2014 NFL Preview: The Once-Proud NFC East


NFL_PREVIEW_LOGOEditor’s Note: FiveThirtyEight is running a series of eight NFL previews, one division at a time, to highlight the numbers that may influence each team’s season. America’s favorite weekly soap opera is about to begin; get prepped.

Philadelphia Eagles

Expected wins (Using implied power ratings from Las Vegas point spreads): 8.5
Playoff probability: 42 percent (30 percent to win the NFC East)
Super Bowl win probability: 3 percent

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The Eagles are defending NFC East champions, and were owners of the NFL’s third-best offense last season. They’re the division favorites in the eyes of Las Vegas’s preseason over/unders. Expectations have escalated compared to the mood before last season, when the Eagles were coming off a disastrous 4-12 campaign with an unproven, gimmicky coach.

But there are also a number of red flags that traditionally portend a decline. First, there’s the Plexiglas Principle, an offshoot of reversion to the mean. It holds that teams making a large improvement from one year to the next tend to give back some of that progress the next season. Historically, teams like Philadelphia — which improved by six wins from 2012 to 2013 — declined by an average of 2.6 wins the following season.

The Eagles also fueled their turnaround with one of the NFL’s best turnover margins, especially after Nick Foles took over as primary quarterback in week five. Foles had the third-lowest single-season interception percentage of any passer in NFL history last season. Turnovers and interceptions can be quite fickle, though. Individual interception percentages are notoriously random from season to season, and there’s almost no relationship between a team’s per-game turnover differential from one season to the next.

Foles had a low interception rate as a rookie, so the hope in Philadelphia is that he has a knack for avoiding mistakes. But even so, he’s not liable to repeat last year’s mere two-pick performance, and consequently the Eagles are unlikely to post a gaudy turnover margin again — especially after accounting once more for the Plexiglas Principle.

And none of this even considers the self-inflicted loss of wide receiver DeSean Jackson. Or that 76 percent of historical players comparable to running back LeSean McCoy — Philadelphia’s best player a year ago — declined the following season. Or that the Eagles aren’t likely to stay as healthy this season.

A drop-off of some sort may be all but inevitable. Fortunately for the Eagles, though, it’s also hard not to see them making another strong bid for the division title in the NFL’s most meh division — regression be damned.

Dallas Cowboys

Expected wins: 8.3
Playoff probability: 39 percent (29 percent to win the NFC East)
Super Bowl win probability: 3 percent

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Over the past eight seasons, only four NFL teams have gotten better passing efficiency (as measured by the adjusted net yards per attempt index, or ANY/A+) from their primary quarterbacks than the Dallas Cowboys. Since 2006, the average number of wins per season for the teams surrounding them on that list was 10.1. In the same period, though, the Cowboys have won just nine games per season. In fact, few teams have ever received such premium passing but won as infrequently as the Tony Romo-era Cowboys.

For Dallas, the culprits are varied. The Cowboys’ defense has generally been inadequate, particularly since Jason Garrett succeeded Wade Phillips as head coach (the defense has allowed the fifth-most points and the highest ANY/A in the league since 2010). Injuries to Romo have forced Jon Kitna, Brad Johnson, Kyle Orton and Stephen McGee to make emergency starts under center. The effectiveness and health of the team’s ball-carriers have been wildly inconsistent from season to season. And Dallas’s special teams have usually been mediocre as well.

Whatever the reason, the Cowboys are currently staring at the prospect of another season spent with successful passing, but a modest win-loss record. (Las Vegas’s preseason over/under win totals have Dallas winning between seven and eight games in 2014.) And that’s if they’re lucky — according to Football Outsiders’ KUBIAK forecast system, the 34-year-old Romo projects for a career-worst passing year this season.

New York Giants

Expected wins: 7.8
Playoff probability: 33 percent (23 percent to win the NFC East)
Super Bowl win probability: 2 percent

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Even though the New York Giants finished the 2013 campaign with a disappointing 7-9 record (snapping a streak of eight consecutive seasons with at least a .500 mark), it doesn’t seem like that long since Eli Manning was slinging the ball to Mario Manningham, Victor Cruz and Hakeem Nicks in the 2011 playoffs … does it?

And while it’s relatively uncommon for Super Bowl champions to drop below .500 within two years, even those teams that do tend to turn things around the third season after their championships. Five out of seven returned to better than .500 that year, averaging 10.6 wins.

However, those numbers assume a certain amount of continuity between the Super Bowl-winning version of a team and its incarnation three seasons later. For most champs, that’s a safe assumption: Joe Montana was a major contributor to the 1981 and 1984 49ers; ditto Mike Webster for the 1978 and 1981 Steelers. But these Giants are the exception. Just three seasons later, they’re carrying over as few contributors from their last Super Bowl roster as just about any ex-champ in decades.

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We can quantify this using Pro-Football-Reference’s Approximate Value (AV) statistic, which attempts to generate a single numerical value representing the quality of any player’s season, regardless of position. (AV isn’t perfect by any means, but it is designed for big-picture studies like this, where we need to group players according to their general contributions.) We don’t yet know what kind of AV totals will be produced by members of the Giants in 2014, but we do know how much they produced in 2011 — and how many of those players will still be on the roster this season.

By that measure, this year’s Giants are set to return only 34.6 percent of the AV generated by their 2011 roster. That’s the third-smallest return among Super Bowl champions since 1970.

Manning, Cruz and Manningham (and edge rusher Jason Pierre-Paul) are all back, but that’s just about it in terms of the Giants’ major contributors by AV in 2011. Nicks and running back Ahmad Bradshaw, both of whom tore through opposing defenses during New York’s playoff run, are gone — along with 15 other members of the team’s starting lineup from Super Bowl XLVI.

Remember how five of the seven ex-champs who were below .500 two years later bounced back with winning records in the third year? The two that didn’t were the 1970 Colts and the 1991 Redskins, both of whom lost about as much AV three years after their Super Bowl as the Giants have. It wouldn’t be a shock if Big Blue is bound for the same losing destiny in 2014, just three seasons after hoisting the Lombardi Trophy.

Washington Redskins

Expected wins: 7.4
Playoff probability: 26 percent (18 percent to win the NFC East)
Super Bowl win probability: 1 percent

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Quarterbacks are usually the focus of every team’s attention, but that’s particularly the case in Washington, where the fate of the Redskins’ entire franchise seems to rest on Robert Griffin III and his surgically repaired right knee. When Griffin was brilliant as a rookie in 2012, Washington went 10-6 (its first 10-win season in seven years) and won the NFC East for the first time since 1999. But with Griffin recovering from injury a year ago — and evidently not his usual self because of it — the Redskins collapsed to 3-13. It doesn’t take an insider who understands of the game of football to see that Washington will likely rise or fall this year on the basis of Griffin’s play.

If the Redskins are counting on Griffin to duplicate (or exceed) his performance of two years ago, they might need a reality check. It’s very possible that Griffin will never again reach that level of play — and it has little to do with his injury.

Griffin’s 2012 season was a masterpiece. He led the NFL in yards per attempt, and tied Tom Brady for the league’s lowest interception rate. He also led all quarterbacks in rushing yards and yards per carry. Remember all of those early-2000s articles about how a new wave of dual-threat quarterbacks — strong-armed and accurate, with a sprinter’s speed — would revolutionize football? That was Griffin, at his best, in 2012.

It also could never last. On a practical level, the more RGIII played, the more defenses could prepare for him (the dreaded “year of tape”). And sure enough, in the first month of the 2013 season, opposing defenses had already started catching up to the read-option scheme that Washington had used to such great effect with Griffin in 2012. There was also the matter of a microscopic interception percentage that was primed to regress to the mean.

We should also consider how exceptional Griffin’s statistical portfolio really was. According to Pro-Football-Reference’s Approximate Value (AV), only 35 quarterback seasons since 1950 were better than Griffin’s 2012 campaign. It was a once-in-a-career type of performance, perhaps literally.

We can predict how likely a quarterback is to surpass his existing career high in AV, based on his age and how great he was in his best season to date. Here’s the probability of a QB like Griffin — with a previous single-season career high of 18 AV — topping that in a subsequent season as he gets older:

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If history is any guide, the odds of Griffin ever surpassing his 2012 season weren’t high (only about 1 in 3) even before his knee injury. The problem with such rare performances is that they’re the product of both skill and luck, which means they aren’t likely to be repeated — no matter how good the player is.