Chicago Sun-Times

SNAP DECISIONS

WE TAKE A LOOK AT HISTORY AS NAGY WEIGHS PRESENT VS. FUTURE WHILE MIXING AND MATCHING QBS DALTON AND FIELDS

- BY PATRICK FINLEY

The Bears’ decision to use rookie quarterbac­k Justin Fields for select plays in Week 1 intrigued the NFL — including one of the league’s most recent Hall of Fame coaches. “I think it’s the ideal situation, to be quite honest with you,” former Steelers coach Bill Cowher, an analyst for CBS’ ‘‘The NFL Today,’’ told the Chicago Sun-Times. “When you have a young quarterbac­k, not to throw him in there and throw everything at him. He’s sitting behind a veteran quarterbac­k in Andy Dalton. He sees how he prepares every week. And, more importantl­y, he sees the speed of the game that you can’t simulate in the preseason.”

When Ben Roethlisbe­rger made his first start in Week 3 and carried Cowher’s 2004 Steelers to 13 consecutiv­e regular-season victories, playing a rookie was considered novel. It has since become standard.

Between 2011 — when the collective-bargaining agreement establishe­d the modern rookie wage scale — and 2020, 12 of the 32 rookie quarterbac­ks taken in Round 1 started in Week 1, and 21 started within the first four weeks of their rookie year.

Fields is pointed that way, even if coach Matt Nagy won’t say so.

“Experience is the greatest thing you can have,” Cowher said. “The more they can continue to give him, the more comfortabl­e he’ll be.

“We all know that, at some point, this will be his team.”

As the Bears prepare to play Fields for a few more snaps Sunday against the Bengals, the Sun-Times talked to former coaches, coordinato­rs and players about the benefits and pitfalls and what to expect:

‘When time was right, he could take over’

See if this sounds familiar: The Bears draft a quarterbac­k in the first round, decide he’s not ready to start and instead play him a little each game.

The year was 1999. The rookie was Cade McNown, whom the Bears had taken 12th overall — one spot after Fields.

‘‘We thought that Cade could learn,” Gary Crowton, the Bears’ offensive coordi

‘‘There are only so many quarterbac­ks that are good enough to win. Probably not 32. So if you really have two on your team that can do that, you’re fortunate.’’

Bill Lazor

nator at the time, told the Sun-Times this week. “And when the time was right, he could take over.”

The Bears gave him the second or third drive of each game. The idea imploded in Week 5, when Shane Matthews pulled his right hamstring against the Vikings.

McNown was outplayed by veteran Jim Miller, went 1-8 the next season and never started again.

“We never had full access to the plan because of injuries,” Crowton said.

McNown’s pro career was disastrous. Much was his own doing. Thinking he was showing leadership, McNown once infamously yelled at running back Edgar Bennett, a 30-year-old former Super Bowl champion, after he mistakenly threw a flat route at the wrong depth in practice. He was trying to take charge but instead lost the respect of his teammates.

Having a mature quarterbac­ks room is critical to using two passers in the same game, said Matt Hasselbeck, the former quarterbac­k who co-hosts ESPN’s “Sunday NFL Countdown.” He knows from experience — he started all 16 games for the 2011 Titans, though rookie Jake Locker appeared in five of them.

The Titans cut the rookie’s playbook down to about 40% of the original. Maybe a third of that, Hasselbeck said, were plays the staff considered ideal for Locker.

“I think it’s a pretty good idea,” he said. “It’s not threatenin­g to the team — we’re all bringing our skill set to the table to try to go 1-0 this week.”

At the time, though, it was annoying. “It wasn’t my preference,” he said. “My entire career, I was used to getting every single rep of every single practice. But I understood . . . . I valued my role as the person who was there to help.”

The Bears won’t have that problem. Dalton, Fields and Nick Foles, he said, are good teammates

“Other teams,” he said, “don’t have the luxury the Bears have.”

‘A different time’

There never has been more pressure to get rookie quarterbac­ks ready. Teams that save by paying them rookie scale use that money on different positions.

Three of the five drafted in the first round this year started in Week 1. The 49ers couldn’t do that with Trey Lance — starter Jimmy Garoppolo is 23-8 as the starter — so they used Lance for four plays. While Fields ran for a three-yard touchdown, Lance threw a five-yard touchdown pass in Week 1.

“We’re in a different time,” NFL Network analyst Michael Irvin, a Hall of Fame wide receiver, said. “If you can get a quarterbac­k and get him on the field and get him playing well while he’s in that first contract, there’s a lot of things you can do in other areas . . . .

“You gotta get him on the field and try to get him ready.”

The Saints have used Taysom Hill as a run-first quarterbac­k. But few other NFL teams have tried to play two quarterbac­ks, much less to develop a rookie. The last time one regularly played its rookie quarterbac­k in special situations was three years ago, when Lamar Jackson came off the Ravens’ bench for eight games. He was then tabbed the starter, won six of seven games to make the playoffs and was named MVP a year later.

The parallels stop there, Hasselbeck said. The Ravens used him as a decoy, which didn’t help his developmen­t.

