Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Study skills key for Herbert

Second-year QB may thrive in new offense

- By Gilbert Manzano gmanzano@scng.com @gmanzano24 on Twitter

Nate Gilliam and Gabe Nabers had an awkward situation when Justin Herbert asked what they planned to do for housing during their rookie season with the Chargers.

Gilliam and Nabers already had plans to live together. They didn’t expect the prized first-round rookie quarterbac­k to be interested in being anyone’s roommate.

“I think we found a place,” Gilliam recalled telling Herbert when he revealed his plans with Nabers.

Herbert’s response, according to Gilliam: “Oh, so you don’t want to live with me?”

Gilliam and Nabers didn’t mind making room for one more because they had become close with Herbert during training camp. They played video games, board games and ate together while staying at the team hotel.

“We didn’t know that was an option,” Gilliam, an offensive lineman on the Chargers’ practice squad, said about living with Herbert. “We just didn’t know that was actually going to come together. I think we went to dinner and we talked it over then.”

The three rookies moved into a place near the team’s facility in Costa Mesa and added to their teammate bonding activities by hosting a feast on the days following wins last season. The roommates cooked a “victory brisket” for the main course.

“He won’t take credit for it, but he’s like the head of the operation when it comes to cooking the meat,” Nabers, a fullback, said of Herbert. “I’m like the sous chef and sides guy. I’m the ultimate sides guy.”

The college-like atmosphere helped Herbert stay

centered while dealing with the rigorous demands of being a starting quarterbac­k in the NFL. But Gilliam and Nabers quickly learned that any roommate activities needed to be planned for early in the week.

The closer it got to game days, the more time Herbert spent in his downstairs office analyzing film and preparing for that week’s opponent.

“We’d get home, and he’d be in his own zone,” Nabers said. “Me and Nate would have our own things that we do, and I’d be in my room watching film. … But Justin would always be downstairs in his office watching film.”

Occasional­ly, Gilliam knocked on Herbert’s door and asked if he could pick his brain on what he’s seeing on film.

“With that guy, you have to give him space,” Gilliam said. “Let him focus. Let him do his own thing. You can chime in. He’s not going to be standoffis­h. … But with those kinds of people, I feel like they just see it quicker than others in the sense that they see the big picture.

“For him, he sees the coverages. He sees certain things a different way. … He just picked it up a little bit quicker than the normal person.”

That meticulous preparatio­n is why Herbert had instant success when he was thrust into the starter’s role in Week 2 last season without getting any first-team snaps in training camp. His ability to quickly process how defenses are attacking him helped him sustain that success and deliver a record-setting rookie season.

But Herbert, 23, is starting from scratch for his second season with a new coaching staff and another scheme to learn.

He won’t catch the Washington Football Team by surprise in the season opener today at FedExField. All of the Chargers’ 2021 opponents have a year’s worth of film on the strong-armed quarterbac­k.

Risk for rewards

Herbert broke several NFL rookie records and earned Offensive Rookie of the Year honors under the guidance of former head coach Anthony Lynn and his staff.

The Chargers fired Lynn after Herbert’s memorable rookie year because the team had back-to-back losing seasons and the front office didn’t view Lynn and his staff as innovative enough.

By hiring a new coaching staff, the Chargers risked disrupting Herbert’s comfort zone.

But that was likely never a significan­t concern for Chargers ownership and GM Tom Telesco after they witnessed what Herbert was able to do without an offseason program during the pandemic and without any starter’s reps before being notified just before kickoff that he would make his debut against the defending Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs in Week 2.

A revolving door at offensive coordinato­r has derailed the careers of many promising quarterbac­ks, but learning a new system hasn’t been an issue for Herbert.

“That’s a skill,” Nabers said, “being able to drop some informatio­n and just fully let the new informatio­n flood your brain. That’s a skill. I think that’s something (Herbert’s) been pretty good at.”

Herbert is in the process of learning his fifth offensive system in the past six seasons. He had three head coaches in four seasons at the University of Oregon and is now with his second NFL head coach.

Herbert, a three-time Academic All-American at Oregon, credited his study habits for being able to transition to different offensive systems.

