Why Jordan Berry is the answer for Steelers special teams
I cataloged every single Jordan Berry punt from the 2015 season.
Yes all 72 punts, including the two playoff games.
Steelers Nation is going to think I’ve lost my mind… We’re a week away from training camp, so that means it’s time for Joe’s yearly rant about the Steelers punting game: except this year, I’m praising our second year punter instead of complaining about needing a new one (which has been a trend for years with the Steelers.)
Punters and more punters
Yes, I had pleaded for the revolving door of punters to end in Pittsburgh. I believe a partial reason for the Steelers going 8-8 in 2013, and missing the playoffs that season, was due having 4 different punters from the beginning of training camp until the conclusion of the regular season. None of those punters were capable of flipping the field, and the “still capable” Steelers defense would end up defending our endzone from midfield, or worse, more often than not. (Notice how going through 4 kickers nearly botched the Steelers 2015 season as well!)
In 2014, the Steelers would sign former Jaguar and Bear punter Adam Podlesh, to compete with an undrafted Brad Wing: Podlesh’s wife was pregnant, and had their child, so the job became Wing’s by default, as the competition never happened.
As we all know Wing was an okay punter, but was also a key contributor to a Steelers home loss against Tampa Bay that season. Of course, the defense was incapable of stopping Mike Glennon at quarterback, and allowing a street free agent (Louis Murphy) from scoring. (So in that way, it was partially Wing’s fault for helping the Bucs start with good field position on his shanked punt.)
That’s why I was excited when the Steelers announced they had signed Eastern Kentucky’s Jordan Berry to compete with Wing during last year’s training camp. Berry has a cannon for a leg (see below) and won the job over Wing, punting 19 times for a 49.8 yards per punt average. (Wing would be traded to the New York Giants for a 2016 7th round draft pick.)
Berry’s big leg
https://twitter.com/landonwhite10/status/754752415061118976
Some fans have been down on Berry, following a few lousy punts, particularly to start the Divisional Playoff game against the Denver Broncos earlier this year, however, he recovered nicely in that game and played fairly well throughout the season. Like any rookie, punters too need time to adjust to the professional game, and get comfortable in their digs (though, with specialists Yet, some fans are still upset about the punting situation: let me offer you some relief by listing every punt Jordan Berry made last season, because punting stats, well, are unreliable, as shown here:
Games | Punts | Yards | Long | Blocked | Y/P | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reg | 16 | 59 | 2511 | 79 | 0 | 42.6 |
Playoffs | 2 | 13 | 531 | 52 | 0 | 40.85 |
This is where things tend to get tricky: Berry’s 42.6 yard-per-punt average ranked 30th among all NFL punters in 2015, with the Rams’ Johnny Hekker leading all with a 47.9 average. Of the top 10 punters, only one played for a playoff qualifying team, Houston’s Shane Lechler. Three more would join the top 15, while the two Super Bowl punters, Brad Nortman and Britton Colquitt, would rank 18th and 28th in average respectively.
Former Steelers Brad Wing (Giants) and Drew Butler (Cardinals) would rank 22nd and 29th in the same category, thus net yards per punt doesn’t quite show the entire picture of the punting game. In fact, almost all punting statistics don’t: unlike passing, rushing or receiving, special teams relies more on field position. Could you imagine if Ben Roethlisberger always threw passes from the opponent’s 20? He’d never accumulate 300 or more yards passing.
Furthermore, Berry attempted the 29th-most punts in the league last season: the law averages dictates if you have more sample data (more punts) your average will adjust accordingly. One bad punt by Berry drops, what I feel is a meaningless stat, into the bottom of the NFL’s punters. That’s why we need to objectively look at every punt Berry made in 2015, which I spent a good deal of time researching in the table below.
Each punt is listed by opponent (in order of games played, including playoffs) the line of scrimmage (LOS) when the punt was kicked, the result of the return, the ending result of the play (opponents’ line of scrimmage following punt return) any special teams penalties (which also skew the OPP LOS) and if the final sum of all of those components forced the other team to start from inside their own 20 yard line, that is noted with a highlighted row and an “x” in the “inside 20” column.
