Pack93z
  • Pack93z
  • Select Member Topic Starter
14 years ago
While the deck is stacked against him landing a spot on the 53, unless the Packers break stride a bit and keep 3 QB's.. I am personally happy to see the kid from Lubbock finally showing that he is capable of playing at this level.

IMO, if the Packers could hold onto him this season somehow, it very well might make Flynn or himself a potential trading chip in the future for the Packers to shore up other areas of the club..

Anyway.. for a kid that was blasted by "ManGenius" coming into the league.. it has to feel good to show that you can perform at this level.

http://www.packers.com/news-and-events/article-1/QB-Harrell-Continuing-To-Improve/aa49cbe9-fdfd-4172-bbe7-7d2921587af7 


QB Harrell Continuing To Improve

By Tom Fanning

Posted 15 hours ago

While Pro Bowl quarterback Aaron Rodgers looks to have picked up right where he left off last season and backup Matt Flynn also appears to be making strides in his third season, there is another signal-caller on the roster that has impressed during the preseason.

First-year quarterback Graham Harrell, who has seen limited action during the first three preseason contests, has shown noticeable improvement of late, leading the No. 3 offense on scoring drives each of the last two games. At Seattle on Aug. 21, he entered the game with the Packers trailing 24-20 with just over seven minutes remaining, and guided the offense on an 80-yard drive that was capped off with a game-winning 12-yard Brandon Jackson touchdown run. Harrell completed his only pass on the possession, a 23-yarder to wide receiver Chastin West to quickly put the Packers in Seattle territory.

Last Thursday night against Indianapolis, Harrell again led the third offense on a long scoring drive, this time a 90-yarder that was capped off with a Kregg Lumpkin 1-yard run. Harrell completed 4-of-5 passes for 62 yards on the drive, his only attempts of the game, including a 15-yard pass over the middle to West to convert a third down.

He is getting better, Head Coach Mike McCarthy said. There is another young player that has been given some opportunities and has moved the offense down the field. He has really improved since he has been here.

Thats what you look for, particularly in younger players, an ascending player, especially at the quarterback position to come in as late as he did. You are starting to see him be more and more comfortable each week that he gets his opportunities, so I like the progress that he has made.

Harrell didnt have the benefit of being with the team for the entire offseason program, signing with the Packers on May 20 during OTAs. Trying to play catch-up with the rest of the offense as he learned the playbook, Harrell attributed his improved play of late to his increased comfort with the offensive system.

Early on in camp, Harrell appeared to be making the safe throw as he looked to his check-downs, but over the past two weeks, he started looking down the field more and throwing with greater velocity, which he also credited to his knowledge of the scheme more than anything.

I was thinking that (about increased velocity) as I was sitting out on the field today watching him throw, offensive coordinator Joe Philbin said. He kind of throws it like you are supposed to throw a football. He looks natural throwing the ball. I think that is maybe a function of knowing the offense better, but it could be that he is just coming around and getting that arm into shape.

He just moves naturally, throws the ball naturally. It looks like a real catchable ball, I like to say. I think receivers probably like catching his ball, and he has got pretty good velocity. I have been impressed. I think he has come a long way.

Harrell said most of his nights early on in camp included studying the playbook as he tried to get the terminology down, before things clicked for him recently. He added that having gameplans for a specific opponent each week also made life easier a well, allowing him to focus on specific plays the offense would be running out of certain formations.

It was a weird deal because it was almost like an overnight thing where one day I am struggling to call the play in the huddle just because there are so many words and you are trying to get the terminology down and really understand what all of the words mean, and then for some reason about three weeks ago it seemed like the terminology started coming natural to me, Harrell said. Once you are able to call it and feel comfortable calling the play, then everything else starts slowing down because you actually know where everybody is going. You have a grasp of the offense and now you can look at the defense and try to attack the defense instead of trying to figure out where all of your guys are going. Thats huge for a quarterback.

In college it was three or four words is your play, and here I feel its about a 25-word play call, so its a lot different. The terminology is nothing the same. We have a lot of similar concepts as far as what we are doing offensively and pass patterns and how we are attacking defenses, but as far as calling the play, formation, protection, all of that, there is no terminology crossover from where I came.

