4.43 per rush) but hit the bad category in passing. Their 6.21 yards per pass ranks 25th in the league. Their biggest strength is avoiding sacks. At 3.75% sack rate, no team in the league is better.
Like all teams, they have their ups and downs, but the overall numbers suggest a team in the realm of average. How has the Bills’ defense fared against teams similar to the Broncos? For purposes of “me not staying up writing all the various permutations until 3 a.m.” I’ll stick to points per drive for this exercise as points are usually understood to be the best predictor of who wins a game.
For points per drive, the Bills have faced the following average teams: