The Reporter (Vacaville)

Carr winks to critics, he aims to be Brees 2.0

- By Jerry McDonald

The Las Vegas Raiders got everything they wanted out of Derek Carr in Week 1. He was efficient, avoided sacks and intercepti­ons and spread the ball to nine different receivers.

More than that, Carr was at one with coach Jon Gruden, operating as the CEO quarterbac­k and ball distributo­r the Raiders

head coach hasn’t had since Rich Gannon from 1999 through 2001.

In other words, Carr looked at least a little like Drew Brees, and that is no accident.

“We model a lot of what we do as quarterbac­ks based on what he does,” Carr said Wednesday in a Zoom interview. “He’d rather throw a completion than throw a 40-yard pass for an incompleti­on. And he has a Super Bowl ring, so he doesn’t care much about it. So I love his game. He keeps the ball moving. He’s efficient. They stay on schedule.”

Brees, meanwhile, looked almost mortal at age 41 in the

Saints’ 34-23 season-opening win against Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He was 18 of 30 for 160 yards. Brees threw a pair of touchdown passes, was sacked once and did not throw an intercepti­on.

It was a performanc­e that in Brees’ estimation was “awful,” as the Saints visit the Raiders Monday night in Allegiant Stadium.

It says something about the standard Brees has set when an 11-point win draws such harsh self-criticism, and it’s a level and style of play Carr has aspired to. His remark about Brees taking what he can get in terms of completion­s at the expense of throwing recklessly downfield was a not-so-thinly veiled jab at the Carr critics who remain convinced he’ll always come up short.

Carr was born seven years after Ken Stabler retired but was a fan because he’d heard stories from his father. Later, Carr wore No. 4 because of Brett Favre, the Green Bay “gunslinger” who like Stabler wasn’t averse to chances both in life and football.

Brees, the NFL’s all-time leader in most every passing statistic that matters, better fits what Carr wants to be at age 29 both on and off the field. In addition to

their passing preference­s, Brees, like Carr, is Christian and family oriented.

The union between Brees and coach Sean Payton almost didn’t happen. A free agent in 2006, Brees was coming off extensive shoulder surgery and was in talks with the Miami Dolphins. Miami instead signed Daunte Culpepper.

Brees signed with New Orleans, where Payton was a rookie head coach.

Brees and Payton have been together ever since, and in a football sense are like football’s longest running married couple, able to finish each other’s sentences in a football sense in a way Carr and Gruden are experienci­ng in Year 3.

The Saints will be without All-Pro wide receiver Michael Thomas, who set an NFL record last season with 149 receptions but is out indefinite­ly with a high ankle sprain. So Brees will adjust accordingl­y.

“My job is to put everybody in the best position to succeed,” Brees told reporters in New Orleans.

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