Upon Further Review: Manny Diaz as DC

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Beautiful work, my dude. I trust my eyes over any statistical metric because stats are what led to those old BCS computer polls where UC Davis was ranked 15th one year despite being a D2 program.

If you watch football, your eyes should tell you Manure's defenses are big on splash plays and big on wide open running lanes and wide open receivers. How many crummy QBs did he make look like Tom Brady in 17? I remember 3 guys having career games against him. And, make no mistake, this D the last 2 years was his.

We'll see how it goes this year, but I wouldn't expect Manure to be a guy who suddenly fields a sound D that doesn't get gashed on the regular. He'll have his splash plays for sure like he always does because his D is built on creating chaos. But when that chaos doesn't work there's chaos on his side of the ball too.
Logan Woodside (Toledo): Completion percentage, YPA, and rating all well below his season averages. Woodside was also drafted and has hung on in the NFL on practice squads and rosters for 3 years now. He’s an NFL player. He was well below average in every metric vs Miami.

Daniel Jones (Duke): completion percentage, YPA, and rating all well below his season averages Daniel Jones was a first round pick and is an NFL Starting QB. He was well below average in every metric vs Miami.

James Blackman (FSU): Slightly above average completion percentage, slightly below average YPA, 5 points below season number in rating. Blackman had somewhere close to an average game against Miami. Not terrible, certainly not spectacular.

Georgia Tech: Triple option. Their QB was 3/7 for the game for 55 yards. Irrelevant.

Eric Dungey (Syracuse): He was 13/41 for 3.3 YPA and 4 picks lmao. He did have 20 carries for 100 yards rushing, which was his 3rd highest output of the year. IDK, other than the Mortal Kombat kick, I don’t think his game vs Miami was on his Heisman reel.

Nathan Elliott (UNC): Went 16/39 (41%) for 173, 1 TD and 3 picks. Absolutely terrible.

Josh Jackson (VT): A few points above average completion percentage, well below average YPA and rating. Had his 2nd worst rating of the entire season against Miami. 0 TDs, 2 picks.

Kurt Benkert (UVA): Here is hater heaven for Manny. Benkert went 28/37 for 384 yards, 4 TDs. The 1 INT turned the entire game (Quan Johnson pick 6), but this was a big game for an opposing QB.

Kenny Pickett (Pitt): Numbers were OK, nothing special. 62% completions, only 6.7 YPA, 1 TD. Rating of 129, which for an entire season would be among the worst in the country. He did add 60 on the ground and 2 short TDs. But they scored 24 points. Any offense with a pulse wins that game easily.

Kelly Bryant (Clemson): 79% completions, 8.7 YPA, 163 rating. All above his season averages. By a pretty decent margin. Great game for him, poor game for Miami.

Alex Hornibrook (Wisky): A few points above his season average in completion percentage, 0.7 YPA below his avg YPA, 170 rating with a season average of 148. Wasn’t an insanely good outing, but still far better than what’s acceptable as a defense.


So overall, 3 guys had better than average games. 1 had an average game. 6 were well below average to terrible. 1 was irrelevant (GT). Not sure how you can say the defense was lit up every week. It’s simply not true. But towards the end of the season, there were games that were not nearly good enough. Again, by every metric and every sane person, Manny’s defenses here were good, and usually very good.
 
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Logan Woodside (Toledo): Completion percentage, YPA, and rating all well below his season averages. Woodside was also drafted and has hung on in the NFL on practice squads and rosters for 3 years now. He’s an NFL player. He was well below average in every metric vs Miami.

Daniel Jones (Duke): completion percentage, YPA, and rating all well below his season averages Daniel Jones was a first round pick and is an NFL Starting QB. He was well below average in every metric vs Miami.

James Blackman (FSU): Slightly above average completion percentage, slightly below average YPA, 5 points below season number in rating. Blackman had somewhere close to an average game against Miami. Not terrible, certainly not spectacular.

Georgia Tech: Triple option. Their QB was 3/7 for the game for 55 yards. Irrelevant.

Eric Dungey (Syracuse): He was 13/41 for 3.3 YPA and 4 picks lmao. He did have 20 carries for 100 yards rushing, which was his 3rd highest output of the year. IDK, other than the Mortal Kombat kick, I don’t think his game vs Miami was on his Heisman reel.

