STOP FLIPPING THROUGH magazines, scanning online forums and chatting up your co-workers. In fact, stop everything you're doing to get an edge in your fantasy football draft. I've discovered a new key to fantasy success: Total Quarterback Rating.
ESPN's analytics team launched QBR last year to measure all aspects of quarterback play -- capturing not only passing yards, TDs and INTs but also metrics that the NFL's passer rating doesn't count, such as rushes and sacks. It also sizes up a QB's situational performance, such as gaining enough yards for first downs. Essentially, everything a quarterback does to help his team
So what can such a comprehensive and, yes, complex statistic tell you about a QB's potential in such basic categories as touchdowns and yards? A lot, actually. Of the 25 quarterbacks who were regulars in both of the past two seasons, the correlation between their passing yards in 2010 and ESPN fantasy points in 2011 is 0.30, or moderate. (Correlation is a statistic that measures the relationship between two variables, ranging from inverse, at minus-1, to perfect, at 1.) If you want to project Mark Sanchez's fantasy upside for 2012, his passing yards from last season isn't a terribly useful place to start. However, the correlation between 2010 QBR and 2011 fantasy scoring is among the highest of any stats, at 0.79. Move the data back to 2008, the first season for which full QBR data is available, and the results are similar.