05-21-24 Ryan Michael with Broncos Country Tonight - podcast episode cover

05-21-24 Ryan Michael with Broncos Country Tonight

May 22, 202416 min
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Run right out to the Eka Commas Perial Health hotline. THO, I'll bring our good buddy Ryan, Michael Ryan, how you doing this evening? Doing well? Ben Grant? Now you guys doing pretty well. First of all, congratulations sir on your your the next thing that you've added to your impressive CV sheet as you are now working for the Barcelona Dragons. I believe, yes, sir, thank you. Yeah, it's something I'm incredibly excited about.

I had the fortune of having opportunities with a number of LF teams, but really, in the end, Barcelona I felt was far and away the best fit for me, and they really won me over. The culture there, the professionalism, the commitment to winning, and you know, from our owner and managing director Jason Robinson, our head coach David Shelton, and the rest of the coaching staff Sean Cooper, Darien Simmons, Jason Hillery, we have such an expansive staff and it's a group of guys who are passionate high

football like you, hard working, committed to helping our peer succeeds. You know, my role on the staff is small, but I'm excited to be a small part of it, and I'm excited for the twenty four season. Yeah, I'm excited for you as well. One of the quarterbacks that they have on the team, Connor Miller, is actually an American. Went to the Florida Atlantic was undrafted in twenty nineteen. So I don't know if he's still on the roster there or not, but he was with the Dragons,

I believe was last year. I knew him through a friend of a friend, so I'm not sure if he's still there or not, but you know, he used to be small world. Yeah. Levi Lewis is going to be our starting quarterback this year, and he's a guy who spent time with the Seattle Seahawks, and you know a lot of people have described his style of play as a fusion between Russell Wilson and Kyler Murray, but Levi is really his own man, and I think he's going to be the perfect fit

for the up tempo offense that we're going to be running. So we're excited to get at it. Yeah, that'd be really cool. You know, can you stream it from the website or I mean, I'm trying to figure out how anybody would get a chance to watch the europe In football like that. Yeah, you can sign up for the ELF season Pass, and then we're really excited about how that's going to help us reach fans it away with

growing technology that we didn't necessarily have during NFL Europe. So it's it's definitely a league that's on the rise, and we're very excited to connect with our fans and definitely tune in. It's going to be some exciting football. Well, you tell coach if he needs a slow, over forty white, short dad bod type wide receiver that I am. I am there for him.

All right, you got it? Oh my goodness, yes, good status about Peyton Manning out there today on the net yards per attempt at how the Broncos kind of sort of fell off a cliff once Peyton Manning, as it were, fell off a cliff and then and then departed. What could the Broncos do? First of all, how bad was that? Because I mean, and they went from basically first in the league to the bottom third of the league. But what can the Broncos do to turn that around? Now?

With Sean Payton and ostensibly bon Nicks, I mean, Peyton Manning was truly a unicorn in terms of what he did well, and really him and Dan Marino were the two toughest the sad quarterbacks in the history of professional football by some distance. Through Breas in my view would have been third there,

but he would have been a distance third. And so if you look at the stats that I posted earlier this evening, the Tim Tebow era, Bronco's twenty ninth in that yards per attempt, So you're factoring in the yards lost the sacks. And then we went on a run three consecutive years the Broncos finished first place with Peyton and then you know, obviously injuries caught up with him during our Super Bowl year in twenty fifteen, and since then we've definitely

been in the bottom third of the league. You know, Bonnix being a guy who was sacked and only one point one percent of his dropbacks last year at Oregon is going to be that perfect fit. I know. It's something that coach Payton was frustrated about last year in terms of the number of sacks that he took. So, you know, we brought in a guy who doesn't make a lot of mistakes, an accurate passer, whose pocket pricing is really one of the greatest strengths of his games. So we're certainly hoping to

see some improvement in that. Can is going to be a first place finish, I wouldn't bank on that, but are we going to improve from where we were twenty fourth and twenty twenty two twenty first last year. Yeah, I'm looking forward to seeing some improvement in that metric for sure. Well it goes into that metric for the fan at home when we reference that number, what does that mean? So the fant home can unpack that? Sure?