Nathan Elliott (UNC): Went 16/39 (41%) for 173, 1 TD and 3 picks. Absolutely terrible.

Josh Jackson (VT): A few points above average completion percentage, well below average YPA and rating. Had his 2nd worst rating of the entire season against Miami. 0 TDs, 2 picks.

Kurt Benkert (UVA): Here is hater heaven for Manny. Benkert went 28/37 for 384 yards, 4 TDs. The 1 INT turned the entire game (Quan Johnson pick 6), but this was a big game for an opposing QB.

Kenny Pickett (Pitt): Numbers were OK, nothing special. 62% completions, only 6.7 YPA, 1 TD. Rating of 129, which for an entire season would be among the worst in the country. He did add 60 on the ground and 2 short TDs. But they scored 24 points. Any offense with a pulse wins that game easily.

Kelly Bryant (Clemson): 79% completions, 8.7 YPA, 163 rating. All above his season averages. By a pretty decent margin. Great game for him, poor game for Miami.

Alex Hornibrook (Wisky): A few points above his season average in completion percentage, 0.7 YPA below his avg YPA, 170 rating with a season average of 148. Wasn’t an insanely good outing, but still far better than what’s acceptable as a defense.


So overall, 3 guys had better than average games. 1 had an average game. 6 were well below average to terrible. 1 was irrelevant (GT). Not sure how you can say the defense was lit up every week. It’s simply not true. But towards the end of the season, there were games that were not nearly good enough. Again, by every metric and every sane person, Manny’s defenses here were good, and usually very good.

There’s no point in bringing anything to the table anymore

Manny isn’t some savant. But his defenses in 3 years gave up over 30 4 times

Manmy could cure cancer and idiots would be asking why he didn’t cure aids
 
Grab the 2017 list slurpy! You know the one all you slurpers like to point to as the “but but but we were ranked #2” smoke and mirrors season as Mannys defense got eviscerated by any QB with a pulse or ones making their first ******* start! If it’s wasn’t for literally 2 offensive MIRACLES were 8 and 5 that year with Mannys defense not being able to stop anyone. Smh while you at it take a look at the 2016 season to sporto!

give examples or please stop @ me.
 
@NicKane


Daniel Jones 21/41 166 1 INT

Blackmon 17/28 200 2 TD 2 INT

Dungey - 13/41 137 4 INT

UNC QBs - 20/46 173 1 TD 3 INT

Josh Jackson - 20/32 197 yards 2 INT

Notre Dame QBs - 13/27 152 1 TD 3 INT

Benkert - 28/37 384 3 TD

Pickett - 18/29 193 yards 1 TD

Clemson QBs - 25/34 - 254 1 TD

Wisconsin - 23/34 - 258 4 TD

Total TD 16
Total INT 15

But it’s nice you want to try to exclude an entire season because it doesn’t fit your narrative

Should we do 2016 as well?

The eye test by some of the resident experts trump all statistics. Everyone knows numbers lie but their unbiased eyes never do.
 
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Numbers don’t have feelings. That’s why I trust numbers instead of the “eye test”.
Trusting numbers is meaningless. You have to know what numbers to focus on and why. What question are you trying to answer? Otherwise you’re left with ‘7 is a number. Trust 7.’

The relevant question is what to do going forward in all aspects of the program. There’s really no point to hypothetically debating Manny as a DC other than to understand what to expect going forward. What were his strengths and weaknesses. How can they be fixed, or exploited.

Picking numbers out of context tells no useful story.

IMO the key things to look at for a DC are third downs, and how you tighten up when your opponent crosses the 40 then red zone. Can you win the match-ups when chips are down. Over 40 is nearing FG territory. Redzone is redzone. Avg yards given up on first down is probably also useful, because it tells you a lot about how you set the tone. But it can be skewed by type of offenses you face and big plays. Overall YPP is a very rough number that probably buries more than illuminates.
 
Probably a combination of stars aligning, him being 25 vs 18 to 23 years olds, and in a very aggressive system that allowed him to be who he is and just a wrecking ball and 1v1s all day and eat. Couldn't' keep that style going maybe in the NFL. That's my only rational idea?

Wait; was he really that old for the ‘18 season??
 
Trusting numbers is meaningless. You have to know what numbers to focus on and why. What question are you trying to answer? Otherwise you’re left with ‘7 is a number. Trust 7.’

