Zero2Cool
13 years ago
He might be the next great QB, but Shawn will still bag on him. :(

http://joeposnanski.si.com/2011/02/04/the-next-great-quarterback/?eref=sihp 

DALLAS Lets start with a few numbers: Over the last 20 years, there have been 46 quarterbacks taken in the first round of the NFL draft. Of those, the majority (28) were Top 10 picks. And 12 of those 28 were No. 1 overall picks.

Which is to say something you already know: Teams have invested a whole lot of money, time and effort to find the next great quarterback. All but four teams Dallas, Kansas City, Miami and New Orleans have spent first-round picks on quarterbacks in the last 20 years. Cincinnati alone has spent three Top 6 picks on quarterbacks.

[img_r]http://sijoeposnanski.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/aaron-rodgers-p1.jpg[/img_r]

So, teams are trying hard to find the future. And, to be blunt about it, mostly theyre failing. You know how many of those 46 quarterbacks have been named first-team All-Pro? One. Peyton Manning. Just 10 have played in multiple Pro Bowls, but even thats deceiving because the Pro Bowl is quirky and doesnt necessarily point to great success. Vince Young has played in two Pro Bowls, and nobody would consider him to have been an especially triumphant draft choice.

Every time a team drafts a quarterback in the first round, especially in the Top 10 or so, they place the teams future on young shoulders. You dont draft a quarterback that high to get a backup or an ordinary player. These quarterbacks are all gifted, obviously. They all have good arms. They are mostly big, all strong or fast or both, all winners. They are handled differently, of course some get thrown into their careers right away, some sit on the bench and learn for a while but they are given the best instruction, training and coaching available.

And, most fail and fail rather spectacularly. We tend to focus on the No. 1 overall picks (and some of them, like JaMarcus Russell and Tim Couch, were disastrous, others, like Alex Smith and David Carr, were not too good), but perhaps an even better gauge is to look at the No. 2 and No. 3 picks over the last 20 years.

Rick Mirer (No. 2 pick in 1993): Disaster.
Heath Shuler (No. 3 pick in 1994): Disaster.
Steve McNair (No. 3 pick in 1994): Good quarterback, led Titans to Super Bowl.
Ryan Leaf (No. 2 pick in 1998): Beyond disaster.
Donovan McNabb (No. 2 pick in 1999): Very good quarterback, led Eagles to Super Bowl.
Akili Smith (No. 3 pick in 1999): Disaster.
Joey Harrington (No. 3 pick in 2002): Not a disaster, but close enough.
Vince Young (No. 3 pick in 2006): Bright spots, but overall a disappointment.
Matt Ryan (No. 3 pick in 2008): Looking good.

So, thats nine quarterbacks taken with the second and third picks a spot where you would figure NFL scouts would NEVER miss and four are undeniable disasters, another two are big disappointments.

This is the challenge of drafting quarterbacks in the NFL. Nobody seems entirely sure what traits it takes for success. This is a league where one of the best quarterbacks of the last decade wasnt drafted (Kurt Warner), another was generally thought to be too small (Drew Brees), and a man making his case as the greatest quarterback ever was not taken until the sixth round (Tom Brady). This is actually pretty consistent with NFL history finding the best quarterbacks has always been more art than science. Joe Montana wasnt taken until the third round. John Unitas was taken in the ninth round by Pittsburgh and released. Warren Moon wasnt drafted at all and had to go succeed in Canada before being given a shot to start his Hall of Fame career.

But, yes, it does seem that in todays world with the quarterback position so specialized and so dangerous and requiring skills that are not easily named or isolated that predicting a quarterbacks success is harder than ever.

Which leads to another question: What does Green Bays Aaron Rodgers have that others dont?

* * *

Aaron Rodgers was the 24th pick of the 2005 NFL draft. You might remember that was kind of a strange year. The two big quarterbacks coming out that year were Alex Smith from Utah and Aaron Rodgers from California, and they really seemed to be about equal as prospects in the mind of NFL scouts, at least for a while.

Alex Smith was 6-foot-4, 215 pounds, good arm, played in Urban Meyers spread offense, which was really built along the lines of the old Bill Walsh West Coast offense.

