1️⃣ Most quarterbacks don't elevate in clutch situations: Across 720 qualifying quarterback-seasons (minimum 45 dropbacks), the median clutch grade is 65.0. Only 22.8% grade above 75.0, while 34.3% of those seasons grade below 60.0.
2️⃣ The all-time high belongs to Peyton Manning in 2006: Manning earned a 92.0 grade, with a 9.48% big-time throw rate and a 2.50% turnover-worthy play rate.
3️⃣ The all-time low belongs to Blake Bortles in 2017: Bortles' 28.0 mark in 2017 was driven by a 12.73% turnover-worthy play rate. More than one in every eight clutch dropbacks resulted in a turnover-worthy play that threatened to send the drive in the wrong direction.
4️⃣ The elite combination: A big-time throw rate above 7.0% paired with a turnover-worthy play rate below 3.0%. That profile appears in just 10.2% of qualifying seasons in the PFF database. In 2025, only Matthew Stafford (8.59% BTT rate, 1.78% TWP rate) and Sam Darnold (7.22%, 0.89%) met both thresholds.
5️⃣ The opposite profile: Low big-time throw rates paired with elevated turnover-worthy play rates. Cam Ward (2.65% BTT rate, 5.30% TWP rate), Michael Penix Jr. (1.41%, 5.13%) and C.J. Stroud (1.28%, 4.60%) all fit that mold in 2025. When the game was on the line, the splash plays were scarce, and the mistakes were too frequent.
6️⃣ The quarterbacks who consistently earn high clutch grades across multiple seasons are the ones who deserve the label: Only 35.1% of qualifying quarterback seasons in the PFF database have produced a clutch grade above 70.0. Joe Burrow has cleared that mark in five of six seasons. Tom Brady did so in 13 of 16. Aaron Rodgers has reached it in 13 of 18, while Patrick Mahomes has done it in six of nine. Even Tony Romo — a quarterback whose reputation in these situations remains a point of debate — graded above 70.0 in eight of 10 seasons.
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