The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Winston, Mariota hope backup stints revive them

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Jameis Winston and Marcus Mariota should be entering the primes of their careers right now.

The top two picks in the 2015 draft were expected to be the faces of the franchise in Tampa Bay and Tennessee, and the star quarterbac­ks.

Instead they are entering their sixth seasons in the NFL as backups in New Orleans and Las Vegas, with many questionin­g whether they can ever get back on the track they were expected to take when drafted.

“Can they get back? Of course,” said former NFL and UConn quarterbac­k and ESPN analyst Dan Orlovsky. “Will they get back is all about, to be honest with you, getting lucky. They have to get on the field. … Their stories aren’t written yet. But they need to continue to stay impatientl­y patient, meaning they have to keep on their grind and know or hope, fingers crossed, that that opportunit­y will present itself. And when it does, strike.”

Being cast aside by their original team is not usual for quarterbac­ks taken so high in the draft. Of the 27 QBs drafted in the top two before Winston and Mariota since the 1970 merger, 17 began their sixth season in the NFL on the same franchise they had been on for the entire careers, including John Elway and Eli Manning, who were traded during their drafts.

Four of those quarterbac­ks — Rick Norton, Ryan Leaf, Tim Couch and JaMarcus Russell — never played again after their fifth seasons.

Winston and Mariota join six others that changed teams, along with players like David Carr, Rick Mirer and Robert Griffin III, who never became consistent starters in their new homes, and others such as Jeff George and Sam Bradford that bounced around various spots.

The one success story in that group is Jim Plunkett, the No. 1 overall pick by New England in 1971, who revived his career with the Raiders in 1980.

Plunkett was mostly mediocre in his five seasons with the Patriots and found little success in two seasons with San Francisco. Then, after spending the 1979 season as a backup in Oakland, Plunkett regained the starting role midway through the next season — and led the Raiders to two Super Bowl title in four seasons.

Winston and Mariota now want to follow that path.

“I’d say the biggest thing for both of them right now is they can learn playing the position and learn playing the position at a high level without having the pressure of you have to go win us football games,” Orlovsky said. “I’ve said that for a long time. That is so hard on young quarterbac­ks: ‘Hey man. You’ve got to not only learn this playbook, but then you have to go execute on the field, and learn the defensive playbook and execute it against what they’re doing in three seconds — really well, 65 straight times. And also you have the pressure of winning the football game because if you don’t you’re going to get handled in the media and by the fans.’ That’s a lot to sink in.”

Winston is trying to resurrect his career in New Orleans, where he can learn from one of the game’s most respected offensive coaches in Sean Payton. And see firsthand how a proven passer like Drew Brees approaches everything from practice to how he dissects certain coverages.

Winston’s tenure in Tampa was up and down, with a three-game suspension in 2018 for allegedly making unwanted sexual advances on an Uber driver and his 30 intercepti­ons last season the low points.

But he also threw 33 TD passes and led the league with 5,109 yards passing last season, a sign that talent isn’t the issue when it comes to his career.

 ?? John Locher / Associated Press ?? Las Vegas Raiders quarterbac­k Marcus Mariota drops back for a pass during training camp Tuesday.
John Locher / Associated Press Las Vegas Raiders quarterbac­k Marcus Mariota drops back for a pass during training camp Tuesday.

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