The relevant question is what to do going forward in all aspects of the program. There’s really no point to hypothetically debating Manny as a DC other than to understand what to expect going forward. What were his strengths and weaknesses. How can they be fixed, or exploited.

Picking numbers out of context tells no useful story.

IMO the key things to look at for a DC are third downs, and how you tighten up when your opponent crosses the 40 then red zone. Can you win the match-ups when chips are down. Over 40 is nearing FG territory. Redzone is redzone. Avg yards given up on first down is probably also useful, because it tells you a lot about how you set the tone. But it can be skewed by type of offenses you face and big plays. Overall YPP is a very rough number that probably buries more than illuminates.
Meh. I trust numbers and not feelings. I didn’t bother reading your post.
 
Logan Woodside (Toledo): Completion percentage, YPA, and rating all well below his season averages. Woodside was also drafted and has hung on in the NFL on practice squads and rosters for 3 years now. He’s an NFL player. He was well below average in every metric vs Miami.

Daniel Jones (Duke): completion percentage, YPA, and rating all well below his season averages Daniel Jones was a first round pick and is an NFL Starting QB. He was well below average in every metric vs Miami.

James Blackman (FSU): Slightly above average completion percentage, slightly below average YPA, 5 points below season number in rating. Blackman had somewhere close to an average game against Miami. Not terrible, certainly not spectacular.

Georgia Tech: Triple option. Their QB was 3/7 for the game for 55 yards. Irrelevant.

Eric Dungey (Syracuse): He was 13/41 for 3.3 YPA and 4 picks lmao. He did have 20 carries for 100 yards rushing, which was his 3rd highest output of the year. IDK, other than the Mortal Kombat kick, I don’t think his game vs Miami was on his Heisman reel.

Nathan Elliott (UNC): Went 16/39 (41%) for 173, 1 TD and 3 picks. Absolutely terrible.

Josh Jackson (VT): A few points above average completion percentage, well below average YPA and rating. Had his 2nd worst rating of the entire season against Miami. 0 TDs, 2 picks.

Kurt Benkert (UVA): Here is hater heaven for Manny. Benkert went 28/37 for 384 yards, 4 TDs. The 1 INT turned the entire game (Quan Johnson pick 6), but this was a big game for an opposing QB.

Kenny Pickett (Pitt): Numbers were OK, nothing special. 62% completions, only 6.7 YPA, 1 TD. Rating of 129, which for an entire season would be among the worst in the country. He did add 60 on the ground and 2 short TDs. But they scored 24 points. Any offense with a pulse wins that game easily.

Kelly Bryant (Clemson): 79% completions, 8.7 YPA, 163 rating. All above his season averages. By a pretty decent margin. Great game for him, poor game for Miami.

Alex Hornibrook (Wisky): A few points above his season average in completion percentage, 0.7 YPA below his avg YPA, 170 rating with a season average of 148. Wasn’t an insanely good outing, but still far better than what’s acceptable as a defense.


So overall, 3 guys had better than average games. 1 had an average game. 6 were well below average to terrible. 1 was irrelevant (GT). Not sure how you can say the defense was lit up every week. It’s simply not true. But towards the end of the season, there were games that were not nearly good enough. Again, by every metric and every sane person, Manny’s defenses here were good, and usually very good.
See. The first thing I read was Logan Woodside being well below average, and I quit reading. I watched that game, and Woodside kept his MAC team in that game against us. He was good in that game. He might not have been as good as he was against Miami Ohio or Kent State, which is why looking at stats is a bad way to determine what's happening in a football game, but he was good against us and made all kinds of throws in that game. Walton and Rosier won that game for us, not Manure.
 
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Numbers don’t have feelings. That’s why I trust numbers instead of the “eye test”.
Then no offense, but you're a God **** fool.

I can tell you first hand I can take ANY set of data points and manipulate them to tell WHATEVER story you want to hear.

Numbers need context and ample sample size from which to draw conclusions. Gross numbers don't have feelings but they are the path to gross negligence when taken out of context.
 
Trusting numbers is meaningless. You have to know what numbers to focus on and why. What question are you trying to answer? Otherwise you’re left with ‘7 is a number. Trust 7.’

The relevant question is what to do going forward in all aspects of the program. There’s really no point to hypothetically debating Manny as a DC other than to understand what to expect going forward. What were his strengths and weaknesses. How can they be fixed, or exploited.