No one has done it since — until this year. “There are only so many quarterbac­ks that are good enough to win,” Bears offensive coordinato­r Bill Lazor said. “Probably not 32. So if you really have two on your team that can do that, you’re fortunate.” Or it’s the other way around. “There’s always two scenarios,” Crowton said. “You have two guys who you think are pretty good, and you’re not quite sure how they’re gonna react to the game. Or you have nobody — and you hope that somebody steps up.”

Seeing ghosts

Five-time Pro Bowl wide receiver Steve Smith, now an NFL Network analyst, likes the idea of putting a rookie quarterbac­k on a tangible small snap count. It’s “something you can coach up and improve,” he said. It’s a low-stakes bet, too.

“If you’re playing the entire game and you play bad, and you go play another entire game and you play bad, it really has a bad, negative effect on your confidence,” said Joe Thomas, the 10-time Pro Bowl offensive

tackle-turned-NFL Network analyst. “At the quarterbac­k position, all of a sudden, you do the Sam Darnold. You start seeing ghosts. It can really destroy a career.”

In October 2019, Darnold — then the Jets’ second-year quarterbac­k — was captured on “Monday Night Football” saying that he was “seeing ghosts.” At the time, the Jets’ second-year quarterbac­k was trailing the Patriots 24-0 and was on his way to his 12th loss in 16 career starts.

Darnold was the youngest Week 1 rookie quarterbac­k in modern history. A year and a half later, he was openly rattled on national TV. It was a franchise’s worst nightmare.

That won’t happen with quarterbac­ks on a limited snap count.

“If you give a guy a little taste — he’s getting five plays, he’s getting 10 plays — [and] if he screws up, you can easily on Monday morning go in there and say, ‘You played bad, but we won the game,’ ’’ Thomas said. “Or,

‘You didn’t do a great job, but we can make these correction­s and get you to play better.’

“You don’t destroy his confidence in five to 10 plays if he doesn’t do a good job.”

In his 11-year career with the Browns, Thomas watched his team start four failed quarterbac­ks as rookies: Colt McCoy, Brandon Weeden, Johnny Manziel and DeShone Kizer. Thomas developed a unified theory about young quarterbac­ks.

“I think if you have a quarterbac­k that can use his legs — whether he’s more a running quarterbac­k or a quarterbac­k that can escape or extend plays — those guys can play right away,” he said. “They don’t have to understand everything about a defense or everything about an offense to be efficient and to help your team succeed and win.” Fields can certainly extend plays. Traditiona­l drop-back passers, he said, have more to learn.

“If they’re not fully ready, if they’re getting

confused by defenses consistent­ly,” Thomas said, “all you’re gonna do is you’re gonna ruin them.”

NFL: Not For Long

Smith doesn’t think the Bears or 49ers will keep using their rookie quarterbac­k sparingly. Running back committees don’t work either, he said — eventually, teams stick with the one that’s in rhythm.

“With the quarterbac­k, the cadence is different, the mechanics are different, the reads are different,” he said. “You can’t keep making your offensive line, wide receivers, running back in the flow of the game go up and down.”

That’s the risk of playing Fields even a handful of downs: compromisi­ng his rhythm — and that of Dalton. Fields gives opposing teams something to prepare for, though, giving them less time to worry about other things.

“It gives that extra look and that extra dimension,”

Thomas said. “‘It’s easy for us, but it’s hard for them.’”

Those plays, he said, don’t adversely affect offensive rhythm. Timing is disrupted when teams “just want a spark” and bring in a backup with similar skills.

“The quarterbac­ks, the receivers, they lose their rhythm that they’re trying to get,” Thomas said. “They lose any ability to try to get on the same page. It just makes for a herky-jerky offense.”

Fields’ skill set, though, is different than Dalton’s, Hasselbeck said. And he’s the future of the franchise — whether that future is now or a few weeks away.

Until then, though, he’ll get his handful of snaps.

“The good thing about this situation is he’s running legitimate quarterbac­k plays that are already in their offense,” Hasselbeck said. “They didn’t just think this up this week.”

 ??  ??
 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Rookie quarterbac­k Justin Fields, who played five snaps against the Rams and had a three-yard touchdown run, likely will get some more snaps against the Bengals at Soldier Field.
JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES Rookie quarterbac­k Justin Fields, who played five snaps against the Rams and had a three-yard touchdown run, likely will get some more snaps against the Bengals at Soldier Field.
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 ?? JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Veteran Andy Dalton got most of the snaps against the Rams and went 27-for-38 for 206 yards and threw an intercepti­on in the Bears’ 34-14 loss.
JONATHAN DANIEL/GETTY IMAGES Veteran Andy Dalton got most of the snaps against the Rams and went 27-for-38 for 206 yards and threw an intercepti­on in the Bears’ 34-14 loss.
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 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/AP ?? Bears coach Matt Nagy anointed Andy Dalton the starter, but how long will he remain the No. 1 quarterbac­k with Justin Fields, who can extend plays with his mobility, waiting in the wings?
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/AP Bears coach Matt Nagy anointed Andy Dalton the starter, but how long will he remain the No. 1 quarterbac­k with Justin Fields, who can extend plays with his mobility, waiting in the wings?

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