We’ve all seen that despite our defense shitting the bed, Justin Herbert is back to his old self slinging the ball around like crazy and single-handedly carrying a bad team.
But what about those 4 games where Herbert was wearing a cast on his left hand? Did it affect his play?
The answer - conclusively - through the use of a mix of old-school data and advanced PFF metrics is clear: the cast on Justin Herbert’s hand massively impacted his ability.
Point 1: The PFF grades
Herbert injured his finger right at the end of the 3Q of the Week 4 matchup vs the Raiders. Since he played the majority of that game with no cast, we can group this in with his non-cast games.
CAST STATUS | PFF GRADE | RANK AMONG NFL QBs |
---|---|---|
Cast (Week 5-9) | 68.2 | 19th among 35 QBs |
No-cast (Week 1-4 + 10-11) | 88.0 | 1st among 39 QBs |
Yep, that’s right, Justin Herbert was - according to PFF - literally the best QB in the NFL this season when not wearing a cast/brace on his finger.
Point 2: The old-school stats
These figures are further backed up when we look at the more traditional metrics available to us:
CAST STATUS | GAMES | PASSING YARDS PER GAME | TOTAL TDS PER GAME | INTS PER GAME | PASSER RATING |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cast (Week 5-9) | 4 | 230.3 | 1.5 | 0.8 | 87.9 |
No-cast (Week 1-4 + 10-11) | 6 | 281.5 | 2.7 | 0.3 | 106.7 |
Again, more evidence here of a massive improvement in Herbert’s numbers when he isn’t wearing a cast.
Point 3: Why is this the case?
Now of course many people would argue that a non-throwing hand injury shouldn’t affect a QB, but we can see the following major differences between Herbert not wearing a cast, and wearing one. In brackets are his NFL ranks, in each case, lower numbers are better rankings.
CAST STATUS | Average time to throw | Average depth of throw | Pressures to sack rate | “Big time throws” % | Turnover-worthy plays % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cast (Week 5-9) | 2.80s (17/35) | 7.7 yards (25/35) | 16.7% (15/35) | 2.6% (29/35) | 3.4% (22/35) |
No-cast (Week 1-4 + 10-11) | 2.72s (15/39) | 8.8 yards (11/39) | 13.8% (11/39) | 6.0% (3/39) | 2.6% (11/39) |
Point 4: All areas of the field
Looking even deeper we can see that Herbert is better across every passing distance, it isn’t just his deep ball that improved as many have said.
CAST STATUS | PFF GRADE - 20+ yards | PFF GRADE - 10-19 yards | PFF GRADE - 0-9 yards |
---|---|---|---|
Cast (Week 5-9) | 62.4 (25/29) | 79.5 (12/35) | 63.5 (28/36) |
No-cast (Week 1-4 + 10-11) | 69.6 (22/35) | 91.7 (4/40) | 85.9 (1/38) |
Point 5: Conclusion
Justin Herbert would be leading the MVP race if he didn’t break his finger against the Raiders - particularly in a season with fairly poor play from other big name QBs.
Sure, you have to adjust a bit that we played some slightly better defenses in his 4 game injured stretch, but that goes nowhere near enough to explain the difference in performance.
not with this record. only people winning MVP make the playoffs