The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Debate on developing young quarterbac­ks

- By Dennis Waszak Jr. The Associated Press

Start them right away? Ease them in? Sit a whole season? When it comes to young NFL quarterbac­ks, there’s a debate about what’s best.

NEW YORK » Start them right away? Ease ‘em in? Have them sit a whole season?

When it comes to developing young quarterbac­ks in the NFL, it all depends on who you talk to.

Some teams think it’s best to throw rookie QBs into the fire to learn on the job. Others prefer to gradually work them into the offense. Some say it’s more beneficial to have them grab a cap and clipboard and take it all in from the sideline.

“I think every position is the same,” Jets offensive coordinato­r Jeremy Bates said. “If someone can’t handle it mentally, then you don’t want to put them on the field, because naturally they’ll play slower and be thinking instead of reacting.”

Sam Darnold clearly passed that test for New York, and the No. 3 overall pick in April was under center to start the season.

“If a player shows the athletic ability, the talent and has the mental capacity to handle a gameplan and go into a game and be successful,” Bates said, “then he’s ready to play.”

That doesn’t mean things have necessaril­y gone smoothly for the former USC star.

Darnold’s 14 intercepti­ons lead the league and have contribute­d to the Jets’ 3-6 start. So have his 55.0 percent completion rate and 68.3 quarterbac­k rating, which also rank among the worst in the league.

Still, some point to these early struggles as crucial building blocks for the future.

“I’m going to continue to learn,” Darnold said Sunday after a 13-6 loss at Miami in which he threw four INTs. “There’s always lessons to be learned.”

Of the 32 quarterbac­ks currently listed as starters for their teams, 12 were under center in Week 1 of their first season.

On the flipside, some veteran superstar QBs waited a while before they got their chances.

Aaron Rodgers was stuck behind Brett Favre in Green Bay before finally starting in his fourth season. Philip Rivers didn’t start with the Chargers until his third year, when Drew Brees went to New Orleans. Even Brees didn’t get his first NFL start until his second season.

Tom Brady, Eli Manning, Ben Roethlisbe­rger and Alex Smith weren’t Day 1 starters, either.

“In an ideal world, it gets to be like Drew, who had a chance to watch a little, or Tom Brady and Aaron,” said former quarterbac­k Rich Gannon.

Patrick Mahomes sat behind Smith in Kansas City until Week 17 as a rookie last year, and now is a leading MVP candidate as one of the NFL’s top gunslinger s with a league-leading 29 TD passes for the 8-1 Chiefs.

In the past three drafts, 11 quarterbac­ks were taken in the first round — including Darnold, the Browns’ Baker Mayfield, Buffalo’s Josh Allen, Arizona’s Josh Rosen and Baltimore’s Lamar Jackson this year.

Jackson is the only one to not yet start at least one game. Baltimore has Joe Flacco leading the huddle, but Jackson has still been used in the offense.

The Browns wanted to have Mayfield, the No. 1 overall pick this year, sit and learn behind Tyrod Taylor. But like most plans in Cleveland, it backfired.

Taylor got hurt in Week 3 and Mayfield was thrust into the lineup, helping the Browns beat the Jets.

 ?? JEFF HAYNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Browns coach Gregg Williams talks quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield before facing the Chiefs last week.
JEFF HAYNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Browns coach Gregg Williams talks quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield before facing the Chiefs last week.

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