Windsor Star

BREES’ REMARKABLE ACCURACY PUTS HIM IN A LEAGUE OF HIS OWN

Completing 29 of 30 tosses last week suggests Saints pivot aging like fine wine

- JOHN KRYK Jokryk@postmedia.com Twitter.com/johnkryk

Drew Brees threw the football 30 times last Monday night in the New Orleans Saints’ blowout victory over the Indianapol­is Colts.

He completed 29 passes. All but one.

That impressive performanc­e set a new single-game NFL record for completion percentage at 96.67.

It’s fitting that Brees, who turns 41 on Jan. 15, should finally own this record. He’s the most accurate passer in NFL history, with a career mark of 67.6 per cent, and with increasing­ly pre-eminent season marks.

Yet, much more was made Monday night of Brees breaking Peyton Manning’s career record of 539 touchdown passes, much as happened last year when

Brees broke Manning’s career passing yardage record.

As impressive as they are, those are volume records that reflect only a small percentage of throws. Accuracy records take into account all throws, so maybe they should be considered the most impressive records a QB can hold.

Colts head coach and former NFL passer Frank Reich said on Monday that Brees has mastered a lot of things as an NFL passer, “but to me, it’s his accuracy.”

“He has proven it, year in and year out, for a very long time. Even when you have a guy covered, he really isn’t covered. (Brees) always finds a hole. He can do that as well as anybody who has ever played the game. He has the numbers to back that up.”

He sure does. His accuracy has improved throughout his 19 seasons in the league, right into this week.

In his first full season as NFL starter, in 2002 with the thensan Diego Chargers, Brees completed just 60.8 per cent of his throws. He then dipped to 57.6 per cent in 2003. Over the next five seasons, between San Diego and New Orleans, Brees raised his accuracy to the range of 64.3 per cent to 67.5 per cent. Much better, but he didn’t stop there.

Brees has exceeded the 70 per cent threshold in five of his previous 10 seasons, and is well on pace to do so again. How rare is that? Consider that all other quarterbac­ks in NFL history combined before this year had accomplish­ed that statistica­l feat only six times.

With a completion percentage so far this season of 75.8 per cent, Brees is in position to break the league’s single-season completion-percentage record for the fifth time.

The native of Westlake, Texas did it the first time in 2009, fractional­ly bettering the mark of 70.6 per cent that Ken Anderson of the Cincinnati Bengals set 27 years earlier in 1982.

Then Brees eclipsed himself in 2011 with 71.2 per cent. Sam Bradford passed him in 2016 with 71.6 per cent, only to have Brees take back the record in 2017 with a 72 per cent completion mark, and break it again last season by checking in at 74.4 per cent.

Anderson, now 70, is retired after 16 years as an NFL quarterbac­k (1971-86, all with Cincinnati) and 17 years as an NFL quarterbac­ks coach or offensive co-ordinator with Cincinnati, Jacksonvil­le and Pittsburgh.

Above the waist, there’s not a lot that can be done to make a passer more accurate, said one of the most accurate passers of his or any other generation.

“Either you can throw the football where you want it to go, or you can’t,” Anderson said. “It’s hard to make somebody who’s a 50 per cent passer into a 70 per cent passer with just coaching. So much of it is just natural ability.

“Regarding accuracy and throwing motion, you’re not going to change someone’s throwing motion, when he’s 21 or 22 years old and that’s what he’s done his whole life … I just wanted to make sure a prospect was athletic enough, because I could change his footwork. I was more concerned with arm strength and arm accuracy.”

Pro Football Hall of Famer

Fran Tarkenton said accuracy is an elite quarterbac­k’s most important asset.

“Everybody can throw, right? But the great quarterbac­ks, they are accurate,” said Tarkenton, now age 79. “I would start warming up with someone 20 yards away — and I would aim for his right earlobe, and then his left earlobe, and then I’d go for the right eyeball then the left eyeball. That’s how precise I made myself. So it’s all about accuracy and control.”

I passed along Tarkenton’s comments to Anderson, who was mentored in his first five seasons in Cincinnati by head coach Paul Brown and quarterbac­ks coach Bill Walsh, two of the most iconic coaches, and innovative minds, in league annals.

“I agree with what Fran was saying,” Anderson said. “In coaching quarterbac­ks, I found that a lot of accuracy was rooted in balance. It’s your footwork that gives you a chance to be accurate. (49ers legend) Steve Young once made the comment that, ‘If you film me just from the waist down, I can tell you whether I played well or not.’

“One thing that Bill Walsh told me, which I would always tell my quarterbac­ks as a coach, is that when you’re warming up, don’t just throw to throw. Pick out a spot, whether it’s the receiver’s head, or right shoulder or left shoulder. But be very specific about where you want the ball to go. It’s kind of like if you want to hit the bull’s-eye in darts, but warm up by just throwing it anywhere at the dart board. If you aim at somewhere specific, then your shot pattern tightens up. You’ve got to work on those things.”

It also helps to have the attitude Brees brings to the position.

“Listen,” Brees said following Monday night’s double record-setting performanc­e. “I go out there with the expectatio­n that the ball shouldn’t touch the ground, unless I’m throwing it away, or occasional­ly they’re going to make a play (defensivel­y). You have that expectatio­n. You work for that. You expect that.”

A reporter jokingly asked Brees about what happened on his one incompleti­on, as if he might be bugged about it.

Well, Brees was bugged by it. “I wanted to avoid a sack,” Brees explained apologetic­ally, and in earnest, “and just probably rushed the throw and didn’t really get that much balance, or momentum, toward the receiver. My bad. I should have completed that one.”

How much more accurate can Brees get?

At this point in history, it’s hard to envision any thrower ever improving on 96.67 per cent in a single game, or 75 per cent in a single season.

“I always kind of kidded him,” Anderson said, “because the time he broke my season record, he didn’t play in the last game, and I joked how that was the only reason. But after breaking the record again three other times after that, and maybe a fourth time this year, I figure he must be pretty good.”

I go out there with the expectatio­n that the ball shouldn’t touch the ground, unless I’m throwing it away . ... You work for that.

 ??  ?? Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees is on pace to record his sixth NFL season with a 70-plus completion percentage.
DERICK E. HINGLE/USA TODAY SPORTS
Saints quarterbac­k Drew Brees is on pace to record his sixth NFL season with a 70-plus completion percentage. DERICK E. HINGLE/USA TODAY SPORTS
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada