Here comes Mother Mcnamus!
Double Doink. He literally hit the upright both misses.
I noticed that also. I’d love to see the breakdown of those seasons. I have a hunch that % included quite a few 55+ tries. Especially after he’s hit from 61,58,57 etc.
The key with 50+ is we have to compare range on Attempts. E.G., If Crosby only gets up to plate at <=55 and Mcnamus gets up to plate <=62 it would account for Brandons’ 55% stats. Also notice Mcnamus made both Postseason Kicks at 50,52 to compliment his perfect 100%. He went 10/10 FG and 3/3 XPM in Postseason
Therefore my guess is he’s in that 60-70% in the 50-54 area where most Kickers get opportunities. I’m pretty confident Brandon had quite a few missed in that 55-62 area where many of those other Kickers don’t even get many chances. His 40% on those long tries affected his 50+ average.
If he keeps making these game winners I’ll label him Mother Mcnamus after the great Mother Theresa!
Agree.
I think trying to evaluate kickers on missed and made %'s alone is the wrong approach. This isn't passes completed, where you are kicking 30 times in a game. Miss one kick from 49 and your % can take a big ding.
So many better ways to evaluate kickers, but the stats really aren't out there. Stats that I would like to know are:
1. Weather conditions (temp, wind speed and direction)?
2. Field conditions? Artificial turf, indoor, muddy, etc.?
3. LS, Holder, OL issue?
4. Situation the made or missed happened (game on the line, playoff, etc.)?
5. Actual distance of each kick. A 49 yarder is much different than a 40 yarder. A 63 yarder is much different than a 51 yarder?
6. Health of kicker. Was he nursing an injury?
7. Looking at makes and misses trends in career. A few poor seasons to start their career, but now kicking much better?
Probably some I missed and of course kickoffs and XP's need to be factored into things, maybe even onside kick ability.
There are so many things beyond what we see in the average NFL stat sheet of each kicker. Yet, people will say "meh, he's a 80% kicker, no thanks."