So netyards per attempt or ny over A is really just a metric that factors in the yards per passing attempt, and it accounts for the yards lost to sacks. And something that a lot of people may not be aware of is that sacks are drive killers at almost the same rate as interceptions are automatic drive endors. So if it's third and fifteen and a quarterback wants to preserve his passer rating and he throws a three yard slant, that doesn't help us anymore

than Brett Favre chucking a deep. Maybe it gets picked off, but that's not really any different than a punt in that instance. So you know, given the reality that touchdowns are heavily influenced by field position and intercept as well. You know, if you're a quarterback playing with a bad defense and you're down seventeen points, you're going to be facing some loaded coverages and you're going

to throw more picks, and so I like to hone in. Net Yard per attempt is one of my favorite stats because it's a great reflection of the value that a quarterback brings per drop back, and it's something that isn't necessarily impacted by touchdowns and interceptions. Adjusted net yards per attempt is a more comprehensive measure for those things. But in terms of both adjusted net yards per attempt and net yards per tempt, Paydon Manning was the best player in the history

of professional football. Well, if he was the best player, what was his or what was the best season in the history of professional football? Using that number? That is a good question, and off the top of my head, I don't have a ranking through net yard per tempt alone. In my view, I would say in the top two seasons in the history of pro football at the quarterback position or both paid Manning seasons two thousand and four. In terms of efficiency, he threw a touchdown pass on a nearly one

out of every ten attempts. You're never going to achieve that happen ever again, especially with a sample size throwing as many passes as it did, And so his efficiency wasn't quite what it was in two thousand and four. By the time we got to twenty thirteen, there was greater volume. But when you consider the reality of the injuries that he came back from, and you consider the reality that he threw fifty five touchdowns five four hundred and seventy seventy

cards in fifteen and a half games. Do you remember they pulled him at halftime in the season finale against Oakland? He could have thrown another four touchdown pass in the second half conceivably, So his volume numbers and also efficiency throwing that many passes when you factor in what he had to come through to just make his return to professional football, and you know he joked about it himself that Grady might break next year or if not that, the year after.

And here we are Dak Prescott like the NFL with thirty six touchdowns last year in a seventeen game schedule. No one has touched the fifty five after Mahomes throwing fifty is the only thing even remotely close. Yeah, and it's weird how that looks almost like an aberration now. I mean, you know, it's funny because you thought the extra games would pad the numbers as far as that goes, but as you're absolutely right that Prescott was far far below that

with the benefit of an extra game. How did the injuries affect their trajectory of Peyton Manning's career, because you know, we saw, you know, the big injury with the Colts there, and at the time, you know, it was kind of like, hey, he's one sneeze away from being a quadriplegic, but then he comes back to have some of the most statistically

significant seasons ever. I think that his comeback to the to the Broncos, to professional football, signing with the Denver Broncos is arguably the most impressive thing I've ever seen at the quarterback position. Because clearly I'm not a doctor, but a lot of folks have made the argument that given the severity of his injuries, he should have never returned to pro football. And there's a difference between being capable of returning and is this a good thing to do for your

long term health. I can't speak to that, but what I can tell you is when he came back in twenty twelve to twelve arguably was even more shocking to me than twenty thirteen, because he immediately jumped into a new team

with a new system and the new coaching staff. Led the NFL in success percentage fifty four percent, led the AFC in passer rating one to five point eight, led the league in netyards per attempt, and adjusted the netyards per attempt as we had just mentioned, set Broncos franchise records for touchdown passes and passer rating, and he was a first team All Pro selection immediately his first year back, and he was again at first team All Pro selection his second

year. His seven first team All Pro selections are far and away the most in the history of the quarterback position. Tom Brady won three of those in twenty one seasons. Hayton Manning won two in his first two years in Denver alone. So what he was able to do really for the first two and a half years in Denver he is unseekably brilliant. But eventually, and this shouldn't have been a shock to anyone, the injuries caught up with him, and I had my read on the situation when it was was that he had

limitations in arm strength due to the neck entry. He couldn't run away from that, and that led to greater demand on his legs because he had to generate torque and Peyton Manning's passing mechanics were damn near perfect, but to collective wear and tear of basically using your legs to generate arm strength that wasn't there anymore, led to his quads tearing in twenty fourteen, and then you know,

you follow that through the twenty fifteen he tears. His plan of fashion has left foot and just the injuries became too much to keep up with. So what happened there and a lot of quarterbacks will tell you the first thing to go with their legs. Their arm could continue for a few more years. But when you lose your legs, especially in Manning's case, it really

impacted his pass accuracy, which was the strongest aspect of his game. But what I will say for Peyton, even in that last year, I mean most Broncos fans are familiar with the fact that he threw nine touchdowns seventeen interceptions, so the efficiency marks weren't good. He averaged more passing yards per game on the road than Brady did to eighty three point four Brady had two eighty

two point three. That year. He had six games averaging seven point six yards per attempter more to put that into contact, seven point six would rank seven months all NFL quarterbacks. In twenty twenty three, he finished top ten and sack percentage again. He led the league in fourth quarter comebacks if you include the postseason, and certainly that two touchdown, zero interception performance against Brady in the pass in the AFC Championship game gave Von Miller and the defense the

opportunity to really tee off on Tom for the rest of that game. So I always say that twenty fifteen is the greatest bad season in pro football, which is a weird backhanded compliment. But the Testament do all the things that Peyton Manny could still do well at a high level upstairs right. I don't know if you know this, but the Barcelo and Dragons have a history of going out and being innovators in a sense. They brought Michael sam back to

football, the first and openly gay player to enter the NFL draft. Sam been out of football for uh for several years, and uh, he's we've brought back as a defensive line coach. Now they since moved on. He's moved on, I believe to a Polish team. I can't remember off the top of my head, but uh, you know I I I didn't know if you knew that or not. I did. Yeah, And absolutely a number of big names have actually come through Barcelona Denver Broncos. Connection would be

