Vancouver Sun

New crop of young QBs stealing league’s spotlight

Five first-year rookies had 70 per cent completion­s, with zero intercepti­ons

- JOHN KRYK

This maybe best explains Sunday’s unlikely juxtaposit­ion.

One of two NFL starting quarterbac­ks first-named Carson played like a Pro Bowl veteran on Sunday. Threw for 301 yards and two touchdowns. Cagily picked apart a good defence. Wasn’t intercepte­d.

The other Carson played like a hyperventi­lating rookie. Threw four intercepti­ons. Searched for an open receiver with all the poise and success of the slow, fat guy looking for an escape route during the running of the bulls.

So it went Sunday as this strange, captivatin­g, exhilarati­ng first month of the NFL season wound down.

Philadelph­ia’s 23-year-old rookie sensation, Carson Wentz, belittled the proud Pittsburgh Steelers defence in a 34-3 thumping, while Arizona’s 36-year-old veteran gunslinger, Carson Palmer, did little right in a 33-18 mauling in Buffalo.

The juxtaposit­ion doesn’t end at these two.

Combined, Wentz and the other four first-year passers in Week 3 — Cleveland’s Cody Kessler, New England’s Jacoby Brissett, Dallas’ Dak Prescott and Denver’s Trevor Siemian — completed 70 per cent of their passes for seven touchdowns and zero intercepti­ons.

Four of the five won their games and the other, Kessler — in his first (emergency) career action at Miami — somehow helped the undermanne­d Browns make it to overtime before losing.

Meantime, Palmer and four of Sunday’s other five starting QBs in their mid to late 30s — New York Giants’ Eli Manning, San Diego’s Phil Rivers, Pittsburgh’s Ben Roethlisbe­rger and New York Jets’ Ryan Fitzpatric­k — had a dismal day.

Even with the four-TD day from Green Bay’s Aaron Rodgers thrown into the stats mix, the old guys together completed just 57 per cent of their throws for five TDs and 13 intercepti­ons. All but Rodgers lost on Sunday. It’s almost hard to believe. The five kids with 11 combined games of NFL playing experience didn’t throw a single pick, while the six old guys with experience ranging from 12 to 16 seasons threw 13.

Wentz, after three games, is the talk of the league and rightly so.

He’s the first rookie since 1970 to start and win his team’s first three games without throwing an intercepti­on, and is the first NFLer ever with at least 100 attempts (102), 60 completion­s (66) and five TD passes without an intercepti­on in his first three games.

Accolades are avalanchin­g in. It’s Wentzmania in Wentzsylva­nia.

Tweeted U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden, a longtime Eagles fan from nearby Delaware: “Heart, guts, and poise from my guy, @ cj_wentz. Huge game, strong start for the @Eagles. @DrBiden is pumped. It’s our year.” Hero: Minnesota Vikings defence. Probably only Seattle’s and Denver’s defences have performed to their level. In handing Carolina, the defending NFC champ, its first home loss since 2014, the Vikings sacked Cam Newton eight times, hit him 12 times, had four tacklesfor-loss plus a safety — big play after big play. Carolina’s last 10 possession­s ended thus: safety, punt, missed field goal, punt, intercepti­on, punt, intercepti­on, punt, intercepti­on, downs. That allowed Minnesota to overcome an early 10-0 deficit and pull away for a 22-10 win.

Zero: Ryan Fitzpatric­k, QB, Jets. Only the maddeningl­y inconsiste­nt Fitz could play maybe the best game of his 12-year career last week, in New York’s big win at Buffalo, and follow it up this week with maybe his worst: 20of-44 (45 per cent) for 188 yards and six intercepti­ons in a 24-3 loss at KC that dropped the Jets to 1-2.

Stock up: Dustin Hopkins, PK, Redskins. Buffalo drafted him in 2013. Right after displacing veteran Rian Lindell, Hopkins hurt his groin near the end of his rookie-season training camp. The Bills scrambled and signed Dan Carpenter, who took Hopkins’ job and beat out a healthy Hopkins the next summer.

Months later, New Orleans signed Hopkins to a practicesq­uad contract, but last summer he lost the Saints’ kicking job to Zach Hocker. Hopkins latched on with the Redskins early last season.

In his first NFL game action, Hopkins in 2015 made 89 per cent of his field goals. On Sunday he booted a pair of fourth-quarter field goals for Washington, including the winning 37-yarder with 1:51 left, to down the Giants 29-27. Hopkins is 11-for-11 through three games, one of only two kickers still perfect on field goals this season.

Stock down: Brock Osweiler, QB, Texans. That was one terrible passing performanc­e at New England last Thursday night. Osweiler couldn’t pilot the Texans into Patriots territory until late in the game. Because the Texans committed to paying the former Denver Bronco $72 million over the next four seasons, the pressure on Osweiler to quickly produce now red-lines.

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