fatkid73
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The numbers don't even matter if you don't know what they represent. I can tell you Rodgers didn't get a negative number. He got a positive number. More importantly, however, you have to understand how their grading system works. They give grades based on how each play was analyzed. You might think if a player got a zero, that's bad but it's not. Take Rodgers for instance. They gave him a grade of +.7 last game. To you and others that seems ridiculous cause he threw for 5 TDs and what not. If I was to look at that grade, it wouldn't make me think he had a bad game, just an easy time of it. In other words, he wasn't seeing much or any pressure and his receivers were getting open consistently and at will. Each play is graded individually and then all are averaged out. If Rodgers completes a pass to a receiver who is wide open, that play would be graded a 0 for Rodgers. It means he hit hit receiver as was intended but required no extra or special effort to do so. If he had to fit it in to a tighter window on a deeper route he'd get more credit for that. They go by increments of .5 for each play. Every play is graded on the same scale no matter if a TD or Int. A TD would just be another good pass while an Int would be 1 bad pass if the QB is to blame.
Pff also does rating based off the numbers which lay fans would better understand. For that game, Rodgers' pff QB rating was 101.
Not sure where this came from or if you made it up, but multiple articles i looked at are saying Rodgers got a negative grade from PFF. Here is one as an example from @TheBuzzer on Fox Sports:
After NFL analytics website ProFootballFocus (PFF) revealed its negative game rating for Packers QB Aaron Rodgers' Monday Night Football performance, a mob of incredulous NFL fans began urging PFF to (discount) double check its model.
Rodgers completed 24-of-35 passes for 333 yards and five touchdown passes against zero interceptions, good for a 138.5 passer rating. But PFF, which grades every player's performance on every play according to its more nuanced model, saw it differently. Take a look at how Rodgers, who graded a negative 0.8 for the game, stacked up against other QBs in Week 3:
Love me some @PFF but Aaron Rodgers was not worse than Nick Foles, Jameis Winston or Blake Bortles this week. pic.twitter.com/F4BYr7PR17
http://www.foxsports.com/buzzer/story/pff-aaron-rodgers-negative-grade-packers-chiefs-mnf-092915