Aaron Rodgers was 6-foot-2, 223 pounds, a bit stockier than Smith, big-time arm, played for quarterback guru Jeff Tedford and led California to a 10-1 season, though California could not quite put the ball in the end zone against USC at the end of the game to make it an undefeated season.

Both quarterbacks were viewed as smart. Both were viewed as competitive. Both had great talent and great college coaching. Smith was a few months younger, a little bit bigger, and came from a system that, perhaps, made it just a little bit easier to visualize how he might play in the NFL. One of the difficulties of drafting quarterbacks is that some college systems make quarterbacks look great think Houston when high first-round picks Andre Ware and David Klingler went there but those same quarterbacks look like pale imitations in the tougher and largely gimmick-proof NFL. Truth is, Jeff Tedfords quarterbacks had a history of looking great in college, not so much in the NFL. Five of his quarterbacks had been taken in the first round. Of the five, Trent Dilfer, by far, had the best NFL career, and with all due respect, Trent Dilfer was not a great NFL quarterback. This probably hurt Rodgers.

In the end, San Francisco decided to pass on the somewhat local Rodgers and take Alex Smith with the first pick. They threw him out there for seven starts in his first year, and he threw 11 interceptions and one touchdown pass. He has not been especially healthy or especially effective since, and the 49ers have not had a winning record since.

Rodgers then fell all the way to the 24th spot in the draft, where he was taken by an aging Green Bay team with an aging legend of a quarterback, Brett Favre. This is another thing about the NFL draft whispers begin circulating about players and suddenly their stock just falls. This happened with Dan Marino in 1983, when he fell all the way to No. 27, three picks after the Jets took Ken OBrien. Rodgers stock kind of plummeted without anyone really knowing why.

Right after the Packers took Rodgers, the Washington Redskins took Jason Campbell, a 6-foot-5, 223-pound quarterback from Auburn.

The point being that there appeared to be nothing that separated Aaron Rodgers then certainly nothing that NFL scouts and coaches seemed to see.

But there WAS something. There had to be something. It now looks like Rodgers might be the best young quarterback in the NFL. The guy across the field from him on Sunday, Ben Roethlisberger, has his case, and Philip Rivers puts up huge numbers in San Diego, and there are a bunch of young quarterbacks like Matt Ryan and Josh Freeman and Mark Sanchez and Sam Bradford who still have promising and unforeseen futures.

But if you had to pick one young guy, 28 or younger, you would probably pick Rodgers. Passer rating isnt a great statistic, but it says something that his 98.4 rating is second-best ever for players in their first six years in the NFL, and No. 1 was a guy named Otto Graham. And Rodgers is putting up his numbers outdoors, in often terrible weather, for a good team, and he has done this under the added pressure of having to replace Brett Favre.

He has also been brilliant in the playoffs this year. He was breathtaking at Philadelphia, eluding defenders (Aaron Rodgers is probably as good an in-and-out-of-the-pocket quarterback as there is in football, his coach Mike McCarthy said after the game) and throwing three touchdown passes without an interception. In Atlanta, indoors, he was even better, just about perfect, really, hitting 31 of 36 passes for 366 yards and three touchdown passes, again without an interception. The next week in the snow of Chicago, he looked human especially in the second half but he also looked in control.

So, why him what does Aaron Rodgers have that so many of the brilliant young prospects lacked?

When you listen to the quotes about him, you wonder if even now anyone really knows.

I think he was prepared mentally and physically, Packers GM Ted Thompson says. Hes a good leader and a good teammate.

These words mean just about nothing. Quarterbacks who are taken in the first round have all prepared all their lives to play quarterback in the NFL. Just about all of them are considered good leaders and good teammates in college.

He stayed true to his craft and very true to his fundamentals, Mike McCarthy says. Hes an expert of the offense. He has the ability to run the whole offense, if needed, at the line of scrimmage.

Yes, the old He knows the offense thing. But again why does Rodgers have a better grasp of the offense than, say, Jason Campbell does? When Brady Quinn came out of Notre Dame, then Kansas City Chiefs general manager Carl Peterson told me that in all his years of interviewing players, Quinn most impressed him. His makeup was off the charts. His ability to understand schemes was unquestioned. Brady Quinn, taken two years AFTER Rodgers, was the third-string quarterback for the Denver Broncos and did not play a single down.