Picking numbers out of context tells no useful story.

IMO the key things to look at for a DC are third downs, and how you tighten up when your opponent crosses the 40 then red zone. Can you win the match-ups when chips are down. Over 40 is nearing FG territory. Redzone is redzone. Avg yards given up on first down is probably also useful, because it tells you a lot about how you set the tone. But it can be skewed by type of offenses you face and big plays. Overall YPP is a very rough number that probably buries more than illuminates.
Most young folks are fantasy sports people and stat guys. They think sports is stats, not what actually transpires.

Look at PFF. They trot out all kinds of goofy stats every week that leave guys who are paying attention to the games scratching their heads wondering how they arrived at their conclusions. They'll have some dude who got whipped like a mule all game rated higher than a guy who actually played well based on some goofy concoction of clunky stats.
 
Then no offense, but you're a God **** fool.

I can tell you first hand I can take ANY set of data points and manipulate them to tell WHATEVER story you want to hear.

Numbers need context and ample sample size from which to draw conclusions. Gross numbers don't have feelings but they are the path to gross negligence when taken out of context.
These guys get duped by numbers. They think these numbers that are based on all kinds of subjective input are the same as pure math. They see 2 plus 2 equals 4 when they see stats. When I see stats, I always think "Lies. **** lies. And statistics." Any skilled data guy can turn football numbers into anything he wants them to be by manipulating the data points.
 
See. The first thing I read was Logan Woodside being well below average, and I quit reading. I watched that game, and Woodside kept his MAC team in that game against us. He was good in that game. He might not have been as good as he was against Miami Ohio or Kent State, which is why looking at stats is a bad way to determine what's happening in a football game, but he was good against us and made all kinds of throws in that game. Walton and Rosier won that game for us, not Manure.
Is this another Kenny Pick-it is amazing hot take?
 
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Then no offense, but you're a God **** fool.

I can tell you first hand I can take ANY set of data points and manipulate them to tell WHATEVER story you want to hear.

Numbers need context and ample sample size from which to draw conclusions. Gross numbers don't have feelings but they are the path to gross negligence when taken out of context



In what context should we take you openly rooting against the Canes last season?

**** offfff
 
Only one set of numbers that matter. The final score. Have seen the Cane's lose all the stat numbers but the final score and that is what counts.
 
See. The first thing I read was Logan Woodside being well below average, and I quit reading. I watched that game, and Woodside kept his MAC team in that game against us. He was good in that game. He might not have been as good as he was against Miami Ohio or Kent State, which is why looking at stats is a bad way to determine what's happening in a football game, but he was good against us and made all kinds of throws in that game. Walton and Rosier won that game for us, not Manure.

The point is he was good against everyone, hence the reason he was drafted and is still being paid to play football professionally. But he had a sub-par game for his standards against us. As most offenses do, because Miami had one of the better defenses in the country from 2016 to 2018.
 
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@NicKane


Daniel Jones 21/41 166 1 INT

Blackmon 17/28 200 2 TD 2 INT

Dungey - 13/41 137 4 INT

UNC QBs - 20/46 173 1 TD 3 INT

Josh Jackson - 20/32 197 yards 2 INT

Notre Dame QBs - 13/27 152 1 TD 3 INT

Benkert - 28/37 384 3 TD

Pickett - 18/29 193 yards 1 TD

Clemson QBs - 25/34 - 254 1 TD

Wisconsin - 23/34 - 258 4 TD

Total TD 16
Total INT 15

But it’s nice you want to try to exclude an entire season because it doesn’t fit your narrative

Should we do 2016 as well?

Good stuff bro;

I commented on the ‘17 season before in another thread. Man that was one helluva ride. Cardiac kids fa sho, but I would take that in a heartbeat.

One thing that stood out was the body blows we took. Malik Rosier had an unbelievable comeback kid mentality that season, kinda like Harbaugh w/ the Colts back in that magical season that led them to the playoffs.

We fared well against QBs like the first 10 games of the season, but we took some punches keeping the def on the field.

