Barnwell’s 2019 midseason NFL awards

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We are officially past the halfway point of the 2019 NFL season. After Sunday, teams have played 134 of the 267 games on the annual NFL calendar, which comes out to 50.2%. The last game of the first half was one of its most entertaining, with Baltimore ending New England’s march toward a perfect season with a 37-20 defeat.

That game and many others from Sunday figured into my midseason awards ballot, which changed several times as the day went along and looked very different from the one I might have filed this time last week. There’s really only one or two of the official categories that have a clear favorite at this point, and even that requires applying an inconsistently used rule for Offensive Player of the Year. Aaron Rodgers might have been the favorite to win the award after Week 8, but he’s no longer in the top three here after an anonymous performance against the Chargers.

Perhaps this shouldn’t be a surprise in a league where 21 of 32 teams are over .500, at .500, or within one game of .500, including all of the AFC South and three of the four teams in the AFC West. Everything still feels up for grabs, and that includes just about every award. My ballot is designed to encapsulate who played best during the first half of the NFL season as opposed to who is most likely to win the award at the end of the season. I’ll also include my first-half All-Pro team, which is considered under the same circumstances:

Jump to an award:
DROY | OROY | COY
CPOY | DPOY | OPOY | MVP
All-Pro teams: Offense | Defense

Comeback Player of the Year

While offensive linemen don’t typically need as long to come back from Achilles injuries as running backs or wide receivers, this isn’t supposed to happen. Brooks, who has excelled at guard for the Eagles since joining the team in 2016, was a major doubt to start the season after tearing his Achilles in the divisional-round loss to the Saints. Even if he did make it back early in 2019, it seemed unlikely that he would immediately regain the form that led to back-to-back Pro Bowl appearances in 2017 and 2018.

Instead, Brooks was back for training camp, and after playing 73% of the snaps in the opening week win over Washington, he has been in for every snap since. He has also gotten right back to his old level of play; the former Texans standout has posted a 94.1% pass block win rate this season, which ranks 10th among guards. Brooks has only committed one penalty all season and has been credited by Stats LLC with just one sack allowed. Brooks is right back where he belongs as one of the best offensive linemen in football. (Honorary mention here to Sheldon Rankins, who also tore his Achilles in that playoff game and returned after missing the first three weeks of the season.)

When Kupp went down with a torn ACL last season, Jared Goff‘s numbers dropped off across the board. After posting a passer rating of 115.4 and a Total QBR of 77.0 with Kupp on the field, those marks fell to 90.2 and 50.8, respectively, without Kupp in the lineup. Kupp’s unique mix of skills allows him to serve as both a blocking threat on the backside of run plays, a safety valve for Goff in the Rams’ preferred 11 personnel package, and one of the league’s most devastating threats after the catch with the ball in his hands.

Goff has struggled at times this season, but you can imagine how much worse off he would be without Kupp. While Kupp’s target and receiving share were pretty similar to that of fellow wideouts Brandin Cooks and Robert Woods before going down last season, Kupp has graduated into the primary role this season. He comfortably leads the team in receptions (58), targets (86), receiving yards (792) and receiving touchdowns (five). Kupp has been targeted on 30% of the routes he has run this season, which ranks second among wideouts behind Michael Thomas. Some skill-position players take a full year before they’re back to their old selves after tearing an ACL. Kupp doesn’t look like his pre-tear self this year. He looks better.

As good as Brooks and Kupp have been, though, I have to give the nod to Frederick after recovering from Guillain-Barré syndrome. There are no easy injuries to come back from, of course, but while Brooks and Kupp had familiar timelines and rehab schedules to work with in returning from their injuries, Frederick was dealing with a rare virus and a totally uncertain future. There are only a few examples of players in other sports dealing with the illness and making it back onto the field, let alone returning to their prior level of play, with former Liverpool defender Markus Babbel as the most notable example.

Frederick was arguably the best center in football before missing all of 2018 with his illness. I’m not sure he’s been the best center in the league since returning from the ailment, but he’s been an above-average pivot on one of the league’s best lines this season, going all season without committing a single penalty. For Frederick to come back and play at a high level is incredibly brave.


Defensive Rookie of the Year

What Bush is doing as an instant starter for a defense ranked ninth in DVOA before Sunday’s win over the Colts can’t be underestimated. The Steelers have seemingly been drafting and developing star linebackers for decades, but they don’t usually start as rookies. Since 1999, the only rookie Steelers linebackers to start seven of their first eight games in the league, as Bush has this season, are T.J. Watt and Kendrell Bell. Bell was a Pro Bowler as a rookie, and Bush might be on the same path.

Bush continues to stuff the stat sheet, although after recovering three fumbles over the first month of the season, he has only recovered one over the ensuing three games. He took that fumble to the house against the Chargers, and he added an interception of Philip Rivers in that game. Bush is tied for the league lead among rookies in interceptions with two, which is rare for an inside linebacker. More traditionally, he paces all freshmen in both tackles and solo tackles. With the Steelers relying on their defense to win games, it’s difficult to imagine where they would be without their first-round pick.

