Why the NFL Has a Quarterback Crisis

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Why the NFL Has a Quarterback Crisis

Since the dawn of the NFL, head coaches and general managers have been calling top college quarterback prospects into conference rooms to pepper them with rudimentary questions: how to attack a certain defense, for instance, or what to do when a play breaks down. The answers were sometimes dull and sometimes brilliant, but there were always answers.

This year, according to separate interviews with dozens of NFL coaches and executives, something disturbing happened in these pre-draft quiz sessions. When asked the same basic questions, many quarterback prospects responded with something NFL insiders said they have never seen before: blank stares.

Detroit Lions offensive coordinator Joe Lombardisaid the new crop of college quarterbacks were flummoxed by a simple question about an “under” front, one of the most common defensive alignments. “Whoa, no one’s ever told me ‘front’ before,” he remembers one prospect saying. “No one’s ever talked to me about reading these defenses.”

Buffalo Bills general manager Doug Whaley said he had the same results when he asked prospects a question about defenses shifting from a common scheme called “cover 2” to an equally mundane tactic called “cover 3.” Hue Jackson, the offensive coordinator from the Bengals, said he had to dumb down his questions, while Indianapolis Colts offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton said some QBs failed to grasp things as basic as understanding a common play call. “You have to teach these kids the absolute basics,” he said.

The knowledge base was so low, Buffalo’s Whaley said, that it left him feeling “a little nervous about the long-term future of this game.”

As the 2015 NFL season begins, the league’s decision makers say they are daunted by what they see as a widening gulf between the college game and the pro game, one that has existed for a while but is now starting to affect the quality of the league’s most-cherished commodity: Quarterbacks. The kinds of passers the NFL thrives on are those who can survey the field before the snap to “read” the defense and make any necessary adjustments, then drop back and dissect the coverage again, picking through a number of passing options to find the open receiver.


For years, this brand of preparation has been regenerated from Joe Montana to Tom Brady to relative newcomers like Seattle’s Russell Wilson and Andrew Luck of the Indianapolis Colts. Spoiled by their immense talent and football intelligence, the NFL has organized itself around quarterbacks to the point where it is hard to imagine the sport without them. The five most productive individual passing seasons in history have happened since 2011.

But if current trends continue, NFL insiders say, quarterbacks who have the sophistication to outfox NFL defenses to deliver the ball to open receivers are “going to be on the endangered species list,” said Cleveland Browns coach Mike Pettine. “The quarterback may not be gone yet,” he added, “but if you have one, protect it.”

“It’s doomsday if we don’t adapt and evolve,” said St. Louis Rams general manager Les Snead.
 

Rekkapryde

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Pro Style QB offense schools gonna eat if it's the case. But the Problem is coaches in college are going to run offenses that give them the best chance to win and those are spread and read option systems. These Offenses that spread defenses out are going to continue to evolve away from pro style shyts. So the NFL better get on board with the new wave.
 

FaTaL

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Pro Style QB offense schools gonna eat if it's the case. But the Problem is coaches in college are going to run offenses that give them the best chance to win and those are spread and read option systems. These Offenses that spread defenses out are going to continue to evolve away from pro style shyts. So the NFL better get on board with the new wave.
Colleges don't care about the nfl

The spread is here to stay
 

BonafideDefacto

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Cover 3 and 4-3 under was base D's in High school and college when I was coming up. How the fukk doesn't a QB know what under is and it's impact on the coverage. A madden player can explain under/over or even stack. I haven't had madden in years but I do recall them having those defenses.

The issue is this new style of spread O keeps the defense in nickel varients all the time.
 
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You have players coming from programs running a base spread offense that don't even have a playbook or run essentially 3 or 4 plays on offense. The keys you read as a spread QB are so stripped down and simplified...that's the beauty of it. It allows you to play fast because the complexity of it is far less than a pro-style system. These kids only have to rep a few plays over and over and perfect the techniques of those plays.
 

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I think also it's a bi-product of QB's this day and age asked to do so much more. 15 years ago, you could ask your QB to drop back 20 times and be ok with that. Defenses also weren't so hell-bent to stop the pass because rushing was also a lot more relevant then. Now we have a lot of these guys being asked to drop back 30+ times a game, call audibles, etc. and still produce the same quality of play. You can't really skate by with being an average QB today. A lot of QB's that are in the HOF wouldn't be able to hold up in today's NFL. Unless you just have a phenomenal running back and a great defense the need for an ELITE QB is at an all time high.

Now this isn't really relevant to the whole reading defenses thing necessarily, but I think it also ties into why there's a "QB crisis" as they say.
 

unit321

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The QB position is really easy. I have never played football in pop warner, high school or college or the pro level. But, I can play on Madden and win, usually. Think about that. I just hit the buttons, select a receiver and go. How easy is that? Same thing in real life except I throw the ball instead of hitting buttons.
 
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