Top Defensive Players of 2009
In December, I put up a post on the top Heisman candidates and my thoughts on them. With the emergence of Ndamukong Suh and locally with Brandon Graham, I wondered the best way to evaluate defensive players strictly from the stat sheet. Defense is made is more for the UFR, not for stat comparisons. The problem is, with over 800 games played in the FBS every year, it would take an army to break down the film for all the players in all the games. My stats based approach has the advantage of being able to quickly look at every game played last year.
There is no way to evaluate from the play by play who is responsible for a bad play on defense, but you can get a decent idea of who is responsible for a good one. Sure someone else could have opened up the hole, taken on extra blockers or forced a cutback, but over the course of a season, if you you made a lot key tackles, chances are you did a lot of work on those plays.
I took all of the plays from the season and immediately cut out all the plays from the second half where one team led by more than 2 TDs, no garbage time stat padding (same goes for any games against Baby Seal U opponents, always excluded from all my work). I then reduced the list of plays to ones that put the offense in a worse position than were they started the play. This doesn’t just mean TFL plays. A 2nd and 8 is worse than a 1st and 10 for an offense, so a tackle on a 2 yard gain on first down counts. Any third down stop counts, and often these are the biggest plays a defender can make. Turnovers are obviously the holy grail, stop the offense, create field position for your offense. The players are measured by two metrics, number of plays and magnitude of plays. A defensive tackle might make a lot of plays but most of them for relatively small values. A cornerback probably doesn’t get the chance to make many plays on a down by down basis, but each interception is huge, and has a very high value.
I then compared each players production versus what the average player at his position accomplishes to get a sort of VOAP, Value Over Average Player. Unfortunately, I couldn’t get good enough roster data to split all positions, so everyone is either DL, LB or DB, not perfect but better than nothing. I assumed that the average team would split the majority of the playing time between 6 DL, 4 LB and 5 DB. From the best I can tell, there isn’t much variation between the safeties and the corners, but DE’s get a bit of a benefit being compared to DT’s and DT’s get a slight hit compared to DE’s.
Top National Players
All player data is available here. It is easier to work with if you download into Excel since G Docs doesn’t like pages with a lot of rows. There are some slight changes to the numbers from my Heisman post as I reloaded the 2009 data and tweaked the expected value formulas.
I don’t have all the historical data but I would be shocked if a defensive tackle has ever had a better season than Ndamukong Suh did in 2009. He made 52 plays more and was nearly 5 TDs better than the average d-lineman and that includes defensive ends. No player in the country had a VOAP within a touchdown of him.
The closest, none other than Michigan’s Brandon Graham. Graham produced 27 extra plays and over 27 points of value more than the average defensive lineman. This made him the top value adding defensive end in the country and second to Suh overall.
In fact, the Big 10 had four of the top 6 defensive lineman in the country. O’Brien Schofield, Ryan Kerrigan and Adrian Clayborn all managed at least 23 points per page above replacement.
Luke Kuechly of Boston College led all linebackers with 57 plays and 25 points above average. Kuechly produced a ridiculous 87 negative plays on the season, 10 more than any other player at any position and 17 more than anyone else from a BCS a conference. Navorro Bowman, Nate Triplett and Brian Smith all cracked the bottom half of the top 10 linebackers at 17-18 points above average each.
Defensive backs were highly unproductive in the Big 10 relative to other conferences. Tyler Sash of Iowa came in at +12, 15th nationally and Donovan Warren was second best in the conference, but his +9 barely cracked the Top 40 nationally. Walter McFadden of Auburn was the top producing defensive back nationally, providing a +22 for the season.
Reviewing All-American Teams
I was curious to see how the national All-American team selections would compare with this metric. For positions like defensive end, linebacker and safety I would hope quite well because these positions are very output oriented and most of the value is in making plays. For defensive tackles and corner backs, I wasn’t as confident. A good defensive tackle will often add value by making plays for others. A good cover corner will often see the action go away from him and might not get many opportunities.
Defensive Ends
There were five players that were selected as defensive ends on the All-American teams, four of them stack up very well in my ratings, one does not. Brandon Graham was rated 1st and was +27. Derrick Morgan of Georgia Tech was 7th and +18. Von Miller of Texas A&M and Jason Pierre-Paul were 12th and 13th at about +15.5 for the season.
The outlier was TCU’s Jerry Hughes who came in 60th at +6 and was actually selected to the most All-American teams as any d-lineman. The large is probably due to the fact that 5 of his 11 sacks (10th nationally) came during garbage time.
Top non-selections were O’Brien Schofield, Wisconsin (2nd, +27), Jeremy Beal, Oklahoma (3rd, +25), Ryan Kerrigan, Purdue (4th, +25) and Adrian Clayborn, Iowa (5th, +23)
Defensive Tackles
Again five players were picked to All-American teams as defensive tackles. Three had elite level production and 2 did not. Not to say that they were undeserving as discussed earlier, defensive tackles value can be difficult to attribute.
Suh was an obvious selection, and both Brian Price of UCLA (3rd, +20) and Gerald McCoy of Oklahoma (7th, +9) were well-deserved. The two potentially questionable selections, Mount Cody had the reputation and the highlight but did not have the direct productio, 79th nationally and 1.4 points below average. The other low production selection was Penn State’s Jared Odrick who just made the top 50 and was only 1.7 points above average.
