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Matt Waldman: "Thoughts on Rookie QB's...

September 30, 2016 03:10PM
Matt Waldman

[mattwaldmanrsp.com]

I was wrong to think that Jared Goff was the most pro ready of the 2016 rookie quarterback class. I underestimated the difficulty of the transition from Cal’s Air Raid offense to the Rams’ West Coast system. But I don’t think this is a big deal if you’re focused on the true North of the compass for what matters most for a young quarterback:

Long-term development.

Most people aren’t oriented this way. What we see written and discussed in major media reinforces the fallacy that rookie quarterbacks need to perform well immediately. When a lesser-regarded prospect outperforms a player of higher regard, there’s often a one-to-one comparison of the two and there shouldn’t be.

Quarterbacks are a lot like musicians and it’s problematic to judge two rookie quarterbacks during the rehearsal process. They’re learning how to interact with their band and the performance environment and each band and environment has enough differences that most boom-bust conclusions are short-sighted.

Jared Goff is learning an entirely new system. Will Hewlett–a quarterback coach and consultant to high school, college and professional passers–says the transition from the Air Raid system at Cal to a West Coast system with the Rams is like learning Chinese.

If you’ve ever taken language lessons as an adult, it becomes apparent almost immediately that the process sublimate the winning traits of your personality. Learning Chinese? Forget having a quick wit or great sense of humor for months.

Are you known for your sensitivity? You’ll be so busy focusing on what people are saying that you only catch a glimpse of how they’re saying it. Facial expressions and tone of voice are like third and fourth reads for a quarterback at your opponent’s 45 on 3rd and 12 with 1:34 left on the clock, down by 3, and dealing with the potential for A-gap pressure and missing that DE dropping into the flat.

You’re still sensitive, witty, and intelligent. You still have those skills and others but they won’t show up nearly as often when first learning that new language. Goff’s stats show that he’s not handling pressure well and he’s make critical errors but to conclude that he’s lost these skills or analysts were wrong for ever seeing them, glosses over the realities of learning a complex system.

And the West Coast system is the most difficult offense to learn. It’s the most common one in the league because coaches have witnessed how unstoppable it can be when at its best. However, there are few quarterbacks who can run it at that level.

It’s like staring in one band as a tenor saxophonist and then being asked to perform a ballad like the one shown above on the soprano. There are multiple, subtle demands to evoking deep emotions from the audience and the main performer’s flaws are at much greater risk of exposure to the crowd.

Jared Goff’s learning curve is far different but he’s judged along the same standard. RamsWire writer Jeff Smith has done a good job of telling Rams fans to freak out that Goff is the No.3 quarterback after the preseason. Smith is correct that the Rams invested a lot of capital in Goff, analysts (like me) thought Goff was the most pro-ready quarterback in the class, and Goff’s statistics haven’t been good.

But the stats only show that Goff’s results are bad and they way they are presented, there’s a presumption that Goff should display the same qualities that made him productive at Cal. This is a bad presumption.

The Cowboys have asked Prescott to play his best ax as a part of a strong group of players and perform songs with strict time boundaries, comfortable tempos, and tightly rehearsed forms. The Rams want Goff to learn a similar but slightly different and temperamental instrument and perform songs that have a lot more variables.

Goff is doing a lot more thinking than performing and it’s why he’s the No.3 option. If the Rams ownership has a clue, Goff’s temporary tenure as the final backup on the depth chart is more annoying when answering media questions than it is in the locker room.

Jeff Fisher gets his share of media criticism as an overrated coach but he believed in bringing quarterbacks along slowly. He wanted Vince Young to rely more on his brains than his body but Young didn’t become a student of the game. After a great rookie year with the team working around Young’s talents, opposing defenses generated more demands for Young to succeed and he didn’t study enough to meet them.

Steve McNair was a student of the game and he evolved into one of the more underrated pocket passers of his time. McNair didn’t start immediately and there were concerns early on that McNair wasn’t worth the No.3 overall pick in the draft. Fisher and the Titans were patient and it paid off.

Brett Hundley was the No.3 quarterback last year. He’s now considered a promising backup with starter potential. The notable difference in perception between Hundley and Goff is that Goff was the No.1 overall pick and Hundley dropped to the middle rounds in 2015.

Those in the know understand that Hundley was considered an early round talent entering his junior year. If he stayed at UCLA last year, he might have earned a high-round selection.

The public pressure on Goff and the Rams has greater intensity due to the number of picks the team traded to invest in the rookie. But if the Rams ownership and executive team is thinking clearly, they’ll look at Aaron Rodgers and Tom Brady’s career arcs.

Neither players was remotely a No.1 overall pick in the draft. Brady began his career as the No.3. Most teams would have spent more on these two players in their prime than what the Rams spent on Goff.

So when readers ask me, “What do you think about Jared Goff and Dak Prescott now?” it’s all about my frame of perspective. For fantasy football, Goff is a player that I’ll monitor. He’s a potential waiver-wire player in re-draft leagues later in the year.

Prescott is at least a temporary starter with actual value in daily fantasy formats. He’s also capable of strong opening month in season-long formats.

In dynasty leagues, I’m still drafting Goff over Prescott and there’s no hesitation. If anything, I’m getting better value on Goff. The bump in Prescott’s value makes him a little less attractive although the opportunity to solidify his future as a starter is a lot more compelling in the immediate present.

Beyond the immediate fantasy implications of late summer and early fall, I stand by the process that led me to the results that I publish every April.

