Miami Herald (Sunday)

Dolphins hope Tua can make Year 3 improvemen­t

- BY BARRY JACKSON bjackson@miamiheral­d.com Barry Jackson: 305-376-3491, @flasportsb­uzz

The Dolphins have told people they’re committed to quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa for the 2022 season — barring the new coach souring on him quickly — and this question thus becomes one of the most important to be answered next fall:

Will Tagovailoa evolve from a decent starter to very good starter if given a better supporting cast and a more skilled offensive coaching staff?

Here’s the good news: There’s ample evidence of quarterbac­ks making a significan­t jump in their third year as NFL starters, or even well beyond that. There are also several examples of quarterbac­ks regressing or not improving at all in Year 3, and yet neverthele­ss having good careers.

We studied 22 pretty good-to-very good quarterbac­ks from this century (18 still active), their third-year-as-a-starter performanc­e compared to their first two and whether that third year reflected what they became. Of those 22, Tagovailoa outperform­ed some of them in his first two years and wasn’t as good as others.

Here’s what we found, keeping in mind that we evaluated the players’ third year of starting half or more of their team’s games (not necessaril­y their third year in the league):

Ten of the 22 improved significan­tly from their second to third season as starters: Josh Allen, Drew Brees, Matt Ryan, Philip Rivers, Andrew Luck, Baker Mayfield, Ryan Tannehill, Deshaun Watson, Dak Prescott and Kyler Murray.

An 11th, Derek Carr, made a modest improvemen­t in Year 3. A 12th, Patrick Mahomes, was already very good and got a little better.

Allen, who had a 67.9 passer rating as a rookie, jumped from an 85.3 rating (20 TDs, 9 INTs) in year two as a starter to 107.2 (37, 10) in Year 3.

Brees rose from 76.9 and 67.5 ratings in his first two seasons as a starter to a 104.8 rating (27 TDs, 7 INTs) in Year 3.

Rivers jumped from 92.0 and 82.4 ratings in his first two years as a starter to 105.5 (34, 11) in Year 3.

Luck improved from 76.5 and 87.0 ratings in his first two seasons to 96.5 (40 TDs, 16 INTs) in Year 3.

Ryan went from 87.7 as a rookie down to 80.9 in year two to 91.0 (28, 9) in Year 3.

Mayfield, who had a 93.7 passer rating as a rookie starter, dropped to a 78.8 passer rating (22 TDs, 21 picks) in Year 2 as a starter but rose to 95.9 in Year 3 (26, 8) before sliding to 83.1 this season.

Tannehill jumped from 76.1 as a Dolphins rookie starter (12 TDs, 13 INTs) to 81.7 (24, 17) in year two to 92.8 (27, 12) in Year 3 with the Dolphins.

Murray improved from 87.4 as a rookie to 94.3 in his second season to 100.6 in Year 3. His passer ratings in his first two years were only modestly better than Tagovailoa’s. So it’s encouragin­g that Murray took another jump this season.

Of those 10 who made big jumps in their third season as a starter, the play of Brees, Rivers, Luck and Ryan were especially reflective of how their careers went from that point on. It looks like Allen and Prescott and Watson are on career trajectori­es similar to what they did in Year

3.

But Mayfield regressed this season, and Tannehill leveled off until he was traded to Tennessee, where a superior running game and offensive line helped him achieve his best two seasons.

So Brees, Rivers, Luck and Ryan — worse or similar to Tagovailoa in their first two seasons — offer the strongest historical data to suggest that Tagovailoa could still take another significan­t jump.

On the flip side, Rivers, Luck and Ryan are more physically talented than Tagovailoa, and Brees is one of the best quarterbac­ks in NFL history, though ESPN’s Dan Orlovsky has said he sees Brees in Tagovailoa if the Dolphins give him more help.