It is just his decision making, Packers quarterback coach Tom Clements says of Rodgers.

Hes such an efficient quarterback, Steelers defensive back Troy Polamalu says.

Hes an amazing, amazing, amazing leader, Packers tight end Andrew Quarless says.

Hes seeing the field, Steelers linebacker James Harrison says. Hes reading things out. Hes getting the ball to his people. Hes the hottest thing going right now.

And so on you can go to person after person and ask why Aaron Rodgers made it when others did not and they will almost always speak in generalities, in clichs, about leadership and field presence and efficiency. And theres no doubt truth in all of what they say, but that doesnt make it easier to find the next Aaron Rodgers.

Maybe thats just how it has to be because maybe what separates Rodgers is something ineffable, something that cannot be scouted. A couple of former NFL quarterbacks now say that Rodgers has the perfect throwing motion, but coming out of high school Rodgers did not get a Division I scholarship offer and ended up going to Butte Community College. He played well enough there to impress Tedford, who brought him in and worked constantly with him. What blew Tedford away, he has said many times, was how much the kid wanted to learn about playing quarterback. He wanted to know everything. He worked and worked and worked on his motion until it was, well, good enough to someday be called perfect.

He then went to the Packers and sat behind Brett Favre for three years. This has been listed as one of the reasons for his success He was able to sit and watch and learn, Thompson says but other quarterbacks have been eased into the league without great success. What seems to have separated Rodgers is that he never stopped wanting to improve, never stopped trying to pick up any hint he could find wherever he could find it, never stopped searching for ways to make himself better as a leader or as a passer as a teammate. The quarterback position in the NFL takes so many physical and cognitive skills accuracy, arm strength, maneuverability, mental dexterity, the ability to make quick and precise decisions, physical toughness, nerve that there probably is no way to find anyone who meets them all.

So the key might be finding someone with a limitless ambition to improve. Listen to Rodgers on leadership:

I learned a lot about how to motivate guys [in junior college]. As a young 18-year old, youre trying to be the field general to guys who have been there and done that had life experiences, been in the work force, been in jail, been in the military, had leaders before.

Listen to Rodgers on preparation:

I spend a lot of time each week, just making sure Im ready to play the game. I want my teammates to know Im the most prepared guy on the field. Thats film study, thats also studying the game plan and thats practice.

Listen to Rodgers on his perfect motion:

Since high school Ive been blessed to work with people who really understood how to coach the position. And in college, I think I got the best of the best with Coach Tedford. We honed fundamentals, we talked about the mental aspect of playing quarterback and I really think that time with him was invaluable.

What you get from these quotes and just about everything Rodgers says in addition to steady and pleasant boredom is a sense of someone who thinks about things constantly, even little things that few others think about. He seems to be someone who simply cannot imagine staying the same, simply cannot imagine that hes already good enough. There are so many potential distractions at the NFL level, some of them off the field (money, fame, fan fickleness ), some on the field (dealing with pain Rodgers has a history of concussions standing up to a heavy rush, the inner workings of a team ). And the most successful quarterbacks, bar none, are the ones who deal with those distractions and never believe the hype and continue to hunger for even the slightest improvement.

That is a lot tougher trait to scout than arm strength and how much a player can bench press.

* * *

Before this season began, Aaron Rodgers went to Mike McCarthy and asked him to put photographs up of the Green Bay Packers championships in the team meeting room and leave an empty space up there for the 2010 team. Its fair to say that nobody who plays for Green Bay is unaware of the teams history. Lombardi and Starr and Nitschke are not underrepresented in Green Bay. And its also fair to say that everybody who played for the Packers in 2010 wanted to win a championship.

Still, Rodgers thought it might be good to have a little bit of that history in the meeting room and an empty space to get the players thinking big. How much did this have to do with the Packers being here? I would estimate 0.0%. But thats not the point. Maybe it did help crystallize the goal in a few players minds. Maybe it inspired a whole bunch of guys. We cant really know.

What we can know is that this is how Aaron Rodgers thinks he is looking for every edge. He is thinking always, every single day, about becoming a great quarterback for a great team. And maybe thats how he emerged from the huge casting call of talented young men who wanted to be the next great quarterback. Its like he has never stopped auditioning.

