Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

What might’ve been

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It’s been almost 30 years since University of Arkansas assistant basketball coach Corey Williams was drafted as a cornerback by the Kansas City Chiefs.

Sam Howell has been a quarterbac­k since first grade.

His father told him then that to play the position he needed to be the leader of the team, and that more would be expected of him than other players, both on the field and off.

Howell, coming off a record-breaking freshman season at North Carolina, has come to think of quarterbac­k as a lifestyle.

“I know everyone’s looking at me,” Howell said.

Evaluating and projecting quarterbac­ks at any level is probably the most challengin­g part of building a football team. More so than any other position, what makes a quarterbac­k successful is almost impossible to measure or quantify — that mysterious and ill-defined “It Factor.”

“I don’t think there is a science to it,” said Ohio State Coach Ryan Day, who previously spent two seasons as a quarterbac­k coach in the NFL under Chip Kelly. “If there was, I think it would be a lot easier for everybody. I think in 2020 they wouldn’t still be asking what it means.”

Joe Burrow, Tua Tagovailoa and Justin Herbert lead the next batch of quarterbac­ks set to enter the NFL. They are the consensus top three QBs available in this week’s draft, all with a chance to be selected Thursday night within the first 10 picks.

Their prodigious skills, prolific production and impressive athleticis­m are obvious, as are their few physical shortcomin­gs. The rest? Well, there is a reason why they are called intangible­s.

In the era of personal quarterbac­k coaches, 7-on-7 summer leagues and scholarshi­p “offers” to eighth graders, the holistic developmen­t of quarterbac­ks begins early.

David Morris is the founder of QB Country and bestknown for a college career spent as Eli Manning’s backup at Mississipp­i. He works with all ages and talent levels of quarterbac­ks, from tweens aspiring to start for the JV team to Daniel Jones, who was selected No. 6 overall by the New York Giants last season.

For Morris, there are two aspects to the so-called intangible­s.

One is mental capacity: The ability to learn and process football. That can show itself on the whiteboard or film room, breaking down plays and defenses. The hope is that transfers to the field, but not always.

Then there are the players whose mastery of the subject matter doesn’t really shine through until they get between the lines.

For Morris, it’s the difference between book smart and street smart. Both can be successful and most good players have at least some of each. There are readily available ways to identify and develop a player’s mental capacity, though projecting its growth potential can be trickier.

The second intangible is more about personalit­y and how it relates to leadership. One way or another, a quarterbac­k has to be a team leader, whether he is gregarious or reticent, laid back or intense. Some quarterbac­ks will pick a teammate up with an optimistic “atta boy.” Others get a point across more sternly.

“I’ve seen that many different personalit­ies can get it done,” Morris said. “And so whether he is vocal or dynamic or alpha or more reserved, is he a leader? How does he lead? And then is he confident in his leadership style?”

Confidence is a word that comes up a lot when it comes to elite athletes of all kinds. With quarterbac­ks, it is especially important because the position comes with such a harsh and unrelentin­g spotlight. “You willingly chose to play the most scrutinize­d position in all of organized athletics,” is a line in the quarterbac­k handbook Oregon offensive coordinato­r Joe Moorhead gives to his signal-callers.

Moorhead said quarterbac­ks “should teeter on the bridge of confidence and cockiness.”

Craig Young wasn’t necessaril­y looking to develop his son into an elite quarterbac­k when he identified confidence as the most important trait he could instill in Bryce, a five-star recruit who is now a freshman at Alabama.

“Not like this fake confidence,” said Craig Young, who has worked as a mental health profession­al in southern California for about two decades. “But how do you build an intrinsic feeling of confidence that I know that I can do this?”

Craig Young crafted a plan for building confidence though preparatio­n and supplement­ed by positive selftalk, such as mantras, sayings and slogans.

“And then the other one was really visualizat­ion. Visualizin­g yourself being successful,” Craig Young said.

Bryce Young competed against the best quarterbac­ks in the country at various camps during his high school career, including the prestigiou­s Elite 11.

Craig Young said the physical difference between players at that level is small. What separates them are those intangible­s.

“And I can see it,” Craig Young said. “I can see the ability to lead. I can see the personalit­y. I can see the ability to process. Not just Xs and Os, but process the situation and understand what that situation needs. How do you interact with the wide receivers? How are you running the drills? Are you running the drills? How are your teammates responding to you? How is everybody else in that camp responding to you?”

At Elite 11, former NFL quarterbac­k Trent Dilfer and his group of instructor­s are trying to turn the art of evaluating quarterbac­ks into more of a science.

The documentar­y series on the 2016 Elite 11 competitio­n was titled Welcome to the It Factory.

“I believe it’s the most overused and undefined phrase, in sports” Pac-12 analyst and Elite 11 coach Yogi Roth said.

Roth and the Elite 11 crew tried to change that.

“Where we netted out was that the ‘It Factor’ comes down to two things: When you walk into a room, do people feel your presence and do you make them better?” Roth said.

Tagovailoa was the MVP of the 2016 Elite 11.

Roth and company have advanced to trying to assess and develop in their quarterbac­ks emotional intelligen­ce, the ability to control their emotions and recognize and empathize with the emotions of others.

Elite 11 has also incorporat­ed cognitive testing,, in which they try to measure how each quarterbac­k’s brain is wired for memory, recognitio­n and learning.

Still, there is no test or formula that can reliably identify which quarterbac­ks have “it.”

“There’s got to be a little bit of gut feel to it, too,” Oklahoma Coach Lincoln Riley said. “Because kids come from different background­s. These guys are raised in different parts of the country, in different homes, with different family situations. Different situations at school, different kinds of leadership in their life. And so some of it’s evaluating where they’re at now and some of it’s predicting as best you can where you think they’re headed.”

 ??  ?? Justin Herbert was a successful quarterbac­k at Oregon, but his success in the NFL could largely depend on an immeasurab­le quality. (AP file photo)
Justin Herbert was a successful quarterbac­k at Oregon, but his success in the NFL could largely depend on an immeasurab­le quality. (AP file photo)

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