USA TODAY US Edition

FOR TOP 2, PRESSURE’S ON

Can Goff, Wentz handle blitz of QB expectatio­ns?

- Nancy Armour narmour@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

Jared Goff and Carson Wentz have no idea what they’re in for.

Oh, they say do, saying all the right things after the Los Angeles Rams and Philadelph­ia Eagles made them, respective­ly, the Nos. 1 and 2 picks in the NFL draft Thursday night.

“If you’re a first-round quarterbac­k, there’s going to be pressure regardless,” Goff said. “I’m very excited. Very ready to go, ready for the challenge.”

“You just block it out,” Wentz said a few minutes later. “You don’t let the pressure or expectatio­ns get to you. I block out all the noise. I’m confident that it will all work out as it’s supposed to.” If only it were that easy. The scrutiny on any top pick is immense, but it’s nothing compared to what Goff and Wentz are going to face. Goff will be the face of the NFL’s return to Los Angeles after a 22-year absence, and the hype surroundin­g him will be Kardashian-esque.

Every Rams sponsor is going to want a sizable piece of him, and he’d better get used to seeing his face everywhere because it’s going to be plastered on signs and billboards all over the city.

With the NFL version of the Taj Mahal opening in 2019, neither the Rams nor the league can afford for Goff to be anything less than a superstar, on and off the field.

As for Wentz, Eagles fans have

booed Santa Claus and pelted him with snowballs. Think they’re going to give a rookie quarterbac­k a grace period or spare his feelings, especially after the dysfunctio­n they’ve endured the last few years? No.

Then there’s the potential awkwardnes­s with Sam Bradford, himself a former No. 1 pick. Bradford thought he was Philadelph­ia’s quarterbac­k of the future, only to find out last week the Eagles see him as more of a stopgap.

Stepping into either of those scenarios would be tough for a Manning brother, Andrew Luck or Cam Newton. And, talented and personable as they are, Goff and Wentz are not in the same class as those guys.

Unlike last year, when Jameis Winston and Marcus Mariota were considered the best of all the players available, Goff and Wentz were projected as midfirst-rounders only a month ago.

But the Rams and Eagles are desperate, and desperate teams do silly things. Like mortgaging a big chunk of their future for guys for whom greatness is not assured. “I’m going to prove them right,” Goff said. “Let them know they made the right decision.”

Robert Griffin III, Johnny Manziel, Mark Sanchez, Blaine Gabbert and Tim Tebow said similar things, and look how well that worked out for everyone. Four years after the Washington Redskins traded up to take Griffin with the No. 2 pick, he’s with the Cleveland Browns, who needed a quarterbac­k because their gamble on Manziel two years ago failed. Miserably.

Sanchez is the Denver Broncos’ quarterbac­k-for-now, and Gabbert is riding the San Francisco 49ers’ bench. As a franchise quarterbac­k, Tebow makes a great TV analyst.

“Everyone talks about, ‘Can you handle the adjustment to city life?’ All that stuff. It’s just football,” Wentz said this week. “Don’t make it bigger than it needs to be.”

That’s the lie Goff and Wentz will have to tell themselves, but a lie it most definitely is.

Both are coming from programs that flew under the radar, Goff from California and Wentz from Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n North Dakota State. As bright a spotlight as they thought they were under, those were 60-watt bulbs compared to the NFL’s klieg lights.

Derek Carr, the No. 1 pick for the expansion Houston Texans in 2002, tried to explain that, publishing an open letter to Goff and Wentz this week.

“Here’s the cold, hard truth: Becoming a superstar overnight is a hard thing to deal with,” Carr wrote. “You’re going to be praised and criticized. Ignore both. Soaking in the praise will only lead to a possible slip in your mental or physical preparatio­n. In the same breath, focusing on negative criticism will hinder your play and ability to lead your team.”

It doesn’t matter how many times they hear that, though. Goff and Wentz are going to have to experience it for themselves.

Buckle up, fellas. The road ahead is a bumpy one.

 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Jared Goff, picked No. 1 overall by the Rams, said, “I’m very excited. ... Ready for the challenge.”
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I, USA TODAY SPORTS Jared Goff, picked No. 1 overall by the Rams, said, “I’m very excited. ... Ready for the challenge.”
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 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Carson Wentz poses with Commission­er Roger Goodell after being drafted No. 2.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I, USA TODAY SPORTS Carson Wentz poses with Commission­er Roger Goodell after being drafted No. 2.

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