Allen has flown under the radar by virtue of playing on the Jaguars amid Gardner Minshew mania, but like their fill-in quarterback, the first-round pick has made an immediate impact. Allen has seven sacks in eight games, including a pair of strip sacks. He even picked up a sack by spinning off of star Saints left tackle Terron Armstead, although it was admittedly a coverage sack.

Could you make the case that Allen is better than Nick Bosa? Maybe. Their production is relatively similar, given that Allen has seven sacks and 13 knockdowns on 371 defensive snaps, while Bosa has an identical seven sacks and 13 knockdowns on 292 snaps. The extra opportunities obviously help Allen, but Bosa has also played on a defense that has almost constantly been ahead and able to pin their ears back to go after the quarterback. Both play alongside great defensive linemen, which makes it easier to see one-on-one opportunities. According to ESPN’s analysis of NFL Next Gen Stats, Allen has been double-teamed on 26.3% of his pass-rushing opportunities, slightly ahead of Bosa at 21.8%.

I’ll narrowly give the nod to the younger Bosa brother, who has created nine sacks with his pass rushes this season, tied for sixth in the league. Bosa has created those nine sacks on 111 pass-rushing opportunities, in contrast to Allen’s seven sacks created on 147 pass-rushing reps.

The Defensive Player of the Year hype surrounding the second overall pick might be a little inflated — he might not even be the best member of the Bosa family for that discussion — but he has made an instant impact for the league’s most-improved defense.


Offensive Rookie of the Year

I was all ready to place Saints center Erik McCoy on this list after a glowing start to the season, but with McCoy hit by four holding penalties in the first half and Metcalf dragging overmatched Bucs cornerback Jamel Dean for 123 yards and a touchdown during Sunday’s overtime win over Tampa Bay, I’m pushing the league’s leading rookie receiver into the top three. Not bad for the ninth wideout chosen in the 2019 draft class.

While I’m generally loath to totally throw away a player’s scouting report after a half-season of football, it’s clear that the scaremongering surrounding Metcalf before the draft wasn’t accurate. Metcalf can do more than run in a straight line. He’s not limited to go or fade routes, although he’s absolutely terrifying when the Seahawks get him isolated against a smaller cornerback. Metcalf is threatening teams on deep crossing routes and drag routes, where he can use his 6-foot-3 frame to create separation from opposing cornerbacks and his speed to run away from opposing linebackers after the catch. Russell Wilson‘s unconscious first half on deep balls has made this the perfect landing spot for Metcalf, but the rookie wideout is playing his part, too.

While the preseason storylines surrounding Murray and the Air Raid seemed to suggest that they would either take the league by storm or fail miserably as gimmicks, the truth has been somewhere in the middle. Murray and the Cardinals’ rushing attack has been more effective than anybody would have expected, with Arizona ranking fourth in rush offense DVOA through the first eight weeks of the season. Murray, who has 56 carries for 313 yards and two touchdowns, ranks fourth in expected points added as a runner among quarterbacks.

Strictly on pass plays, Murray ranks 17th in Total QBR at 54.7. The Cardinals aren’t asking Murray to throw downfield frequently, with the former Oklahoma star averaging just 6.7 air yards per pass attempt, which ranks 28th in the league. Some of that likely owes to a lack of confidence in Arizona’s pass protection. The Cardinals also haven’t exactly been stocked with burners at receiver, given that Christian Kirk missed three games and Andy Isabella had barely played before his long catch-and-run against the 49ers. Murray’s leading targets at receiver have otherwise been Larry Fitzgerald and KeeSean Johnson. If he can start using the threat of the running game to create big plays downfield as a passer, the Cards will hit new heights on offense.

The lone rookie running back who has been an every-week starter for his team, Jacobs has flourished behind one of the league’s most impressive offensive lines. Chalking Jacobs up as a product of that line wouldn’t be fair, though; he has averaged 2.13 yards after first contact as a rusher, which ranks third among backs with 100 carries or more. On Sunday, he beat up and ran over the Lions, racking up 120 yards, two touchdowns and seven first downs on 28 carries.

Jacobs ranks sixth in the league in rushing yards through eight games, combining significant volume with slightly above-average efficiency as measured by tools like Success Rate. You might hope he contributes more as a receiver, given that he has 11 catches for 102 yards so far, but there’s no perfect rookie this season. As the focal point of an underrated Raiders offense, though, Jacobs has done enough to finish first at the halfway point.


Coach of the Year

In a year where this award could easily go to one of eight or nine coaches, there’s no right order for the candidates here. I’m not going to name guys like Sean McDermott, Andy Reid or Ron Rivera, each of whom wouldn’t be remotely offensive as the winners after nine weeks. This award typically goes to new coaches who drive single-season turnarounds; the obvious option there is Green Bay’s Matt LaFleur, who dropped into fourth after Sunday’s curious loss to the Chargers.





Source : ESPN