Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Tua Tagovailoa a rarity these days: a lefty QB

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When Tua Tagovailoa signed his rookie contract with the Miami Dolphins, the left-handed quarterbac­k from Alabama didn’t have to worry about smudging his signature.

He signed the documents with his right hand.

Yes, the NFL’s latest lefty QB is a natural right-hander, one whose father, Galu, turned him into a (sometimes) southpaw in his youth.

“My dad was the only lefty in our family and he wanted me to be a lefty as well, so he switched the way I threw,” explained Tagovailoa, who still eats, writes and golfs right-handed but shoots baskets and throws footballs with his left.

“I don’t think I would be here if I was a righty,” said Tagovailoa. “Because I know I’m only good with my left hand throwing the ball.”

That makes Tagovailoa an oddity in the NFL, where a left-hander hasn’t started at quarterbac­k since 2015, when Dallas’ Kellen Moore threw for 435 yards in a Week 17 loss to Washington.

Since then, 116 quarterbac­ks have thrown a pass in the NFL, and all of them were right-handed.

The last lefty to throw a TD pass wasn’t even a quarterbac­k but a wide receiver: the Cowboys’ Dez Bryant threw a 25-yard strike to Jason Witten in 2016 against Detroit.

Fewer than three dozen southpaws have played quarterbac­k in the NFL’s 100-year history, something that irks Steve Young, the most decorated left-handed QB and the first to reach the Hall of Fame, 11 years before Ken Stabler’s posthumous induction in 2016.

“There’s something wrong from a statistica­l standpoint,” Young said, noting that with 10% of the general population being left-handed, every year there should be a half-dozen lefties among the league’s 64 or so quarterbac­ks.

“And we’ve never been 10%,” Young said. “I can never remember six of us at one time. It was Boomer Esiason, myself, Mark Brunell, Jim Zorn early on. I can think of four or five, never six at one time, ever. Later on, Michael Vick.”

Now, lefties are lucky there’s even one of them.

“I will never say a kid is left-handed so he can’t play in the National Football League,” Steelers GM Colbert said. “That would be a naive statement. That would never concern us whatsoever.”

Added 49ers coach Kyle Shanahan: “A good thrower is a good thrower. I would say it’s probably a coincidenc­e, probably less pool to choose from.”

The bias certainly doesn’t begin in the pros.

“I don’t follow all college teams, but I never see a lefty quarterbac­k,” Young said. “So, the NFL might say, ‘Hey don’t look at me. There’s no lefties coming out of college.’ Then, the colleges say, ‘Look, there’s no lefties coming out of high school.’ ”

Even the experts are stumped over what’s caused this paucity of southpaws.

“I really don’t know the answer,” shrugged Ravens GM Eric DeCosta.

“Quite honestly, I don’t know,” added Falcons GM Thomas Dimitroff.

“I usually have an answer or can dance around a lot of things,” Vikings GM Rick Spielman acknowledg­ed. “That one, I have no answer to.”

“I don’t have an answer,” either, added Broncos GM John Elway, who did offer a guess: he wonders if all the good lefty QBs are becoming pitchers instead.

“Those lefties that can throw heat are pretty coveted,” said Elway, himself a minor league farmhand (as a right-handed outfielder) in the Yankees system the summer before beginning his Hall of Fame NFL career.

“If I could be a left-handed pitcher and throw in the 90s and play major league baseball, that’s a pretty good gig,” Jaguars coach Doug Marrone said. “I don’t have anyone 300 pounds running at me trying to take me down.”

Young doesn’t blame baseball.

“I could never have been a major-league pitcher, I couldn’t have even been a college pitcher. But I could play quarterbac­k,” Young said. “A small percentage of quarterbac­ks can pitch in the major leagues. Or even pitch in college. Quarterbac­king and pitching don’t necessaril­y go hand in hand.”

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