Other top non-selections were Nate Collins, Virignia (2nd, +21), Lamarr Houston (4th, +16), Jared Crick, Nebraska (5th, +15) and Corey Peters, Kentucky (6th, +14).
Linebackers
There wasn’t much consensus among the All-American teams on the linebacker position. A total of 10 different selections were made. It appears the selections are more weighted on quantity of plays instead of quality of plays. This makes sense because most linebackers don’t make a lot of big stat sheet plays like interceptions or sacks and so the good old tackle stat is the most used.
When looking at the top values for linebackers, Luke Kuechly at #1 is the only player from the top 14 to receive any All-American honors. When you look at the play quantity, Kuechly and 3 others are in the top 8. The three are Rennie Curran from Georgia (+13), Pat Angerer, Iowa (+8) and Greg Jones from Michigan State (+12). Consensus pick Rolando McClain of Alabama is in the top 50 in both quantity and quality, and played for the top defense in the country.
There was one player who seemed to make the team purely on reputation and team success alone, because his production was dramatically less than the rest of the group. In defense of the selections, I won’t even name this individual for he might be the scariest man alive that played for the 2008 Florida National Championship game. He only produced 2 more plays and was just below average (-.1) in point production versus average player, and still received recognition from three different groups.
Cornerbacks
Of the five cornerbacks named to an All-American team in 2009, four landed in the Top 11 of my rankings. Joe Haden, Florida (3rd, +18), Javier Arenas (4th, +15), Alterruan Verner, UCLA (8th, +13) and Patrick Peterson from LSU (11th, +11) all produced very highly. The only exception was Perrish Cox from Oklahoma State who still managed to make the top 40 with a +6 for the season.
Walter McFadden from Auburn and Brandon Brinkley from Houston were the top two rated cornerback and both produced over +20 for the season.
Safeties
It took seven selections to cover all of the picks for safeties. Five of the seven fit nicely at the top, including the top 3. DeAndre McDaniel, Clemson (1st, +20), Earl Thomas, Texas (2nd, +17), Rahim Moore, UCLA (3rd, +17), Tyler Sash, Iowa (7th, +12) and Eric Berry, Tennessee (11th, +10).
The two outliers were Kurt Coleman from Ohio State (44th, +1) and another apparent reputation selection, Taylor Mays, USC (77th, –3).
Michigan
Player | Position | Group | Plays | Value | Adj Plays | Adj Value |
Brandon Graham | DE | DL | 45 | 37.0 | 27 | 27.4 |
Donovan Warren | CB | DB | 24 | 21.1 | 4 | 8.7 |
Ryan Van Bergen | DE | DL | 23 | 16.1 | 5 | 6.5 |
Stevie Brown | S | DB | 28 | 18.1 | 8 | 5.7 |
Jonas Mouton | LB | LB | 33 | 17.2 | 3 | 2.8 |
Mike Martin | DT | DL | 27 | 9.8 | 9 | 0.2 |
Obi Ezeh | LB | LB | 34 | 14.5 | 4 | 0.1 |
Jordan Kovacs | S | DB | 25 | 12.0 | 5 | -0.3 |
Craig Roh | LB | LB | 20 | 11.0 | -10 | -3.4 |
Kevin Leach | LB | LB | 19 | 8.8 | -11 | -5.6 |
William Campbell | DT | DL | 2 | 0.7 | -16 | -8.8 |
Will Heininger | DE | DL | 1 | 0.6 | -17 | -9.0 |
Troy Woolfolk | CB | DB | 9 | 3.2 | -11 | -9.1 |
Boubacar Cissoko | CB | DB | 4 | 3.0 | -16 | -9.3 |
Brandon Smith | S | DB | 7 | 2.1 | -13 | -10.2 |
J.B. Fitzgerald | LB | LB | 7 | 3.4 | -23 | -11.0 |
J.T. Floyd | CB | DB | 4 | 0.9 | -16 | -11.5 |
Brandon Herron | LB | LB | 8 | 1.6 | -22 | -12.8 |
Kenny Demens | LB | LB | 2 | 0.2 | -28 | -14.2 |
Michigan’s top two producers, Brandon Graham and Donovan Warren were covered above. After those two, only two players managed to be above +3 on the season. Ryan Van Bergen was +6.5 on the season on the defensive line and should have the potential for a big season this year. Stevie Brown was next at +6 (if you count him as a safety, +4 as a LB).
Jonas Mouton, Mike Martin, Obi Ezeh, Jordan Kovacs and Craig Roh all sit around the average mark for their positions. The most glaring point for me is that Michigan’s top linebacker, Mouton, barely makes the top 150 linebackers nationally in production. If Michigan’s defense is going to turn things around there is going to have be some new playmakers step up and there has to be more production from the linebackers.
April 12th, 2010 at 10:58 PM ^
April 13th, 2010 at 10:55 AM ^
April 13th, 2010 at 12:24 PM ^
November 9th, 2010 at 4:09 AM ^
I am interested in these value formulas, but have a few more questions. Where are you coming up with the information on expected points as it pertains to down and distance. I see the charts on expected points based on a 1st and 10 scenario, but how are you determining expected points for other down and distances (say for instance your 2nd and goal from the 1 that you use here)? Are there also charts for these? Or is there just a formula that you are using?
April 15th, 2010 at 12:42 PM ^
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