If the Rams give Goff the time the Packers and Patriots gave to their starters–or even Washington inadvertently gave to Kirk Cousins while rushing the process with Robert Griffin III–Goff has the talent to thrive. His pocket presence, accuracy, and feel for the game hasn’t left. The new system is forcing him to think rather than play.

If the Cowboys continue to surround Prescott with a strong band and can spotlight the rookie’s confidence and athletic ability, he’ll succeed this year. If they gradually feed him more options and responsibilities so he can grow into a well-rounded leader of an offense, he develop into a complete player.

Quarterbacking is like making music. Thanks to our digital age, most young quarterbacks have more access to technical coaching, nutrition and training programs, and football theory than their predecessors.

Look at their technique, athletic ability, and understanding of specific offensive ideas in a vacuum and they appear more pro-ready than in the past. But just like musicians who developed the optimal physical techniques to produce a good sound, memorized hot licks, and gained extensive knowledge of harmony, none of it matters if they can’t make it all sound musical.
SubjectAuthorViewsPosted

  Matt Waldman: "Thoughts on Rookie QB's...

Rams431226September 30, 2016 03:10PM

  i agree with waldman...

wv ram609September 30, 2016 03:49PM

  Re: Finally someone owns up to it

Speed_Kills552September 30, 2016 04:01PM

  Re: Finally someone owns up to it

zn480September 30, 2016 04:09PM

  I think the Eagles deserve some credit too

merlin403October 02, 2016 08:36AM

  Re: Yes

Speed_Kills246October 02, 2016 08:56AM

  Re: I think the Eagles deserve some credit too

zn266October 02, 2016 09:22AM

  Re: Matt Waldman: I was wrong as well... Wrong team

Anonymous User853September 30, 2016 04:50PM

  Re: Matt Waldman: I was wrong as well... Wrong team

zn512September 30, 2016 04:57PM

  Rams don't run the West Coast system

Blue and Gold425September 30, 2016 06:48PM

  Re: Rams don't run the West Coast system

kw13482September 30, 2016 08:20PM

  Like almost all teams, Rams run a hybrid scheme with Coryell

Blue and Gold362October 01, 2016 08:40PM

  What do they run?

max369October 01, 2016 03:47AM

  Re: What do they run?

kw13507October 01, 2016 06:18AM

  MBP offense?

max369October 01, 2016 06:26AM

  Rams run the invinsible offense in the Rain

Rams_81380October 01, 2016 07:13AM

  Re: Rams don't run the West Coast system

-X-405October 01, 2016 07:15AM

  It is the Coryell language

Blue and Gold487October 01, 2016 08:42PM

  Re: Matt Waldman: "Thoughts on Rookie QB's...

brownsugar449October 01, 2016 02:16AM

  More recent Waldman...

max402October 01, 2016 03:17AM

  They don't want mistakes

Hazlet Hacksaw377October 01, 2016 03:57AM

  Re: They don't want mistakes

max377October 01, 2016 07:00AM

  Re: Getting Fisher's words twisted...

dzrams494October 01, 2016 07:20AM

  "That's the goal."

-X-416October 01, 2016 07:32AM

  from the press conference 4/28

zn386October 01, 2016 07:54AM

  Re: I think we have all historical bases covered here

-X-378October 01, 2016 08:33AM

  Re: I think we have all historical bases Welcome Aboard -X-

Anonymous User526October 01, 2016 02:23PM

  if I recall the problem is

zn399October 01, 2016 08:06AM

  Re: if I recall the problem is

dzrams409October 01, 2016 10:16AM

  Looks like you did some twisting of your own

9er8er241October 02, 2016 07:32AM

  Why do fans miss the bigger issue?

max242October 02, 2016 07:53AM

  The answer is in the word, "fan"

9er8er245October 02, 2016 08:08AM

  why are opinions different from mine?

zn265October 02, 2016 08:13AM

  Because

9er8er228October 02, 2016 08:20AM

  Re: Because

zn307October 02, 2016 08:39AM

  Didn't say that

9er8er235October 02, 2016 08:49AM

  Re: Because

max288October 02, 2016 09:00AM

  Right

9er8er403October 02, 2016 09:12AM

  Thats really where we are...

max237October 02, 2016 09:34AM

  not what he said

zn235October 02, 2016 08:09AM

  Yes it is

9er8er384October 02, 2016 08:28AM

  Re: Yes it is

zn281October 02, 2016 08:39AM

  Again, nope

9er8er291October 02, 2016 08:43AM

  Not sure if what he said then matters much

LesBaker253October 02, 2016 08:51AM

  You may still not be following

9er8er354October 02, 2016 09:01AM

  It's this...

max241October 02, 2016 09:25AM

  I dunno about the musician comparison...

sstrams576October 01, 2016 04:18AM

  Re: I dunno about the musician comparison...

73Ram318October 02, 2016 03:33AM

  Barry Manilow.... Really?

sstrams285October 02, 2016 04:38AM

  Re: Barry Manilow.... Really?

73Ram310October 02, 2016 04:51AM

  Well, at least you..

sstrams211October 02, 2016 07:37AM

  Re: Barry Manilow.... Really?

21Dog256October 02, 2016 04:55AM

  Shot Down in Flames..

sstrams364October 02, 2016 07:36AM

  or for us diehards.......

21Dog233October 02, 2016 07:43AM

  Right

9er8er248October 02, 2016 06:32AM

  Absolutely 9er8er..

sstrams248October 02, 2016 07:39AM

  Rams only run 6 plays

Rams_81377October 01, 2016 07:11AM

  Goff

waterfield387October 01, 2016 09:46PM

  He disqualifies his opinion as meaninful

9er8er304October 02, 2016 06:10AM