Last time I took a look at all of Ryan Tannehill’s touchdowns from last season. This time we’ll be taking a look at his interceptions and identifying what he needs to work on going into his fourth season.
First, let’s take a look at the stats.
Receiver Breakdown
| Jarvis Landry | 4 |
| Lamar Miller | 2 |
| Mike Wallace | 1 |
| Brian Hartline | 1 |
| Dion Sims | 1 |
| Rishard Matthews | 1 |
| Brandon Gibson | 1 |
| Gator Hoskins | 1 |
Quarter Breakdown
| 1st Quarter | 0 |
| 2nd Quarter | 6 |
| 3rd Quarter | 3 |
| 4th Quarter | 3 |
Down Breakdown
| 1st Down | 7 |
| 2nd Down | 1 |
| 3rd Down | 3 |
| 4th Down | 1 |
Route Breakdown
| Out/In Route | 3 |
| Post | 2 |
| Slant/Drag | 1 |
| Corner | 1 |
| Curl | 1 |
| Flat | 1 |
| Go/Vertical | 1 |
| Seam | 1 |
| HB Out/Angle/Swing/Wheel | 1 |
Location Breakdown
| Deep Left | 1 | Deep Middle | 2 | Deep Right | 1 |
| Intermediate Left | 1 | Intermediate Middle | 1 | Intermediate Right | |
| Short Left | Short Middle | Short Right | 6 |
Distance Breakdown
| Fewer than 6 yards | 5 |
| Between 6 and 15 yards | 3 |
| Greater than 15 yards | 4 |
Tannehill’s struggles seem pretty evenly distributed by distance. Location wise, Tannehill clearly has problems on short right passes. We’ll see what’s causing these problems as we analyze the film.