"Joe Posnanski" wrote:


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nerdmann
13 years ago
Coming out of Tedford's system, Rodgers' throwing motion was NOT perfect. Tedford taught him to hold the ball up by his ear, so he could get the ball out quicker. That offense was based on short passes, where he could maximize accuracy by throwing darts.
The reason Arodge is a top calibur QB is because he had Mike McCarthy as his QB guru. Same for Matt Flynn. (Brohm was still relying on his daddy.)
I still think that if Ted Thompson didn't hire MM, we'd be hearing about how great Alex Smith is, and Tom Rosseley would have failed miserably in developing Rodgers.
“Winning is not a sometime thing, it is an all the time thing. You don't do things right once in a while…you do them right all the time.”
macbob
13 years ago
Edit: Nerdmann-you beat me to the wire, but we were thinking along similar lines...

Or, could it be he had three years to prep through Mike McCarthy's QB school, and has Mike game-planning/calling plays??? Over the years, the Packers have done a tremendous job of preparing QBs, whether Holmgren, Sherman, or McCarthy. Besides Favre and Rodgers, there have been a number of backups who went on to start for other teams or perform well for the Packers--Hasselbeck, Brooks, Brunell, Pederson, and now Flynn. That's a pretty good record, considering some teams can't even produce a starter, much less a backup/second QB who could start on other teams.
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Zero2Cool
13 years ago
I don't think anyone said that Tedford is credited with Rodgers throwing motion being near perfect, but rather that Rodgers dedication to detail has.
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nerdmann
13 years ago
Arodge also has the "big five" to throw to, plus Finley.
“Winning is not a sometime thing, it is an all the time thing. You don't do things right once in a while…you do them right all the time.”
Zero2Cool
13 years ago

Arodge also has the "big five" to throw to, plus Finley.

"nerdmann" wrote:



I think it's illegal to only have 4 OL. 😉
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Packers_Finland
13 years ago
I'm starting to get annoyed how people are only jumping on Rodgers dick now that he's in the Super Bowl. He was the same QB five weeks ago.
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zombieslayer
13 years ago

I'm starting to get annoyed how people are only jumping on Rodgers dick now that he's in the Super Bowl. He was the same QB five weeks ago.

"Packers_Finland" wrote:



For the record, I said he was the BEST QB in the NFL early this year. This is obviously before we had any idea we'd be in the SB. Well, except for Finley88Beast and RaiderPride, except RP was one year too early.

To be fair, Aaron's performances in the Playoffs have been outstanding. His only tough time was against da Bears but their pass D has given us nightmares.
My man Donald Driver
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(thanks to Pack93z for the pic)
2010 will be seen as the beginning of the new Packers dynasty. 🇹🇹 🇲🇲 🇦🇷
Wamzlee
13 years ago

I'm starting to get annoyed how people are only jumping on Rodgers dick now that he's in the Super Bowl. He was the same QB five weeks ago.

"Packers_Finland" wrote:



Yeah, it's annoying, but warranted considering where he has taken the team this year.

Of course, when analysts would talk Aaron Rodgers up earlier this season and last year, I couldn't stand all the Packer fans who said "I don't know why they keep talking him up now, it's not like he has proven anything". For the record, he proved a lot in 2008, and it was frustrating that people couldn't see the level of talent we had at the QB position sans 4.

Now those people are harping on Colin Cowherd for not seeing it, when they were being just like Cowherd.

Just the way some fans are I guess. :icon_smile:
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Packers_Finland
13 years ago

I'm starting to get annoyed how people are only jumping on Rodgers dick now that he's in the Super Bowl. He was the same QB five weeks ago.

"zombieslayer" wrote:



For the record, I said he was the BEST QB in the NFL early this year. This is obviously before we had any idea we'd be in the SB. Well, except for Finley88Beast and RaiderPride, except RP was one year too early.

To be fair, Aaron's performances in the Playoffs have been outstanding. His only tough time was against da Bears but their pass D has given us nightmares.

"Packers_Finland" wrote:



I'm not talking about Packer fans. Most of us saw the 'special' in him in '09. It's these damn article writers who are suddenly Rodgers' biggest lovers, despite thinking "he hasn't won a playoff game yet" only a few weeks ago. Taking a team to a Super Bowl isn't a personal achievement, like the writers seem to think it is.
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