USA TODAY International Edition

Fields’ uncanny recall bears watching

- Jori Epstein

AUSTIN, Texas – Justin Fields cycles through his throwing session, moving swiftly through off- platform throws and cross- body heaves while clicking through a mental checklist.

Keep eyes in the right place. Weight back. Maintain consistenc­y across throws regardless of the direction, distance and situation.

The Bears rookie quarterbac­k is training with fellow clients of NFL agent David Mulugheta at a Central Texas high school field house, Fields tuned in for veteran tips from Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson and Green Bay’s Jordan Love beside him.

The workout, guided by private quarterbac­ks coach Quincy Avery, aims to ensure each player’s mechanics are crisp when he reports to training camp this month.

But Fields’ athleticis­m and dualthreat capabiliti­es are far from the only strengths the 11th overall selection of the 2021 draft aims to deliver to Chicago.

Fields’ intellect – and, more specifically, a keen memory with a knack for processing play calls – should excite Chicago’s offensive staff, Avery says. He rebukes any remnants of a predraft narrative questionin­g Fields’ demonstrat­ed proficiency in processing.

“His ability to transpose things and flip them in his mind, like the mental rotation? Not a lot of people have that,” Avery, who has worked with Fields since the quarterbac­k was in ninth grade, told USA TODAY Sports. “That’s going to give his coaches a distinct advantage as they want to expand the playbook.

“If someone says he can’t grasp the offense, that’s probably one of the most false things I’ve ever heard about Justin. His memory, and it’s not just me saying that: We’ve tested those things, and Justin’s memory is off the charts.”

The assertion, sports psychologi­st Scott Goldman says, isn’t grossly hyperbolic.

Fields was one of 387 NFL prospects this year who took the Athletic Intelligen­ce Quotient ( AIQ) test Goldman cocreated. The test’s aim: capture a player’s intellectu­al capacity in areas including learning efficiency, visual- spatial processing, decision- making and reaction time. In the 16- question learning efficiency section – think: 16 paired concepts that athletes needed to absorb and then reiterate – Fields identified all 16 responses correctly, Goldman confirmed to USA TODAY Sports.

Of 125 profession­al quarterbac­ks who have tested ( not all are currently on active rosters) in the last decade, only four other quarterbac­ks hit all 16. Goldman said Fields’ results mark an outlier among 6,500 total profession­al athletes whose ability to download and recall he has gauged.

“It happens less than 1% of the time. It’s super rare,” Goldman said Wednesday night by phone. “What it means is we actually didn’t capture his ceiling. We don’t know, ( given) he got 16 out of 16 right, is it possible he could have gotten 20 out of 20? 25? 30?”

Goldman is careful to note: He and colleagues intend their mental analytics tool to be descriptiv­e, not predictive. But the descriptor of Fields’ ability to process should aid his transition from running Ohio State’s offense with sideline play cues to processing Bears calls through a headset and then efficiently delivering instructio­ns to teammates in real time.

Fields has immersed himself in the study of the Bears playbook since early May, the 22- year- old comfortabl­e spouting off calls a dozen words long with the same ease in which he acknowledg­es the latest Twitter buzz. Fields has taken to reciting play- call scripts aloud at home and on the sideline of Bears practices, initially seeking to memorize head coach Matt Nagy’s playbook before he gradually integrated a deeper understand­ing of concepts.

“Shifts, formations, protection­s,” Fields told USA TODAY Sports of how he organizes the intricacie­s in his head. “You’ve kind of just got to break that play down, picture it out and picture the play before you say it.

“Now since I know it, I actually can see the play before I call it, and it’s easier.”

Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, who entered the league in 2017 when Nagy was Kansas City’s offensive coordinato­r, relates. As a rookie, Mahomes devised mental techniques to learn “super long” play calls, he said.

“I remember saying the plays into a little voice recording and then playing it back to myself,” Mahomes told USA TODAY Sports by phone last Tuesday. “I remember me and my girlfriend at the time – now my fiancée – I’d get her to look at the plays, and I’d read them out like I was talking in the huddle. There’s all different techniques. I’d write ’ em down a million times until I was finally comfortabl­e to say them on Sundays.”

But as Mahomes’ familiarit­y grew, so too did his appreciati­on of their precision. Every player on the field will receive clear instructio­ns on their role and location, Mahomes said. Quarterbac­k comprehens­ion will overtake any delay.

“Once you’re comfortabl­e enough to say it, it’s kind of like a machine to get it out,” Mahomes said. “Guys know where to go. You can get out there and play fast when you’re on the field.”

Fields covets that fluidity.

He’s realistic about the situation into which he was drafted, less anxious to start immediatel­y than he is to earn longevity in the league.

And Fields is eager to rebrand a Bears franchise known for its defensive prowess. Chicago’s offense has ranked in the top half of the league just twice in the last 12 seasons, while the team’s defense has met that mark eight times during that stretch – including each of the last six years.

“We’re trying to change the culture of the Bears offense,” Fields said. “The Bears’ story has been the defense for I don’t know how long. So we’re trying to get some firepower on the offensive side of the ball.”

Sure, that firepower will include the athleticis­m that propelled Fields to amass 6,240 yards and 78 touchdowns from scrimmage in two seasons at Ohio State.

But Fields is also eager to display the intellectu­al firepower that limited his gaffes to a mere nine intercepti­ons in that stretch – to show his knack for cycling through his reads and extending plays in ways the Buckeyes might not have requested from him.

Nagy saw Fields’ intense mindset in offseason practices, a successful aggressive deep ball prompting the coach to say his rookie quarterbac­k “has the mentality ( to) rip your heart out.”

Avery concurs. Bears fans can expect a quarterbac­k capable of impressive throws, Avery says.

But don’t let his composure underscore the ferocity with which Fields is calculatin­g his next move.

“He’s like a silent competitor,” Avery said. “He’s not going to say much, but he’s trying to take your throat out.”

 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Bears moved up in the draft to select QB Justin Fields with their first- round pick.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/ USA TODAY SPORTS The Bears moved up in the draft to select QB Justin Fields with their first- round pick.

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