The Peterborough Examiner

Watkins faces a tough task

- JOHN KRYK

For the second time in his young NFL career, receiver Sammy Watkins finds himself portrayed as the instant one-man solution.

The one guy who can significan­tly raise the level of play of a secondyear quarterbac­k who’d pretty much flopped as a rookie.

The first time was in 2014, Watkins’ rookie year.

The Buffalo Bills front office professed to be so certain the superstar college receiver from Clemson could turn EJ Manuel — who mostly struggled as a rookie after the Bills selected him No. 16 overall — into a markedly improved QB in Year 2, they said ridiculous things all spring and summer long.

“This game is about making plays and surroundin­g our quarterbac­k with playmakers,” then-Bills GM Doug Whaley said after Buffalo traded first- and fourth-round draft picks to move up to choose Watkins fourth overall. “He’s automatica­lly going to make our quarterbac­k better, and us better as a team … This guy’s going to get us to the playoffs.” Not. Watkins did not make Manuel any better. Buffalo’s head coach then, Doug Marrone, benched Manuel just four games into that 2014 season. Nor was Watkins able in 2015 or 2016 to help QB Tyrod Taylor improve more than a smidge, and wouldn’t have even if he wasn’t always hobbling on a wonky foot.

So now, a week after the Bills traded him last Friday to the Los Angeles Rams, Watkins finds himself being similarly touted on a second NFL club.

Yes, far less breathless­ly by the Rams front office — “He’s a complement­ary piece,” GM Les Snead said of Watkins this week — but Snead did join first-year Rams head coach Sean McVay in predicting Watkins will immediatel­y help spur improvemen­t in Jared Goff, the franchise’s supposed on-field saviour.

The Rams drafted Goff No. 1 overall a year ago. The young passer picked up the particular­s of an NFL-style passing attack so slowwwwwly as to look mostly dreadful in his late-season starts.

How can Watkins help? By enabling the Rams attack to stretch defences, Snead said. And there’s this, McVay added:

“I think it certainly helps (Goff ) because any time that you have good playmakers, where it makes it more difficult for defensive guys to be able to key in on one player, it certainly loosens up and regulates some of the coverages — and I think it’ll be very helpful for our team, and especially for our quarterbac­k.” Mmmm-hmm. Shortly after the 24-year-old practised for the first time as a Ram on Wednesday, McVay said his “expectatio­n” is that Watkins will play “probably through the first quarter” in Saturday’s preseason game at Oakland.

“Sammy’s number was called a handful of times,” the NFL’s youngest head coach said of Wednesday’s practice, “and he did a great job delivering. And Jared made good, accurate throws.” See! Took only one practice! Listen, folks. You could surround an over-his-head, ham-and-egger quarterbac­k with four Hall of Fame pass catchers, and you know what? He’s still going to play like an over his-head, ham-and-egger. Because he is what he is. Sure, he’d get bailed out a couple/three extra times a game by his no-doubt super frustrated, star pass-catchers, but super-frustrated fans won’t pull out any less hair.

That’s not to say Goff is a hamand egger. He’s far more gifted a passer than Manuel. A No. 1 overall talent Goff might yet prove to be. But if he can’t steer his can’t-miss career back on track in Year 2, then the addition of even Antonio Brown and Dez Bryant to the Rams offence next off-season wouldn’t make him much better.

Ya still gotta deliver the ball — exactly where, and exactly when, it needs to get there.

A corps of top-flight receivers can make a good QB look great at times — see Manning, Eli — but the addition of only one such receiver surely won’t make a bad or mediocre passer look good often enough to make much difference.

If Goff is going to realize his potential, it’s got to come from within.

CRUSHING COLTS NEWS

The last thing the Indianapol­is Colts needed was another serious injury to a key offensive lineman. They’ve had enough of those in recent years. But head coach Chuck Pagano on Thursday confirmed that centre Ryan Kelly — the team’s first-round draft pick in 2016 — has a broken foot bone. Kelly is expected to miss 6-8 weeks.

There’s still no word on when Andrew Luck might be ready to resume practising, and when he can play. The sixth-year QB is slowly recovering from winter surgery on a torn shoulder muscle.

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