The preseason doesn’t matter as much as you want it to

The preseason doesn’t matter as much as you want it to
Turf Show Times Turf Show Times

The offseason NFL discourse can get exhausting and every year it gets more repetitive. With every team, the conversation starts with how they got better before moving into how each rookie draft pick and free agent signing fits perfectly into the team’s vision. From there we move into offseason rankings that create faux outrage and then we finally get to the preseason where everything matters.

It’s a process known as “The Cycle” and it’s something that was outlined by a former writer here at TurfShow Time, Joe McAtee. However, you all probably know him better as 3k. The cycle is defined by the following,

“The offseason is supposed to provide us seven months of puffery extolling the virtues of every team in spite of each other. Somehow, all 32 teams get better every year. Every rookie is looking the part of a successful NFL player. Every free agent signing looks to eliminate that roster gap for years to come. Every young player got better. Every older player avoided late career decay…That’s the way the league has been covered in the modern era by each individual team bubble. And it creates an economy for coverage that only allows for overestimation for players, units, and teams as a whole.”

In an era that almost has too much information, we’re trained to believe that all of it matters. Media members have begun tracking preseason stats, specifically for quarterbacks. Eliot Shorr-Parks, who covers the Philadelphia Eagles for 94.1 WIP, has been one of the biggest contributors to this. Shorr-Parks has gone as far this offseason as tracking joint practice wins and losses.

This isn’t to say that none of it matters, but it certainly doesn’t matter as much as we’re led to think it does. That’s especially the case when it comes to the NFL preseason.

Now, it makes sense that fans would overvalue the preseason. For many that don’t go to training camp, this is the only time to see the players in action. It’s only natural to place higher value on things that you see which for most is the preseason. However, what we don’t see are the things happening in the meeting room, the purpose of a drill, the play design, etc. that includes so much needed context. What’s going on behind the scenes and what is the specific coaching point?

It’s easy to fall into that trap and it’s something that I’ve done myself. Last week I wrote that the Rams had to find a way to keep Willie Lampkin. Back in 2023, I wrote that Tremayne Anchrum deserved a chance to start. Anchrum has bounced around five other teams since that column was written.

That’s really only to say that everything that happens in the preseason should be taken with a grain of salt. It’s how the Nelson Spruces, Luis Perezes, and others become preseason darlings. In 2022, Lance McCutcheon led the preseason in receiving yards, Anchrum was the Rams’ highest-graded offensive lineman according to PFF, and Jake...