Joe Berger has no idea what a grade of 26.8 actually means. But he's a polite guy, so he thanked Pro Football Focus for crunching its analytics thingamabob and spitting him out as the best center in the NFL this season.
"Any time anyone recognizes you as doing well at something, you know, it's good," said Berger, whose first NFL playoff start in an 11-year career will come Sunday when the Vikings play Seattle in an NFC wild-card game at TCF Bank Stadium.
Berger, who edged Cowboys Pro Bowler Travis Frederick (25.4), admits he's skeptical and hasn't followed the website closely.
"Until most recently, I guess," he said. "I heard my name kind of get thrown out there with it."
See, not every PFF grade is meant to bludgeon a struggling player and trigger entertaining exchanges between old-school coaches and new-school reporters. In fact, in a league of 1,696 active players, Berger's point total was surpassed by only 57 players (3.4 percent).
Take that, Adrian Peterson, the NFL rushing leader, who ranks 36th among running backs with a 2.6 point total.
"As far as how they get their scores and that stuff, I don't know how all that comes about," Berger said. "I know you hear mixed reviews on it. It's a cool number, but what matters most to me is how I'm graded in our room."
In that room, Berger also ranks highest among all linemen. The specifics aren't public knowledge, but they support the decision by General Manager Rick Spielman to make re-signing the then-backup Berger a priority in free agency. Once center John Sullivan's back gave out in August, it became possibly the greatest quiet move made by a playoff team this season.