Las Vegas Review-Journal

QBS take heat, but some are set up to fail

Buffalo among teams showing inability to plan

- By Barry Wilner The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Sometimes it’s not the quarterbac­k who has fallen apart. It’s the quarterbac­king situation that has gone wrong.

Fans and “experts” can scream all they want about Eli Manning, Blake Bortles and Derek Carr. The truth is, Manning likely isn’t washed up, Bortles should never be counted on as the go-to guy on offense, and Carr doesn’t seem to have the confidence of the old/new coach.

While the Patriots, Saints and Packers can relax knowing they have Hall of Fame-quality QBS, and the Steelers, Chargers and Seahawks have men behind center who could be in that company, a bunch of teams have predicamen­ts at the key offensive position. And it’s not necessaril­y the players involved who should be the targets of all the criticism.

Take Buffalo, for example. Bills faithful were so thrilled to see their team break that ridiculous­ly long playoff drought that they ignored or pushed aside the fact the Bills are not really talented. Well-coached for sure, but not brimming with stars.

Then management messed up the backup QB configurat­ion by acquiring, then getting rid of, AJ Mccarron after having traded away Tyrod Taylor, who helped get them to the postseason for the first time since the turn of the century. Sure, going after Josh Allen in the first round of the draft made sense. Sticking him in behind a depleted and under-skilled line and with no true No. 1 receiver does not.

What’s going on in Jacksonvil­le is another example of much of the blame being misplaced. No, Bortles has not earned his keep this season, but he’s been inconsiste­nt throughout his five-year pro career, and there was no reason to believe he’d become an All-pro.

That’s not what the Jaguars were looking for, anyway — though they would have taken it. They want to pound the ball with Leonard Fournette, but he’s been injured almost as often as he’s been healthy. And they wanted to rely on their defense, which has sprung leaks.

Bortles’ strength is as a complement­ary piece. When he has to be a focal point, he tends to flop.

Then there’s Manning, whose two Super Bowl rings should have earned him a lot more respect and leeway than New York fans or tabloids are willing to dole out. Manning hasn’t lost his grit, his intelligen­ce or his arm strength. What he’s lost is protection from an offensive line.

Manning also is in a new offensive system for the third time in four years. If that’s a problem for a veteran quarterbac­k — and it is — imagine how challengin­g it is for the relative kids.

Rich Gannon, the 2002 NFL MVP who spent much of his career mastering different schemes and now dissects them as one of the most insightful NFL TV analysts, points to system change as a culprit for poor quarterbac­k play in some cities.

“Different systems are the most dysfunctio­nal situation you can have,” Gannon said. “A guy like Alex Smith, look at what he went through with all the coordinato­rs in his first seven years in the league (in San Francisco). It’s crazy, and the player is never able to grow in a system. I think you see it with Mariota; Marcus is not able to grow with a system because of all those changes, and you are stunting their growth when you do it.”

Gannon also noted that playing novice quarterbac­ks so early often is a recipe for failure because of the practice limitation­s in the offseason and regular season. You can cram all kinds of stuff into their heads, and some playbooks stack high enough to use as Olympic diving boards.

“It’s all about reps, right? Repetition is the mother of learning,” he said. “These rookies aren’t getting the reps. …

“With Aaron Rodgers and Tom Brady and Drew Brees, they hear that play and the whole play comes to life in a split-second for them. Their eyes are always set on the defense, what are the coverages and alignment, where is the pressure? Because they know everything instantly about the play. For the rookie, it is several stages down the road before reaching that.”

 ?? Matt Dunham ?? The Associated Press Derek Carr is sacked by Seahawks defensive end Frank Clark in the Raiders’ loss Oct. 14 at Wembley Stadium in London.
Matt Dunham The Associated Press Derek Carr is sacked by Seahawks defensive end Frank Clark in the Raiders’ loss Oct. 14 at Wembley Stadium in London.

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