Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Kizer could flourish with Packers

- Ryan Wood

GREEN BAY — DeShone Kizer scrambled from the pocket, buying time. There were less than two minutes left in the Cleveland Browns’ season, a winless record looming. Trailing Pittsburgh, 28-24, they were driving inside Heinz Field, approachin­g the red zone.

On fourth-and-2, Kizer shed a Steelers pass rusher and spotted receiver Corey Coleman all alone at the 10-yard line. Kizer tossed a perfect pass, his last for the Browns. It hit Coleman’s hands and should have led to the Browns’ first win of the season.

Coleman dropped it.

Game over. The Browns finished 0-16.

Kizer took another loss.

His personal record last season: 0-15.

Mike Sanford watched the game on television. Now at Western Kentucky, Sanford coached Kizer for two seasons at Notre Dame. Last season’s finale, Sanford said, was the only game he saw Kizer play for the Browns.

“The Steelers game really showed his mettle,” Sanford said. “How he handled it, how he handled the adversity. It was the last week of the season, a lot on the line, being one of the first ever to go 0-16 in the NFL. I thought he played beautifull­y, quite frankly.”

Indeed, Kizer finished with a seasonhigh 314 yards, averaging 10.47 yards on 30 passes. He had two touchdowns and a season-high 98.5 passer rating. He was not perfect. Kizer threw a fourth-quarter intercepti­on and completed only 53% of his passes.

He also wasn’t the reason Cleveland lost.

Didn’t matter. After the game, Kizer accepted responsibi­lity for a historical­ly fruitless season.

“I’m a winless quarterbac­k in this league,” Kizer said, according to the Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Ultimately, the Browns traded Kizer to the Green Bay Packers this month because they determined they couldn’t win

with him as their quarterbac­k.

They had ample evidence supporting their conclusion. Kizer led the NFL with 22 intercepti­ons, becoming one of four quarterbac­ks to start at least half their team’s games and throw more intercepti­ons than touchdowns (Brett Hundley was also in that group). Kizer’s 60.5 passer rating ranked last in the league, 10 points worse than Hundley’s 70.6. His 53.6 completion percentage also ranked last, worse than Hundley’s 60.8.

By season’s end, Browns coach Hue Jackson publicly questioned whether Kizer ever would figure out how to be an NFL quarterbac­k.

Still, Kizer said he was “very surprised” to be traded.

“Going through this off-season (I was) trying to develop as much as I can, and learn from everything that I went through last year in Cleveland, and was trying to prepare myself to go back and become a better quarterbac­k and get to winning in Cleveland,” Kizer said Friday. “When stuff like this happens, you really can’t be prepared for it.”

It’s fair to ask whether any rookie quarterbac­k could have thrived in Cleveland, a franchise so unstable it’s had seven general managers, six head coaches and no winning seasons in the past decade.

The odds were especially stacked against Kizer. He entered the NFL after just two college seasons.

One scout who has studied Kizer believes he has the potential to develop into an NFL starter, though he didn’t play like one last season. The scout referenced Kizer’s size at 6-4, 234 pounds, and also his big arm. Despite running a 4.83 40 at the combine, Kizer showed he was mobile last season with 419 rushing yards.

A self-described geek and nerd, Kizer also entered the NFL equipped with a vast understand­ing of pro-style schemes.

“He’s like a supercompu­ter of defensive and offensive recognitio­n, and understand­ing how structures of offense and defense work together, how to get in the right play,” Sanford said. “In terms of protection­s, managing the run game at Notre Dame, he was pretty much the maestro at the line of scrimmage and did as good of a job as I’ve ever been around.”

Sanford believes Kizer would have benefited from another year at Notre Dame. He wasn’t ready to play immediatel­y in the NFL. Instead, he started Week 1.

Kizer took the losing especially hard. After a Christmas Eve loss to the Chicago Bears, according to the Plain Dealer, Kizer called his rookie year “one of the most difficult moments of my life.” He recognized the historical flop that was Cleveland’s 2017 season, and his role in it.