“I think it goes back to school and having good study habits,” said Herbert, a biology major who had a 4.01 cumulative grade-point average in college. “Being able to try and pick things up quickly, you have to work hard. You have to put the work in to get it figured out.”

Disrupting Herbert’s comfort zone after his historic rookie season was likely worth the risk for the Chargers because of his proven study habits and his new teachers.

The well-prepared Herbert is now working with Chargers coach Brandon Staley, a defensive mastermind with a knack for being ahead of trends, and offensive coordinato­r Joe Lombardi, who has extensive knowledge of the New Orleans Saints’ offensive system, one of the most successful schemes in the league over the past 15 years.

Lombardi, Staley, quarterbac­ks coach Shane Day and offensive line coach Frank Smith spent the offseason program and training camp building off the Saints’ scheme as a foundation and tweaking it to fit Herbert’s strengths.

Lombardi spent 12 of the past 14 seasons as a Saints assistant coach. He was the quarterbac­ks coach for 10 of those years and got to coach Drew Brees, Teddy Bridgewate­r, Taysom Hill, Jameis Winston and Chase Daniel, who is now a backup quarterbac­k with the Chargers.

“It’s a very sophistica­ted offense, but the foundation is the same,” Daniel said about comparing the Chargers’ and Saints’ schemes. “We’re going to do stuff that Justin might do better than Drew Brees and vice versa. What Joe does is fit the offense to the quarterbac­k. He got spoiled for so long being with Drew for 12 years. But this No. 10 of ours is special. He can throw just about every ball on the football field.”

The complex scheme and rotating personnel groupings at a rapid pace might be the toughest system Herbert has ever been asked to grasp, but he’s embraced the challenge.

“It’s never easy and I wouldn’t really want it any other way,” Herbert said. “It’s obviously a tough scheme that we have to learn, but all of the guys here, they put in a lot of effort. I think it’s been going pretty well so far.”

‘Everybody gets love’

Chargers wide receiver Keenan Allen was in the process of explaining what makes this offensive system different from others when he realized Nabers was being featured in this offense.

“We got different personnel groupings,” Allen explained. “Gabe’s getting catches out there. … Obviously, that’s Herb’s guy. He’s getting catches on hitch routes. That’s a fullback, by the way.”

Allen doesn’t want to lose targets to a fullback, but he understand­s the more other players contribute, the better it’s going to be for him and Herbert in the long run.

“Everybody gets love in the offense and that’s good because, obviously, I get doubled a lot,” said Allen, a four-time Pro Bowl receiver. “Mike (Williams) gets doubled

sometimes in the red zone. Jared (Cook) will get doubled in the red zone. (Austin Ekeler) gets doubled sometimes, so if everybody is getting the ball, it’s hard to pick who to double, so it’ll open up some matchups.”

Nabers is Herbert’s guy, as Allen mentioned, but they’re no longer roommates. All three moved into their own homes for their second NFL season.

Nabers and Gilliam won’t have to worry about disrupting Herbert’s “locked in” film sessions. Herbert has a new home office.

Herbert has gotten his teammates in the right places and has executed the fast-paced offense smoothly in practices, say his teammates.

“We’re going to utilize his big arm,” Lombardi said about taking downfield shots. “We’re keeping the defense on their heels, especially when a new personnel group comes in while you’re in the huddle. By the time they figure out who’s in the huddle, they’re trying to get their call in. We’ll already be breaking and then the ball snaps. It gives (opposing defenses) less time to think, the faster you can change personnel groups.

“They’re always looking for tendencies. Like when we’re in this personnel grouping, this is the call we like to make. The less time you give them to think about it, the better.”

Nabers expects the Chargers to have a variety of groupings, including multiple tight ends on the field.

“Any offensive coordinato­r is going to want to utilize Keenan, but a lot of our schemes last year were to try to get him and some of our main dominant playmakers the ball, which you always want to do, but I think the difference in this offense is this offense is trying to highlight where you’re weak,” Nabers said. “So week-to-week we’re going to try to find where is the weak point in a defense?

“And we have weapons at every spot . ... There’s definitely different ways to get everybody the ball. It’s not an offense where you’re asleep on some plays. ‘I know I’m not getting the ball.’ If you have that mindset then you’re going to get hit in the back of the head with a ball because you never know when it’s coming.”

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