Albany Times Union

Impressive debuts fuel hype around rookie QBS

Fields shines brightest, but Lawrence, Wilson impress

- By Rob Maaddi

Justin Fields outshined his fellow first-round quarterbac­ks in their preseason openers.

Trevor Lawrence, Zach Wilson, Trey Lance and Mac Jones also made a positive impression in their debuts. So did Jordan Love, who isn’t a rookie but didn’t take a snap last year.

A few series against backups, thirdstrin­gers and future practice squad guys won’t determine much about any young player, but a strong start is better than a poor one.

“We all want him to play really well,” Bears coach Matt Nagy said of Fields. “That’s a good thing for him to go out and play well.”

While fans and analysts will overhype preseason performanc­es, most coaches put more stock into practices than games, especially the joint sessions against other clubs.

Fields, the fourth QB selected in the NFL draft at No. 11 overall, was 14-of-20 for 142 yards in just over two quarters of action for Chicago against Miami’s reserves.

He made impressive throws outside the pocket and overcame a fumble during a scramble after a spin move.

The former Ohio State star had no problem adjusting to the game speed.

“It was actually kind of slow to me, to be honest,” Fields said.

It’ll get much faster, especially when the games count.

Nagy plans to start veteran Andy Dalton in Week 1 regardless of how well Fields performs in the preseason. Dalton is expected to take more snaps against Buffalo on Saturday.

“Justin understand­s the plan, he understand­s the process,” Nagy said.

But Nagy also wants to see Fields play against a starting defense.

“It can be good to see what he does against a first-team defense,” Nagy said. “It’s part of the evaluation process. There’s zero scheming going on in these preseason games.”

Lawrence, the No. 1 overall pick, got sacked and fumbled on his first play from scrimmage with Jacksonvil­le. He bounced back and completed 6 of 9 passes for 71 yards in two series.

Lawrence started over Gardner Minshew, but Jaguars rookie coach Urban Meyer hasn’t officially given him the job. Despite the appearance of an open competitio­n, Lawrence is expected to be behind center Week 1.

Wilson, the No. 2 overall pick, was 6-of-9 for 63 yards and led the New York Jets to a field goal in two series. Jets coach Robert Saleh plans to give him more reps against the Packers on Saturday and play him in the final preseason game next week.

“To me, he’s so far ahead with regards

to how he sees the game,” Saleh said Tuesday about Wilson’s progressio­n. “It’s not just, ‘What’s a formation, what’s my play call?’ He’s looking at the other side of the ball and he’s doing a really nice job and the results are changing but that can flip another time. His process has been consistent, and it’s been consistent­ly good. Hopefully, we can continue to build on it.”

Lance, selected No. 3 by San Francisco, made the biggest play of all the rookie QBS last week. He rolled to his left, stopped, set his feet and launched an 80-yard touchdown pass. Aside from a couple of dazzling plays, Lance was spotty. He finished 5-for-14, including three dropped passes, for 128 yards and was sacked four times.

The plan for the 49ers is to start Jimmy Garoppolo while Lance, who played just one full season at Fcslevel North Dakota State and only one game last season, adapts and learns.

 ?? Jonathan Daniel / Getty Images ?? Justin Fields of the Chicago Bears was 14-of-20 for 142 yards in just over two quarters of action for Chicago against the Miami Dolphin’s reserves.
Jonathan Daniel / Getty Images Justin Fields of the Chicago Bears was 14-of-20 for 142 yards in just over two quarters of action for Chicago against the Miami Dolphin’s reserves.

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