With three months to decompress, Kizer was more measured Friday when reflecting on last season.

“If it does anything,” Kizer said, “it adds motivation and gives me something to have a base in this league. Not a lot of guys get an opportunit­y to go out and start 15 games in their first season. I know how the bullets fly now. I’ve been able to create my own process. I’ve learned how to evaluate a defense and go out there and play with the bullets flying. I think that’s awesome for a young quarterbac­k.

“I think now is an experience to take a step back and re-evaluate that process, and figure out where the issues were in my game.”

If the Browns traded Kizer because they didn’t believe he could win, the Packers requested him because they determined he could.

Green Bay’s interest in Kizer wasn’t new. He said there was “a little bit of contact” with the Packers before last year’s draft. After falling out of the first round, Kizer regrouped and tried to prepare for what the second day might bring. The Packers had the first pick, and Kizer thought they might use it to draft him.

“We learned that they thought very highly of me and felt that could be a landing place for me,” Kizer said.

The Packers didn’t draft Kizer at No. 33 overall, instead selecting cornerback Kevin King. By the time they were on the clock for a second time in the

round, Kizer was already drafted.

Kizer also has supporters within the Packers coaching staff. Joe Philbin, back as the Packers’ offensive coordinato­r, sat in on a Notre Dame quarterbac­ks meeting when Kizer was with the program. Watching film, Sanford said he remembers Philbin being especially impressed with an off-balance throw.

“He said, ‘There’s very few in the league that can make that play,’ ” Sanford remembers. “It was a throw under duress, one of those Aaron Rodgerstyp­e arm throws off a complete, awkward body position. He was able to generate enough force on it.”

Familiar with the Packers’ offense, Sanford can see what drew them to Kizer. Coach Mike McCarthy runs West Coast principles, but his passing game pushes the football vertically more than a traditiona­l West Coast offense. Sanford said Kizer’s intellect will fit in well with McCarthy’s system, helping recognize blitzes and dictate coverages before the snap. He knows Kizer has the arm strength to throw downfield, something Hundley rarely showed last season.

None of it means Kizer will have a long NFL career. There were plenty of warts last season, most troubling turnovers. He must also become a more accurate passer. This spring, Kizer said, he’s working in California with quarterbac­k guru Tom House, refining his throwing motion.

“I think I found my stroke,” Kizer said. “I feel like I’m throwing the ball the best I’ve ever thrown it right now.”

The scout who believes Kizer has tools to develop into an NFL starter also mentioned his inability to win. In Kizer’s final college season, Notre Dame finished 4-8.

Kizer’s struggles in key moments followed him into the NFL. He led the league with six red-zone intercepti­ons last season, double Hundley’s three. Inside the 20-yard line, he completed just 31.82% of his passes. When the Packers traveled to Cleveland in December, Kizer’s overtime intercepti­on to fellow safety Josh Jones led to the Packers’ win.

But Sanford believes it’s premature to write off his former pupil. Most important, he said, is for Kizer to find the right situation. Cleveland clearly wasn’t it. If he beats Hundley for the backup job, Kizer could have three years to learn behind Aaron Rodgers, resetting his career.

“The situation that he went into (in Cleveland),” Sanford said, “I think DeShone will actually be OK from that.

“I think he’s a guy who, when he just gets into that right situation, he’s going to completely flourish and blossom. Somebody’s going to have a highlyathl­etic quarterbac­k who can push the ball vertically downfield and happens to be very intellectu­al for his position.”

 ??  ?? Kizer
Kizer
 ?? SCOTT GALVIN / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Quarterbac­k DeShone Kizer’s 60.5 passer rating ranked last in the National Football League.
SCOTT GALVIN / USA TODAY SPORTS Quarterbac­k DeShone Kizer’s 60.5 passer rating ranked last in the National Football League.

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