Honestly, I will pass on commenting on his article. But to answer your direct question as to where or not his numbers look right, IMO, they might as well be made up. I have no idea why or how someone would chart each QBs throws. If he claims Bradford ONLY had 20 pass attempts, I am not sure where he was the rest of the practice. And the WR "targets" aren't even close. Unless he is only referring to the 11 on 11 team stuff. Who knows,, and anyone who wants to use training camp comp % and targets as a way to evaluate these guys, doesn't get it.
I created an account to reply to this comment. You obviously don't know me so this post is very misguided.
1) I did not make these numbers up. I attended Rams Camp and kept track of all the throws/receivers/defensive backs in a notebook as it was happening. I don't understand why you think this is so difficult.. There is AT LEAST a 40 second break in between each play.
2) I only charted the 7on7's and 11on11's.. Maybe if you would read the whole article you would have figured that out...
3) The WR "targets" are EXACT. I charted every play... Some guys didn't get thrown to much in the 7on7's and 11on11's (Givens for example). Obviously, other parts of the practice had the receivers more involved.
4) The numbers aren't the main source of evaluation obviously. It does provide people with some sort of statistical data to look at, and people generally enjoy that. When evaluating, the numbers only provide a tad bit of context to what I watched during practice.
-- To claim that I don't "get it" is kind of a strong thing to say. I've been charting CB's since 2012 and scouting players since 2007. I'm not going to act like I know everything, but I know enough to where that article is valid.