View the red zone opportunities within the 20, 10, and 5 yard lines and the percentage of time they turned the opportunity into a touchdown.
Loading Fantasy / Red Zone Stats … How does Jimmy Garoppolo’s 2020 expanded stats compare to other quarterbacks?
This section compares its advanced stats to players in the same position. The bar represents the player’s percentile rank.
The longer the bar, the better it is for the player.Explain these statistics
Bad Pass%
The percentage of passes that were considered badly thrown.
Average Target depth
The average number of yards thrown by the quarterback per pass, including incomplete passes.
Sack rate
The percentage of dropbacks where the quartback was released. The longer the bar below it, the more often they are dismissed compared to other QBs.
Average recipient YAC
The average number of meters from the catch that the receivers made on the passes thrown by this quarterback.
Receiver drop%
The percentage of passes dropped by receivers on passes thrown by that quarterback. The longer the bar, the safer its recipients were.
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2020 NFL game record
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2019 NFL Game Log
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2018 NFL score sheet
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2017 NFL Game Log
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2016 NFL score sheet
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How do Jimmy Garoppolo’s readings compare to other quarterbacks?
This section compares his draft training metrics with players in the same position. The bar represents the player’s percentile rank. For example, if the bar is halfway, the player will fall into the 50th percentile for that metric and this is considered average.
Much was expected of Garoppolo, who entered last season, but those sky-high hopes were dashed in Week 3 when he suffered an ACL tear on his left knee at the end of the season. His first couple of games didn’t really live up to the hype – three INTs Week 1, just under 200 yards after Week 2 – but Week 3 (8.4 YPA, two TDs) gave a glimpse into his promise before it went down in the fourth quarter. Aside from Garoppolo’s health, the number one issue for the 49ers is the state of coach Kyle Shanahan’s offense. The team’s # 1 goal is the tight end of George Kittle, who will regress at least a little from his all-time season, and while the 49ers have plenty of young talent across the board, the emphasis is on young people. Dante Pettis had an impact on the late season as a rookie last year, but has not yet been proven. He is joined by Deebo Samuel from the second round and Marquise Goodwin, an inconsistent, deep threat. The 49ers also added Jordan Matthews, but he’s not a lock to make the team at all. The backfield has high quality receivers, and Tevin Coleman joins Matt Breida. Garoppolo plans to return with a knee brace, which could be a problem if the offensive line (48 sacks last year) doesn’t improve. Garoppolo is getting cheaper at the draft table this year, but if you liked him last season, you should still like him this season, provided his knee is healthy in training camp.
Garoppolo might be the most popular man in the Bay Area – the San Francisco Zoo even named one of its snow leopards “Jimmy G.” It’s easy to see why. After a trade in late October last season, Garoppolo stood up for an injured CJ Beathard and led the 49ers to five wins in their last five games. And suddenly the rebuilt 49ers who’ve spent the last four seasons spinning their wheels have their quarterback of the future and a way back to at least relevance. However, it is difficult to draw final conclusions based on a five-game example. Garoppolo was accurate and efficient and stood strong against pressure. Had he thrown enough passes to qualify, Garoppolo would have led the league in YPA (10.1) against the Blitz and finished second in the completion rate (66.7). As a starter, he developed 21 Red Zone scoring drives that have drawn for most in the NFL over the past five weeks. But he didn’t throw down the field too often, struggling in the process, completing three out of 14 attempts beyond 20 meters. He also threw five interceptions in five games. But if anything is encouraging, it’s how quickly he picked up on the offense and how far he could go after a full off-season to learn the intricate system from coach Kyle Shanahan. The 49ers moved into ninth overall against Mike McGlinchey to improve their offensive line. But skills are modest at best, led by 32-year-old Pierre Garcon and 5-9 Marquise Goodwin. Tight end George Kittle is the only obvious target in the red zone and Jerick McKinnon sustained a knee injury at the end of the season prior to Week 1.
After an off-season in which Garoppolo’s name frequently appeared in trade rumors, the 25-year-old signal-caller sticks with the Patriots, who are on the team’s depth map behind entrenched starter Tom Brady. Garappolo, who voted New England 62nd overall in the 2014 NFL Draft, had the opportunity to play at the start of the season in 2016. Brady was banned from the campaign’s first four games. However, Garappolo’s starting run was canceled due to a shoulder injury. While it was out there, the eastern Illinois product was able to show enough promise to generate the aforementioned commercial interest, with the Browns reportedly attempting to acquire it. Statistically, Garappolo finished last season with 43 completions on 63 tries for 502 yards, along with four TDs and zero picks over the course of six appearances. It’s a small sample, but with three seasons as Brady’s understudy, Garappolo is viewed by the franchise as a plug-and-play option in the event his seasoned counterpart is injured. Garappolo is under contract with New England for the coming season, so it continues to serve as a valuable insurance policy for Brady, who is slated to turn 40 in August. After 2017, it is plausible that the team will try to find a way to keep Garappolo in the group by either signing a contract renewal or granting him a franchise.
Garoppolo is poised to finally get a chance to show what he can do in the NFL after spending two seasons as Tom Brady’s rarely used understudy. Garoppolo, who was elected to the second round from eastern Illinois in 2014, has good athleticism, and his decision-making and leadership skills were rated as pluses. Combine those traits with a quick release and he should, in theory, be an excellent match for the Patriots’ short passing game, but there were questions about his arm strength and pocket awareness after a college career he’d spent on a proliferation. The reinstatement of Brady’s deflategate suspension in four games puts Garoppolo on the starting line-up despite only attempting 31 regular season passes in the last two seasons. The opening month schedule includes a road trip to Arizona and home games against division rival Bills and Dolphins put the young signaler to the test immediately. If he takes on the task, the Patriots could make some interesting decisions about the next off-season as Garoppolo heads into the final year of his rookie contract while Brady wears a huge cap hit for a 40-year-old, but in the short term His first taste of a starting job in the NFL ends after week 4.
When the Patriots used the 62nd overall pick in the 2014 NFL Draft for Garoppolo, the idea was that the team should have a potential successor to franchise beacon Tom Brady. Even after replacement quarterback Ryan Mallett was awarded the Texans last August, Garoppolo was slated to not see much of the field during the regular season, other than a Brady injury. All that changed in May when the Liga gave Brady a four-game ban for his reported role on Deflategate. Subsequently, Garoppolo was ready to start the team’s first four games for most of the summer, but Brady’s suspension was lifted a week before the 2015 NFL regular season opener, setting the stage for Garoppolo to remain the team’s number 2 Signal caller.
Garoppolo, who was voted 62nd overall in the 2014 NFL Draft, gives the Patriots a potential successor to franchise signalcaller Tom Brady, whose colleague QB Ryan Mallett was treated in August. Of course, Garoppolo won’t see much of the field during the regular season unless Brady suffers an injury.