Jerryus Jackson, Yeah, playing quarterback for US. Yeah, he spent a few years playing for the Barcelona Dragons and then later ended up finding great success in the CFL, winning a couple of great cups. So definitely a lot of great NFL CFL connections in Barcelona for sure. Got to uh always got to gotta love that. And I love the fact that that, you know, American football has become a global sport, you know in a lot of ways, and uh and all that what what what? Uh? I don't

want to say what got you into that position? But how did you find out about the positions availability? And how did you come about getting on with the staff there? Sure, so I keep an eye on professional football across the globe by the year working for the Hamilton Tiger Katz of the CFL as a staff writer, and you know, just seeing what the ELF has done overseas, it's far and away the best professional football that you're going to find

over in Europe. And one of the coolest parts is the fact that a lot of the original NFL Europe franchises are now Barcelon Dragon's being one of them, of course over there in the ELF. So it provides great opportunities not just for American players to display their skills overseas, but really to develop a lot of homegrown talent across the globe. We've seen the NFL do wonderful things

with the International Games coming every year, and that continues to expand. So I think it's very clear that there is a strong demand for American football over in Europe. I think this is really just the tip of the iceberg. Well, I'm looking forward to it. I'm gonna you got a subscriber out of me, So I'm going to be keeping an eye on Barcelona this year. Just just just for you, my god. By the way, you know, our own Nick Ferguson played de Canadian football, not with the Tie

Cats always with Saskatchewan Ryan Fire and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. As the text line is reminding me at this moment. We were talking earlier about you know, Peyton Manning and you talked about twenty fifteen being the greatest bad season of all time. But you know, the Broncos are looking forward. Peyton Manning is the standard. I guess that they want to get back to it.

That's a very lofty standard, if not the greast indeed, But when you're a franchise that has a John Elway and a Peyton Manning on the books, and even to an extent that Jake Plummer on the books, you know, it's tough as a quarterback not to be compared or viewed through the filter or the lens that we saw those quarterbacks through. What can bo Nix expect for a grace period, you know, like early on, because everybody's going to

he was drafted in the first round. People are going to expect greatness. I think the NFL world is a lot different now than it was when John played with us. I mean truly, if you look at John's numbers from when he was a rookie in eighty three, all the way through eighty nine, they were somewhere around league average, and he had some really good years mixed in with some really tough years, But he wasn't a quarterback who stepped

into the starting lineup and played at an elite level quickly. That's something we almost take for granted because we see it in the NFL today. But as you and I have talked about, then, you know, when we're seeing young quarterbacks really step into that starting role and having really strong starts in almost all cases, Andrew Lukins twenty twelve would be one of the few exceptions, but in almost all cases, they're surrounded by tremendous support, if not on

one side, oftentimes both sides of the football. And so the Kansas City Chiefs are a great example of this. They had great success or Patrick Mahomes stepped into the starting role. Ole Smith led the NFL in pouncer rating during mahomes rookie year, and Mahomes is an entirely different caliber of quarterback than Alex Smith. God knows, but the Chiefs had tremendous success before Mahomes. So when you missed tremendous talent with tremendous situation, get tremendous results. Have to

be realistic. We're coming off an eight win season and we're coming off an eight year run where we really have not lived up to the standard that Peyton Manning, John Lway, Nick Ferguson and a lot of the Broncos that came

before both set for us. So I think as far as Grace period, you got to give him a solid two seasons at least to get his seat wet, to really learn sean system that's not an easy system to learn, so there are going to be a lot of bumps and bruises, but to really give him an opportunity to develop and give the recipient of great coaching. That's what we hired Jean Payton to do. And so you know, I would temper our expectations and for me, I'm looking to see what bow Knicks

looks like as a quarterback in twenty twenty five. I'm definitely definitely with you on that, Ryan. We appreciate it as always at the Ryan Michael on Twitter, the contributing writer and analysts the Pro Football Fame of course, our official and official statistician and on you now an offensive defensive analyst with the Barcelona Dragons of the E l F will be paying attention. Man, appreciate you. Take you bet absolutely take care

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