We gave up:
-183 Rushing Yards to Duke (Duke ranked 56th in this category)

-203 Rushing Yards to FSU (FSU ranked 76th in this category)

-226 Rushing Yards to GT (this made sense, b/c GT ranked 5th in this category)

-264 Rushing Yards to Syracuse (Cuse ranked 70th in this category)

-176 Rush Yards to UNC (UNC ranked 89th in this category)

-102 to VT (Great Def Game overall!! VT ranked 54th in this category)

-109 to ND (Imo, this is still my favorite Manny Diaz moment as a DC; this and the WVU game in the RAB. ND ranked 7th in this category)

-55 to UVA (UVA ranked 127th in this category)

-152 to Pitt (Pitt ranked 85th in this category)

-77 to Clemson but 4 TDs (I won’t knock Manny on this one. Def did its job & we started to see the erosion of Richt’s mysterious playbook. Clemson ranked 35th in this category

-142 to Wisconsin (again, a solid game plan against the 23rd ranked rushing offense).

The 2017 season saw us take leads, give up leads, and look for some miracles.

In the OB, we were up 14-3, but between the offense going stagnant & the defense getting hit w/ some late body blows, couldn’t maintain it.

Against Pitt, we were up; got stagnant. Then we saw Kenny Pickett throw & run for 3 TDs, including a 22 yrd keeper. He literally won that game on his own.

Against UVA, we spotted them a two TD lead in the 2nd half, but fortunately, they never moved off that two TD lead. But Benkert (who I don’t even remember) threw for 4 TDs including an inexplicable 75 yard bomb

ND & VT were just a masterful job in domination, and I really enjoyed those games. Still watch them on YT.

UNC was a straight dog fight. We wouldn’t allow them to punch it in, even though they kept trying. Took a nice 51 yrd hook up to Herndon to capture the lead b4 half, then we held our own, even though UNC was in our territory a lot.

Syracuse was also a dog fight. We had a two TD lead against them & was “this” close to blowing that lead. Fortunately Homer had a house call to seal the game


Against GT, the defense let us down this game. Took a heroic effort from Rosier & Langham to stave off the upset in the waning moments.


Against FSU, again, another nip & tuck game as w/ any rivalry game. Up 17-13 after taking the lead, FINALLY, in the 4th; Manny’s defense allowed FSU to march down the field w/ Blackmon who connected on a 20 yrd TD to almost seal the game. Of course we know Rosier put on his Superman cape and bailed us out.

Against Duke, that was just a good ole fashion revenge *** whipping. Lol

So when ppl like @The Franchise say eye test, this is what they mean. Several times we took the lead and gave it right back on the next possession during his tenure. Several times, when we needed a stop no matter the distance, we failed.

Numbers can be deceiving; they do provide a good guideline, but can be deceiving. As an example, I believe u & I debated on the quality of Miami’s classes. #’s wise, it shows we’ve had some good classes, but when u do a deep dive, it showed those class ranks were a little skewed by the number of recruits or a handful of recruits having high rankings that carried a class w/ a bunch of lower ranked kids.

Again, Manny’s a good DC, but the 2018 season appears to be more of an anomaly vs. the norm based upon his entire body of work as a DC, period. What was really weird about ‘17 is the amount of times we couldn’t get off the field due to teams just running it down our throats; I’m talking about teams that weren’t particularly efficient in rushing. It wasn’t huge yardage, but those 3.4 - 4.5 ypc add up when u continue to allow it.
 
With the news coming out that Manny will serve as the playcaller for the defense, returning to the de facto DC position, I wanted to dive deeper to establish whether Coach Diaz was a top-shelf DC or not.

Methodology
It started with a Twitter debate, where fans online perceived Coach Diaz as either an average DC, or even a poor one. From there, I asked for fans to identify the top-5 DC’s currently in college and received a list of various names. I settled on these names:

  • Brett Venables- Clemson
  • Marcus Freeman- Cincinnati (now Notre Dame)
  • Dave Aranda- LSU (now HC at Baylor)
  • Jim Leonhard- Wisconsin
  • Jon Heacock- Iowa State
  • Blake Baker- Miami
There are other worthy candidates, but this list seemed like a representative start of identifying how standout DC’s perform in their roles.

I am using a sample size of three years for each of them, except for Baker, as I am using him for a control to show how Miami fared under Baker as opposed to Manny Diaz.

The metric I am using is Yards Per Play. I chose Yards Per Play (YPP) because it is simple to calculate, readily available, and is a good catch-all for how a defense fares against an opposing offense overall.

