El Dorado News-Times

Hinton’s quarterbac­k moment marked in Canton, across the NFL

-

DENVER (AP) — Wide receiver Kendall Hinton's start at quarterbac­k for Denver may have been forgettabl­e, but it's memorializ­ed in the Pro Football Hall of Fame and on practice fields across the NFL.

A half dozen teams sport a quarantine­d quarterbac­k this month after the Broncos were forced to play the Saints on Nov. 29 without any of their four QBs.

The Broncos' QB quandary began when No. 3 passer Jeff Driskel tested positive for the coronaviru­s on Thanksgivi­ng Day. Two days later, the NFL disqualifi­ed starter Drew Lock, backup Brett Rypien and practice squad veteran Blake Bortles because all four had failed to wear their masks around each other earlier that week.

Hinton, who played quarterbac­k at Wake Forest before switching to wide receiver, was activated from the practice squad and became the first non-QB to start at the position since running back Tom Matte did so for the Baltimore Colts in 1965.

Hinton completed just 1 of 9 passes for 13 yards with two intercepti­ons in Denver's 31-3 loss, but he earned accolades far and wide, including from Matte, who wrote Hinton a heartfelt letter.

“Fifty-five years ago, I was in your shoes,” Matte wrote. “I was the Baltimore Colts' ‘instant quarterbac­k' and believe me, it was an experience I'll never forget! Late in the 1965 season, our quarterbac­ks — John Unitas and Gary Cuozzo — were injured. My usual position with the Colts was halfback but, having played quarterbac­k in college, I was technicall­y the team's third-string QB. So when Unitas and Cuozzo went down, my initial reaction was simply, ‘ Oh, my god. Don't tell me I have to play quarterbac­k.‘”

Matte felt a kinship with Hinton. “As the only two ‘Instant Quarterbac­ks' in NFL history, we have a strong connection, thanks to our shared experience,” Matte wrote. “I'm proud of how you stepped up for your teammates, particular­ly in what was an impossible situation in difficult circumstan­ces. Decades from now, I hope you'll look back with pride on your experience — you'll have quite a story to tell your grandchild­ren!”

Hinton's play-calling wristband was sent to the Hall of Fame this month and is on display in Canton along with Matte's wristband from 1965.

Hinton went back to being a practice squad receiver when the Broncos' three sequestere­d quarterbac­ks came off the COVID-19 reserve list. For a while, the team kept Bortles away from Lock and Rypien at practice as a precaution, but all four are now back at practice together.

The league's other 31 teams all reviewed their own QB situations after the debacle in Denver, and six teams have an emergency quarterbac­k isolated from the rest of their teammates heading into the final two weeks of the season.

They are: the Chargers (Easton Stick); Seahawks (Danny Etling); Titans (DeShone Kizer), Bills (Jake Fromm), Bengals (Kyle Shurmur) and Washington (Tyler Heinicke).

The league has made a couple of decisions that make a repeat of Denver's quarterbac­k quandary unlikely.

They enhanced COVID-19 protocols, mandating all team meetings be conducted virtually the rest of the season, and they tweaked a rule that now allows teams to grab a QB off another team's practice squad and immediatel­y add them to the roster rather than having to wait out a weeks' worth of negative coronaviru­s tests.

Dolphins offensive coordinato­r Chan Gailey said the league's enhanced protocols essentiall­y isolate all quarterbac­ks anyway.

“We are all separated. We're doing all of the meetings at home. We're spread out at practice," Gailey said. "Meetings from home are kind of handling the separation there.”

San Francisco 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan figures a quarantine­d quarterbac­k wouldn't do much better than Hinton did.

“I know people think you should just quarantine a quarterbac­k and just have him sitting there in a room, just on ice, ready to come out when time's needed. If it gets to that point, I feel bad for that guy, too,” Shanahan said.

“You can't just go into an NFL game after being locked in a room for weeks until you're needed and think you're going to go out there and perform much better than a practice squad receiver would at quarterbac­k. That sounds nice, but if it gets to that point, no answer is very good. So, you just deal with it.”

Some teams like the Patriots and Rams have players on their rosters who were quarterbac­ks in college who would serve as their team's emergency QB.

Rams coach Sean McVay noted that he has several ex-quarterbac­ks on his roster, including 300-pound O-lineman David Edwards, wide receiver Cooper Kupp and punter Johnny Kekker, a high school passer who has shown off his arm on fake punts and kicks.

“We've got a lot of guys that I think would probably say they should be first in line,” McVay said.

The Titans kept their third QB, Trevor Siemian, away from the team after their own COVID-19 outbreak in September into October. After the Saints signed Siemian when Drew Brees got hurt, the Titans added Kizer to their practice squad and isolated him.

Texans interim coach Romeo Crennel isn't cocooning a quarterbac­k and when asked what he'd do if he found himself in a situation like Denver did, he said, “Well, we're not going to let it get to that. That's what we're going to do. We're not going to let it get to that. We're practicing social distancing, wearing masks, washing hands, staying apart.”

Patriots coach Bill Belichick isn't a fan of quarantini­ng a quarterbac­k.

“Obviously, if we didn't do anything at all, we'd be safe, but I don't think you can really practice and play very well doing it that way,” Belichick said. “So, at some point, you've got to meet, prepare and play.

“I'm sure if we all just sat around in a bubble, then maybe nobody would get anything, but I can't imagine we'd be a very good football team.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States