Harrell had one of the more productive careers in college football history at Texas Tech, where he ran head coach Mike Leachs spread offense. Harrell ranks first in NCAA history with 134 touchdowns and 1,403 completions, and his 15,793 career passing yards rank second to only Hawaiis Timmy Chang (17,072, 2000-04). Despite those gaudy numbers, Harrell went undrafted in 2009.

Harrell did participate in mini-camp on a tryout basis with the Cleveland Browns each of the last two years, but his only pro experience came with the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League in 2009. He spent the season on the injured list, which was more so the team could keep his rights than it was due to a significant injury, but was able to practice and attend meetings despite not seeing any game action.

There is only a 20-second play clock (in the CFL) so you are not allowed to do as much at the line of scrimmage, so it is a little different but it did help, Harrell said. Its a bigger field. It forces you to make bigger throws, and my time in the CFL was great. It was a great experience and it helped me grow as a quarterback.

When the opportunity in Green Bay presented itself this spring, Harrell jumped at the chance, especially because of what he had heard from another former Texas Tech quarterback.

Coach McCarthy has been around so many great quarterbacks, and he has always had a reputation of actually developing quarterbacks and taking quarterbacks that people think need some work and stuff and turn them into great ones, Harrell said. A former quarterback from Tech, Cliff Kingsbury, was with him down in New Orleans, and he told me a lot about him and how much he liked him and how good of a coach he was as far as quarterbacks. I was excited that they signed me because I knew I would get to learn under him for a little bit and it would be a great opportunity to develop as a quarterback.

Harrell is hoping that chance to develop in Green Bay will continue beyond this weekend when the team makes its final cuts. The Packers have carried just two quarterbacks on the active roster coming out of training camp two of the past three seasons, with a third signal-caller on the practice squad. While Harrell would love to be on the 53-man roster, staying around in some capacity would suit him just fine.

Any chance to learn, not only under Coach McCarthy, but Philbin and (quarterbacks coach) Tom Clements have been great to me, and Aaron (Rodgers) as much as anybody, Harrell said. I think being able to watch him in practice every day, watching him in the games, how he prepares, and just the little things that he can tell me and kind of help me with day-to-day when we watch practice film or actually on the field whenever I do something.

A lot of times he calls me over and he is like, Hey, change your footwork, do this on this play and it will really help you. Just being able to learn under him for a year, no matter where you are, is a great opportunity. Im excited to be here and want to help the team however they ask me to do it.


"The oranges are dry; the apples are mealy; and the papayas... I don't know what's going on with the papayas!"
RainX
14 years ago
He's definitely earned a spot on the practice squad imo, but this team has to many other pressing depth issues to keep him on the 53-man roster this year. Definitely a nice project QB who you hope you can keep around though.
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TheEngineer
14 years ago
Man I love hearing how McCarthy is a good QB coach and how much interest Rodgers takes in helping out the young QBs.
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beast
14 years ago
I like Harrell... but I guess I want a guy I feel has more upside. PS is for to take chances with a guy with good potential but not NFL ready. If everything went perfect for Harrell he'll be what? The next Jeff Garica? That's not bad at all... but in my mind someone with Tom Brady potential just seems like more worth taking a risk on.

Don't get me wrong potential doesn't mean much... other than in the draft... but a guy like say QB Kevin O'Connell has TONS of potential if MM can fix what ever his problem is (which I don't know what it is and yes I know some problems you just can't fix). But I think he's problem is mental and footwork (because he has all the physical talent (at least he did in the draft)). MM may not be able to fix the mental but the footwork he can fix and the mental problems may become fixable when the footwork is fixed.

But MM school might be just what he needs to upstart his career again.
UserPostedImage
RaiderPride
14 years ago
Mike is no doubt a BRILLIANT developer of QB's.

If Mike can not make a NFL QB... No one can.