Four of these 22 quarterbac­ks had a significan­t statistica­l regression in Year 3. But that didn’t prove to be a bad harbinger for three of them (Matt Stafford, Ben Roethlisbe­rger and Carson Palmer). It’s too early to tell with Lamar Jackson, who went from a 113.3 rating in his first year as a starter to 99.3 in Year 2 to 87 in his just-completed Year 3.

Some quarterbac­ks take longer than three years, though I highly doubt Tagovailoa gets a fourth year if he’s mediocre next season.

After appearing in only one game as a rookie, Tom Brady was pretty good his first six seasons as a starter (ratings of 86.5, 85.7, 85.9, 92.6, 92.3, 87.9) before blossoming in Year 7 (2006), when he produced a 117.2 passer rating, with 50 touchdowns and eight intercepti­ons. Nobody is comparing Tua to Brady, but it does take more than three years for some to become their best versions of themselves.

Eli Manning, who started seven games in his first season, posted mediocre passer ratings in his first four seasons as a fulltime starter (75.9, 77, 73.9, 86.4) but rose to 93.1 (27 TDS, 14 INTs) in Year 5 as a starter.

The takeaways here: More than half of the 22 quarterbac­ks in our study improved in Year 3, most significan­tly so. So there’s evidence to suggest Tagovailoa can take another jump next season, especially if his offensive line, running game and receiver group are augmented.

Meanwhile, Pro Football Focus conducted its own study, attempting to project the futures of the 2020 draft class of quarterbac­ks, using its own per play grades and efficiency numbers. Its outlook for Tagovailoa wasn’t encouragin­g. PFF said: “The successful quarterbac­ks surroundin­g Tagovailoa are harder to find, with only the uber-talented Josh Allen and

Matt Stafford registerin­g a lower grade forecast through two seasons. Tagovailoa is more solidly in the middle of unsuccessf­ul quarterbac­ks, surrounded by Mark Sanchez, Colt McCoy, Tyler Thigpen and Trent Edwards.”

But Sanchez had a 69 passer rating through two years, McCoy 74, Thigpen 75 and Edwards 79. Tagovailoa has an 88.8 passer rating through two seasons (27 TDs, 15 INTs) and is much better than those four were.

We didn’t compare Tagovailoa’s career to 21st century busts because Tagovailoa has been much better than busts. But PFF factors in turnover-worthy plays (including dropped intercepti­ons) into their grades, which led to their more pessimisti­c outlook on Tua.

CHATTER

Something notable Brian Flores said in an NPR interview, regarding the Giants hiring

Brian Daboll instead of him: “I think there are back-channel conversati­ons that are had that oftentimes influence decisions. [The Giants hiring process] is a clear example of that. Bill Belichick is a clear example of that. It was clear to me that decision was made with his influence. That’s part of the problem. That needs to change.”

UM coach Mario Cristobal called tight end Jaleel Skinner and defensive end Cyrus Moss — two early enrollees — the “two best players at their positions in the country.” Cristobal watches them and thinks “My, oh, my. That’s what I know Miami to look like. Can run like the wind.” … Cristobal’s first UM class was rated 15th, higher than Mark Richt’s first class (22nd) or Al Golden’s (33rd). … One UM freshman (Anez Cooper) will play mostly offense (guard) but some defensive line, Cristobal said.

There will be a Shula in the Super Bowl: Rams linebacker­s coach Chris Shula, 35, who is the son of former Bengals coach

Dave Shula and the grandson of deceased Dolphins Hall of Fame coach Don Shula. Dave and family will attend the Feb. 13 Super Bowl in Los Angeles.

TNT’s Charles Barkley, who has often been critical of the Heat in the past, said last week that “Miami’s got the best team in the East.”

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa has an 88.8 passer rating through two seasons, and there’s evidence to suggest he can make a significan­t jump next season, especially with more weapons on offense.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Dolphins quarterbac­k Tua Tagovailoa has an 88.8 passer rating through two seasons, and there’s evidence to suggest he can make a significan­t jump next season, especially with more weapons on offense.
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