Harbaugh does the dishes for the mother of a recruit.

Between 1990-1999 his avg attempts were 343.

In 1991 after he surpassed his avg attempts, he threw 3 TD's and 5 INT's.

In 1996 it was 4 TD's to 3 INT's.

In 1999 it was 2 TD's to 3 INT's.

Add it all up and you have 9 TD's and 11 INT's.

Seems like a viable discussion.

Also, I don't think it's a coincidence that in both 1991 and 1996, when he attempted his most throws during a game in each season, he recorded 0 TD's and 7 INT's respectively. Like I said, when asked to do a lot he fucked up a lot.
The way you'd figure it out is to take his average number of attempts per game over that time period. As his passing attempts varied based on the number of games he started each year. You'd only use the average sum if he started the exact same amount of games each year.

So you'd have to take his average attempts per game, then go to the games where he surpassed that average sum and look at his TD and Interception rates.

I really have no interest to look up game logs from 30 years ago, but that is how you'd have to come up with it.
 
Craig Krenzel 3 tds
Troy Smith 8 tds
Terrell Pryor 9 tds
Braxton Miller 0 tds
JT Barrett 0 tds
Cardale Jones 0 tds
Dwayne Haskins 12 tds
Justin Fields 20 tds

Here are the Ohio State QB's drafted into the NFL the last 20 years. All of them combined have 52 tds. They have 56 ints between them.

Between the 8 guys coming from one of the premier CFB programs, they have less years at QB than Harbaugh did on his own. So as I said -- was he a NFL great? No. Was he an elite QB of his era? Yes.

There is like one out of ten people saying you are wrong right now that is an Ohio State fan. Not sure why you bring Ohio State QBs into this
 
There is like one out of ten people saying you are wrong right now that is an Ohio State fan. Not sure why you bring Ohio State QBs into this
That is who I responded to. It was a response to the OSU fan. It has been dragged on now by multiple people though.
 
There is like one out of ten people saying you are wrong right now that is an Ohio State fan. Not sure why you bring Ohio State QBs into this
Harbaugh annoys the hell out of me and having to talk about him this much is making me dislike him even more.:pound:
 
The way you'd figure it out is to take his average number of attempts per game over that time period. As his passing attempts varied based on the number of games he started each year. You'd only use the average sum if he started the exact same amount of games each year.

So you'd have to take his average attempts per game, then go to the games where he surpassed that average sum and look at his TD and Interception rates.

I really have no interest to look up game logs from 30 years ago, but that is how you'd have to come up with it.

1989 - 3 TD's, 4 INT's
1990 - 1 TD's, 3 INT's
1991 - 7 TD's, 12 INT's
1992 - 7 TD's, 7 INT's
1993 - 2 TD's, 4 INT's
1994 - 0 TD's, 0 INT's
1995 - 5 TD's, 1 INT
1996 - 7 TD's, 7 INT's
1997 - 6 TD's, 3 INT's
1998 - 6 TD's, 4 INT's
1999 - 10 TD's, 8 INT's
2000 - 8 TD's, 8 INT's.

62 TD'S, 61 INT's.

Data suggests the more he threw it, the more he fucked up, compared to his overall TD/INT ratio.
 
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