Take note Edwards and Fitzpatrick. Your spot on the Bills roster is secure.
""People Will Probably Never Remember What You Said, And May Never Remember What You Did. However, People Will Always Remember How You Made Them Feel."
Porforis
14 years ago

I like Harrell... but I guess I want a guy I feel has more upside. PS is for to take chances with a guy with good potential but not NFL ready. If everything went perfect for Harrell he'll be what? The next Jeff Garica? That's not bad at all... but in my mind someone with Tom Brady potential just seems like more worth taking a risk on.

Don't get me wrong potential doesn't mean much... other than in the draft... but a guy like say QB Kevin O'Connell has TONS of potential if Mike McCarthy can fix what ever his problem is (which I don't know what it is and yes I know some problems you just can't fix). But I think he's problem is mental and footwork (because he has all the physical talent (at least he did in the draft)). Mike McCarthy may not be able to fix the mental but the footwork he can fix and the mental problems may become fixable when the footwork is fixed.

But Mike McCarthy school might be just what he needs to upstart his career again.

"beast" wrote:



Yeah, ideally by the time we need a new starting QB Harrell will be near the end of his playing years. However, the huge upside here is that if we can keep developing him, we can either trade him or Flynn for a lot more than we'd get for him now.
British
14 years ago
If I was a rebuilding team with no obvious plan at QB at be tempted to claim Harrell off waivers and carry three QBs throughout the season.

But I wonder if Harrell would be best served staying put on our PS? There isn't a better QB coaching duo of MM and Clements in the league and Harrell must know Flynn is likely to be trade bait next offseason.

But no agent would recommend a player stays on a PS if they have a shot at a 53 man roster.
UserPostedImage
TheEngineer
14 years ago
Thing is though, since McCarthy came in, how many QBs have been poached off our PS?

The only one I can think of is Brohm, but then it's because he's a 2nd rounder with (some semblance of) potential.

Does Matt Flynn have trade potential? I think so. But it's taken 3 years for him to get comfortable. Give it 2 more years and Flynn could be a prime backup/trade bait.

But Harrell is fresh, he hasn't been developed yet. He's only starting to bud. Give a few more years before he becomes a pretty little flower bulb and the GMs will come sniffing around.
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PackerTraxx
14 years ago
I too like the job Mike does with QBs. That's the factor that makes him a good coach as I see it. And it is a very important factor. Other things he has learned as he went along. He's becoming a better game coach, and we have a much better staff of assistants. There's still improvements that can be made and I believe they will continue.
Why is Jerry Kramer not in the Hall of Fame?
Pack93z
  • Pack93z
  • Select Member Topic Starter
14 years ago

Thing is though, since McCarthy came in, how many QBs have been poached off our PS?

Does Matt Flynn have trade potential? I think so. But it's taken 3 years for him to get comfortable. Give it 2 more years and Flynn could be a prime backup/trade bait.

But Harrell is fresh, he hasn't been developed yet. He's only starting to bud. Give a few more years before he becomes a pretty little flower bulb and the GMs will come sniffing around.

"TheEngineer" wrote:



Call me old school.. old SOB or whatnot.. but I don't really think you can develop an NFL QB in less time.. some play while developing, only the really mentally strong survive it.

The old proven method of allowing QB's to develop in practice and by watching with a baseball cap on isn't a luxury most are given these days.. most are forced into action before they are ready and flame out.

IMO, the quarterback play, actual play over the decades has declined greatly.. forcing the NFL to continually adjust the rules to the offenses advantage. This props up the numbers and makes QB's numbers and play look better on paper but the long and the short of it, they aren't better QB's.

I look back at QB play years ago and the tight windows that they had to place balls into, while shortly after getting rocked repeatedly.. it is hard to look into today's game and hold the same respect for the QB of today.

Anyway.. I don't think the argument of use not getting robbed of QB's yet doesn't diminish the job MM has done developing the QB's on this roster. Quite honestly it is an open question at this point, it hasn't been proven past Rodgers at this point.. and he didn't become great until year 4 in the league. Flynn is just beginning to develop into an NFL QB.. and Harrell could be groomed to take his place eventually.
"The oranges are dry; the apples are mealy; and the papayas... I don't know what's going on with the papayas!"
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