Every Jordan Berry punt from 2015
OPP | LOS | DISTANCE | RETURN | OPP LOS | ST PENALTY | INSIDE 20 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NE | PIT 31 | 50 | 15 | NE 10 | NE/10 | x |
NE | PIT 27 | 37 | Fair Catch | NE 26 | NE/10 | |
SF | SF 49 | 34 | Fair Catch | SF 15 | n/a | x |
SF | PIT 44 | 46 | 7 | SF 17 | n/a | x |
SF | PIT 6 | 62 | 4 | SF 36 | n/a | |
STL | PIT 40 | 57 | 12 | STL 15 | n/a | x |
STL | PIT 27 | 51 | 12 | STL 12 | STL/10 | x |
STL | PIT 37 | 54 | 20 | STL 29 | n/a | |
STL | PIT 49 | 34 | Fair Catch | STL 17 | n/a | x |
BAL | PIT 23 | 37 | Fair Catch | BAL 40 | n/a | |
BAL | PIT 21 | 38 | Out of Bounds | BAL 41 | n/a | |
BAL | RAV 41 | 32 | Fair Catch | BAL 9 | n/a | x |
BAL | PIT 7 | 40 | 14 | PIT 28 | PIT/5 | |
BAL | PIT 19 | 41 | Fair Catch | BAL 40 | n/a | |
BAL | PIT 37 | 51 | Downed | BAL 12 | n/a | x |
SD | SD 47 | 31 | Fair Catch | SD 16 | n/a | x |
SD | PIT 34 | 42 | Fair Catch | SD 24 | n/a | x |
SD | SD 41 | 30 | Fair Catch | SD 26 | PIT/15 | |
SD | PIT 25 | 56 | No Gain | SD 10 | SD/9 | x |
SD | SD 41 | 34 | Fair Catch | SD 7 | n/a | x |
SD | SD 42 | 38 | Downed | SD 4 | n/a | x |
SD | PIT 42 | 53 | Downed | SD 5 | n/a | x |
SD | PIT 27 | 38 | 5 | SD 40 | n/a | |
AZ | PIT 16 | 31 | Out of Bounds | PIT 47 | n/a | |
AZ | PIT 21 | 45 | 6 | AZ 40 | n/a | |
AZ | AZ 44 | 42 | Downed | AZ 2 | n/a | x |
AZ | PIT 43 | 41 | 17 | AZ 33 | n/a | |
AZ | PIT 21 | 79 | Touchback | AZ 20 | n/a | |
KC | PIT 36 | 48 | 25 | KC 41 | n/a | |
KC | KC 46 | 43 | Downed | KC 3 | n/a | x |
CIN | PIT 14 | 43 | 18 | PIT 39 | n/a | |
CIN | PIT 19 | 46 | 15 | CIN 35 | CIN/15 | |
CIN | CIN 43 | 33 | 5 | CIN 15 | n/a | x |
CIN | CIN 46 | 41 | Out of Bounds | CIN 5 | n/a | x |
CIN | CIN 35 | 18 | Fair Catch | CIN 17 | n/a | x |
CIN | PIT 44 | 32 | Downed | CIN 24 | n/a | |
OAK | PIT 47 | 51 | Downed | OAK 2 | n/a | x |
OAK | PIT 4 | 36 | Downed | PIT 40 | n/a | |
OAK | OAK 43 | 33 | Fair Catch | OAK 10 | n/a | x |
OAK | PIT 46 | 48 | 1 | OAK 7 | n/a | x |
OAK | PIT 29 | 40 | Fair Catch | OAK 31 | n/a | x |
CLE | PIT 35 | 42 | Downed | CLE 23 | n/a | |
SEA | PIT 27 | 43 | Fair Catch | SEA 30 | n/a | |
SEA | PIT 47 | 36 | Fair Catch | SEA 32 | n/a | |
IND | PIT 9 | 37 | Fair Catch | PIT 46 | n/a | |
CIN | CIN 47 | 45 | Downed | CIN 24 | n/a | x |
CIN | PIT 20 | 53 | Out of Bounds | CIN 27 | n/a | |
DEN | PIT 45 | 38 | Fair Catch | DEN 9 | DEN/8 | x |
DEN | PIT 17 | 44 | Fair Catch | DEN 39 | n/a | |
DEN | PIT 49 | 37 | Fair Catch | DEN 14 | n/a | x |
DEN | PIT 35 | 36 | 71 | DEN 28 | DEN/5 | |
DEN | PIT 44 | 40 | Downed | DEN 16 | n/a | x |
DEN | DEN 48 | 37 | Out of Bounds | DEN 11 | n/a | x |
BAL | PIT 24 | 43 | Fair Catch | BAL 33 | n/a | |
BAL | PIT 24 | 42 | -1 | BAL 33 | n/a | |
BAL | PIT 41 | 46 | Fair Catch | BAL 13 | n/a | x |
CLE | PIT 14 | 50 | 12 | CLE 48 | n/a | |
CLE | 50 | 49 | Downed | CLE 1 | n/a | x |
CLE | PIT 43 | 57 | Touchback | CLE 20 | n/a | |
CIN | PIT 23 | 41 | Fair Catch | CIN 36 | n/a | |
CIN | PIT 39 | 47 | Fair Catch | CIN 29 | PIT/15 | |
CIN | CIN 46 | 33 | Fair Catch | CIN 7 | CIN/6 | x |
CIN | PIT 37 | 44 | 10 | CIN 29 | n/a | |
CIN | PIT 5 | 41 | Downed | PIT 46 | n/a | |
