Tampa Bay quarterback Baker Mayfield found another gear in 2024. It was arguably his best season as a pro as he led the Bucs to their second consecutive NFC South title with him at the helm.
He set career highs in passing yards, touchdowns, yards per attempt and adjusted completion percentage. Pro Football Focus credited him with the best grades of his career and ranked him sixth among qualifying quarterbacks last year. Over the past two seasons Mayfield has resurrected his career and entrenched himself as Tampa Bay’s franchise quarterback, replacing Tom Brady, which is quite a feat.
While the Bucs’ scheme gave Mayfield a leg up with a varied and creative screen game, Mayfield made excellent strides when targeting the most difficult part of the field. On intermediate passes Mayfield completed 61.4% of his passes and averaged 10.9 yards per attempt. Both marks were easily the best of his career.
Benefiting from an offensive coordinator who tailored a scheme to his strengths while playing the best ball of his career, Mayfield lifted the Bucs to several wins they otherwise would not have had in 2024. But there are still two areas of his game that still have room to improve that could see Mayfield hit yet another level in 2025.
Baker Mayfield Takes Too Many Sacks
Baker Mayfield’s penchant for not giving up on plays is the quintessential double-edged sword. It both creates some of the most spectacular plays you will ever see but can also set the offense back more than necessary...
https://www.pewterreport.com/baker-mayf ... n-2-areas/Baker Mayfield Needs To Work On Deep Throws
There was a time where Baker Mayfield was one of the most productive deep passers in the NFL. He ranked fifth in cumulative EPA on throws of 20+ air yards in 2018 and 12th in 2020. But during his time in Tampa Bay that part of Mayfield’s game has eroded. In 2023 he was 25th in EPA on deep passes and last year he was 26th.
Part of that reduction is due to a change in how he attacks the field. During his time in Cleveland at the beginning of his career, Mayfield targeted the deep part of the field 11.4% of the time. That number has come down to 9.8% in Tampa Bay and bottomed out to 7.5% last year. The Bucs offense was lethal at creating explosive plays. But those plays came most offense with a great deal of yards after the catch. But the one element of the offense that trailed the league average was attacking downfield...





