The analytics folks at Pro Football Focus sure know how to put a damper on Josh Allen’s recent good game for the Bills.

Releasing their quarterback rankings ahead of the 2019 season, PFF tabbed Allen as the NFL’s worst. Last place. No. 32.

Here’s how PFF explains that:

32. JOSH ALLEN, BUFFALO BILLS

Like Rosen, Allen had a rough supporting cast as a rookie, though his uneven play resembled what he showed at Wyoming. He finished with the No. 25 overall grade at 65.3, showing off the expected big arm that led to the No. 12 percentage of big-time throws, but also the poor decision-making and inaccuracy that led to a No. 30 ranking at avoiding turnover-worthy plays. There are similarities to Lamar Jackson as they both have throw-for-throw accuracy concerns (Allen ranked 33rd out of 35 qualifiers after ranking poorly in college), but there are avenues for future success. Allen’s best bet is continuing to make the big plays down the field while complementing with the rushing ability that saw him rush for a league-high 508 yards on scrambles while posting the No. 4 rushing grade among quarterbacks, at 81.4. A new group of playmakers may give Allen a few more open throws to help with the accuracy issues, and he looks like a quarterback who will struggle with week-to-week consistency but will put together monster stretches of play that will make life difficult on opposing defenses.

PFF’s rankings are certainly a disappointment. But they do make some worthwhile points on Allen’s game, plus, the numbers certainly prove one thing: Allen needs to progress as a player in 2019. As a rookie, he had a .500 record (5-5) when he started and finished games. But he didn’t look like a prolific passer. In two series against the Panthers in his last preseason outing, Allen looked great. But that’s a small sample size and he has to produce when a defense is running its full playbook at him in the regular season before any such national outlets are going to change their mind on him.

With that, more pain: PFF ranked Patriots QB Tom Brady No. 1. The Dolphins and Jets via Josh Rosen and Sam Darnold, respectively, also fell into the “fourth tier” of quarterbacks on PFF’s list. Rosen and Darnold ended up at No. 31 and No. 25.

At the top of the list, Brady edged out Saints QB Drew Brees for the top spot, while Chiefs signal-caller Patrick Mahomes finished in the third spot.