CIN | PIT 42 | 45 | Fair Catch | CIN 13 | n/a | x |
CIN | PIT 27 | 42 | 24 | PIT 45 | n/a | |
DEN | PIT 20 | 52 | 42 | PIT 30 | n/a | |
DEN | PIT 4 | 27 | Out of Bounds | PIT 31 | n/a | |
DEN | PIT 32 | 27 | Out of Bounds | DEN 41 | n/a | |
DEN | PIT 45 | 50 | Out of Bounds | DEN 5 | n/a | x |
DEN | PIT 10 | 43 | Fair Catch | DEN 47 | n/a | |
DEN | DEN 39 | 39 | Touchback | DEN 20 | n/a |
Starting with the worst
The Denver Broncos Divisional Playoff game: Berry had a rough start, which began with Berry out-kicking his coverage in the mile-high atmosphere with a 52 yard booming punt, leading to a 42 yard return, or net of 10 yards. Berry’s next punt was no better, a 27-yard blooper which landed out of bounds, but he would recover with better kicks throughout the game, however some of the damage had already been done, giving the Broncos excellent starting field position in route to a 6-0 head start; field goals the Broncos may have otherwise not had an opportunity to kick had they been pinned back further by the special teams unit.
Not as bad as you think
Of the 72 punts listed, 33 of them put the opposing offense within their own 20, based on Berry’s leg and excellent special teams coverage. That figure represents nearly half of Berry’s punts last season, and when you consider an additional 7 plays on special teams were moved out of inside the 20, due to good returns by the opposition, or penalties on the Steelers, Berry’s overall body of work looks better.
Note: yes, there were some instances in the 33 “inside 20” plays above where the opponent was penalized, however, their returns are predicated on holding or illegal blocks in the back, both penalties which allow for those decent returns to occur.
Of Berry’s punts which were 40 yards or less, I’m of the opinion that 8 of those kicks put the Steelers at a disadvantage in field position (that is, the opponent received the ball at their own 40 or better.) Five of those punts were from within the Steelers own 23 yard line or deeper; a partial blame on the offense for having not marched downfield in playing the game of inches.
The best of the bunch
Berry’s longest punt occured against the Arizona Cardinals, when, starting from his own 21, he booted a 79-yard beauty, which unfortunately tumbled into the endzone for a touchback.
That punt was followed a week later by his very next, which landed within the Cheifs’ 20, but turned into a promising 25-yard gain which could’ve went further… had Berry not made the tackle himself!
Conclusion
You may be the judge for yourself: my bias is obvious towards the Steelers, and admittedly, I did not compare these figures to some who are considered the best in their league (such as the Colts’ Pat McAfee.) However, I felt it necessary to point out that a first-year player has growing pains, and that his overall body of work shows a lot of consistency, but also room to improve. Rather than starting over from scratch, a tactic which has failed over a half dozen times in Pittsburgh, the Steelers should be patient with Jordan Berry, as he could end up being their best punter this decade, and over time, has the potential to be one of the best in the NFL.