To gauge how a team fared against peers, I am removing teams that are not of like-quality. I.E. a Power-5 team, I am removing all non-Power-5 teams from their results. For Cincinnati, I am removing lower tier FBS teams and all FCS teams. This helps to stabilize the talent of the teams and removes a defense beating up on the Missouri State’s of the world.

From here, I calculated the “Win Percentage” that a DC against opposing offenses. A win is holding the offense under their standard average against other peer-like teams, a loss is allowing them to outperform their YPP against that DC’s defense.

Additionally, I wanted to calculate the “Difference” between what each DC allowed on YPP and what those opponents averaged against other peer opponents.

I also calculated the standard deviations of the opponents’ offensive performance and tabulated the number of times each DC held their opponents one standard deviation under their average and two standard deviations. I calculated how often the DC allowed their opponent to outperform their average by one and two standard deviations as well.

Results
By looking at performances against peer institutions and then then weighing it against their offensive performance against other peer opponents I believe you are getting at the actual contributions of each DC and can accurately gauge the quality of coach. The results pass the “smell test” as well, with Venables being far and away the best and Blake Baker being far and away the worst.

Here are the results for % of games holding opponents under their norms (Win Percentage):

View attachment 143007

Coach Diaz fares very well here, finishing second among the group of DC’s with a win percentage of 77.4%. Venables leads the pack, as he does in every category, by holding an opponent under their norms an astonishing 86.5% of the time. Keep in mind, this is against peer institutions, so no Bethune Cookman’s propping up that number for Venables (or anyone).

Surprisingly, Blake Baker did not come in last here, as Jim Leonhard and Jon Heacock both finished lower than his 68.4% showing.

Here are the results for Yards Per Play (YPP):

View attachment 143008

Again, Venables leads the way, with Coach Diaz coming in second. Marcus Freeman is the third DC to hold opponents to under 5 YPP, but keep in mind he is doing that at Cincinnati, with a decided talent advantage against even some conference foes. Clemson may have a talent advantage over their opponents, but the revenue from the ACC to each team at least allows them to be competitive in resources. Some teams in the AAC have a wide budget gap between themselves and Cincinnati.

Blake Baker comes in last in this metric, not surprisingly. That is a gap of .58 yards per play allowed between Baker and Diaz, which is cavernous.

Finally, here are the results for how each DC fared at holding their opponents below their norms (Difference):

View attachment 143009

Venables comes in at a ludicrous -1.17 YPP against peer institutions and their offensive averages. Marcus Freeman is second, but Manny comes in third at -0.84 YPP.

Blake Baker does not finish in last place in this metric, surprisingly, Jim Leonhard does. Leonhard appears to be a bit overrated by fans currently.

Overall:
For those of you who just skip to the end, suffice to say, Coach Diaz comes in second amongst this group of DC’s over a three-year sample. Over this time, keep in mind that Coach Diaz only had Gerald Willis for one season and had three true freshmen LB’s to scheme around. Then he introduced the Striker into his defense in this sampling as well. Venables, Aranda, Leonhard, Heacock are considered among the best names in the game, so Coach Diaz is definitely an excellent DC, who will be a massive upgrade over Blake Baker.

In looking at the performances of Coach Diaz, a few things stand out:

  • Coach Diaz will consistently hold an offense under their norms, but will generally not dominate an offense (over one standard deviation under their norms), as he did this in only 29% of games. Venables did this an absurd 57% of the time. Coach Diaz has only held an offense two standard deviations under their norm once (Against Virginia in 2018), while Venables has done that six times over the last three years.
  • Coach Diaz’s defenses are remarkably consistent in their ability to scheme negative plays against an offense and hold their overall performance down.
I went into this exercise expecting to find Coach Diaz was outside of that elite tier of DC’s and would be solidly in the “good” tier, but the data confirms that Coach Diaz profiles in the 90th percentile of DC’s in the country and will put up a performance far better than we have seen over the past two seasons.

I see you failed to "Pickett-ize" your numbers. You need to take Diaz's best defensive performances and then substitute what would have happened if Kenny Pickett had been the QB, instead of say, Sam Howell or Joe Burrow. Since we can assume that Pickett would average 4 TDs and 400 yards against Diazs defense, the Pickett-ized stats would objectively prove that Diaz is the worst DC in the history of college football.
 
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