
Does "the law of diminishing returns" apply to passing? If so, does it mean anything for team strategy?
Does diminishing returns apply to passing? As a QB passes more, should the effectiveness of his passing be expected to decline? Or do mismatches rule and quality win out in NFL contests, so a top-quality QB's performance should be expected to be consistent during an entire game – or even rise as he finds the weaknesses in a defense and maybe even "breaks" it?
Diminishing returns isn't really a law so much as the observation that people logically put a resource to its most productive use first, then to its second most productive, and so on, so the return from its use incrementally declines. This phenomenon is all around us in modern life.
In football the logic is that teams use the pass plays they can execute best for greatest results first. But when teams throw a lot they must move beyond those few plays -- so their AYA will fall to significantly below its level in few-attempt games. There's lots of anecdotal evidence supporting this idea.