Showing posts with label Joey Harrington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joey Harrington. Show all posts

Skeletons in the Closet

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Recently, while surfing through channels, I stumbled upon a replay of the 2000 Holiday Bowl, featuring the Texas Longhorns and the Oregon Ducks.  I nearly continued changing channels, then I realized: 2000 Oregon Ducks . . . Joey Harrington.  The game was already into the fourth quarter, so a complete TV scout was impossible, but it was certainly worth watching.

What I saw was unnerving.  Joey looked good; very good.  By the time I’d tuned in, he’d already thrown two touchdowns, rushed for another, and received yet another (!).  He got rid of the ball quickly, hit receivers in stride, and was instrumental in engineering two critical touchdown drives in the closing minutes.  It was unnerving because I saw very little of the indecisive, inaccurate quarterback Lions fans would come to know.  There were some little things that looked familiar---his lower body mechanics were still way off—but on the whole, it was a completely different John Joseph Harrington, Jr., under center for the Ducks.  What unnerved me the most?  How much I liked what I saw—the same way I like what I’ve seen of Matthew Stafford.

What went wrong?  Where did Joey’s accuracy, the decision-making, and clutch performance go?  What happened to the sharp, accurate passer I saw on TV, swathed in one of the most ridiculous uniforms in sports?  I suspect the answer has something to do the guy they kept cutting to up on in the booth: OC/QB Coach Jeff Tedford, whom we saw on-screen no less than three times in the waning minutes of the game.

Tedford, whose potent college offenses have produced a string of high-profile NFL busts, is a universally-acknowledged offensive mastermind, a brilliant X-and-O man who puts his players in excellent positions to win.  He does a lot of of the work for his quarterbacks, having enginered an offense that’s based on one or two pre-snap reads.  Often, these keys will remove all but one or two options for a quarterback--meaning when the ball is snapped, he can focus entirely on execution.  While this leads to Tedford being able to extract quality play from nearly any quarterback with a solid arm and decent athleticism, it’s resulted in many of his star pupils failing to catch on at the next level.

When Joey Harrington came to the Lions, he was inserted into the classic Bill Walsh offense; 4 or 5 options on every play, with quick reads, quick decisions, and accurate passing absolutely vital to the success of the offense.  The Walsh offense and the Tedford offense share a lot of fundamental terminology and philosophy: a mix of power running, passing to the running backs, and quick timing passes to the wideouts.

The coaching approach, however, is completely different.  The Tedford offense relies on the quarterback to be an extension of the offensive coordinator; to execute a predetermined gameplan.  The Walsh offense requires a quarterback to be a ‘coach on the field’, with a full understanding of the goals and philosophies of the offense, and making all the reads and decisions as the action unfolds.

It’s no wonder common wisdom holds that quarterback needs three full years of coaching in the WCO before he can execute it at a high level, and it’s further no wonder that Joey Harrington failed to perform right away.  Historians—and Denizens--can debate for eternity whether Joey Ballgame ever had the potential to succeed.  But the success of Aaron Rodgers proves that with good coaching and lots of patience, a Tedford-coached player can indeed become an excellent professional quarterback.

How, then, can we apply this lesson to the development of Matthew Stafford?  The answer is, we can’t.  Stafford came from a relatively complex (for college) pro-style offense in Georgia, and the Lions run a relatively simple (for the pros) pro-style offense.  Stafford is a much different quarterback than Harrington in terms of physical and mental strengths and weaknesses.  Finally, Stafford is a much different person than Harrington, with a much different upbringing, football career, psyche, and attitude.  As much as we humans are wired to learn from past experiences, we may just have to get over our Harrington-induced phobia of rookie quarterbacks.

Then again, Roy Williams played in that Holiday Bowl too; the game-winning touchdown bounced off of his hands.  Maybe the past should make us wary about the future . . .

Discuss it here, in The Den!

FOXSports' "10 Guys Worth Rooting For in NFL Training Camps" chock full o' Lions

Thursday, July 30, 2009

FOXSports.com contributor Peter Schrager has written a column on 10 players worth rooting for in NFL training camps, and it features three Lions and an ex-Lion.

His Lions include undrafted free-agent WR D.J. Boldin, who Schrager lists along with WR Nick Moore of the Vikings. They're the younger brothers of established NFL star WRs Anquan Boldin and Lance Moore.

Writes Schrager: "D.J. and Nick would be more than happy just surviving training camp with jobs at the end of August. For all the younger brothers out there let's keep an eye on how they do in the trenches this month."

Also on Schrager's list to root for is new LB Larry Foote and OT Jon Jansen.

Writes Schrager: "They say there's nothing quite like going home. Have 'they' been to Detroit?" (A gratuitous shot at Motown. How novel.) Larry Foote and Jon Jansen have, and the two return voluntarily this season to help revitalize and recharge a team that's been entrenched in the ashes for far too many years ... "Together, Foote and Jansen will strive to bring veteran leadership, consistent play, and a sense of pride to their hometown team. And who knows, perhaps even a few wins."

Some Lions fans might have difficulty rooting for another on Schrager's list -- ex-Lion flameout and current Saint backup QB Joey Harrington.

States Schrager:

If you're a fan of redemption stories, you might want to check out what he's up to down in New Orleans this August. Harrington, known as "Joey Blue Skies" in Detroit, is currently with the Saints — his fourth team in five NFL seasons. Bounced on and off the New Orleans roster in '08, the Lions former No. 3 overall pick is now in a tight race for the Saints backup job with fellow veteran gunslinger Mark Brunell. Harrington, whose face once famously graced a New York City billboard back in his Oregon days, has been throwing the ball well this offseason. Signed to a one-year deal in NOLA, this could be his last shot in the NFL.


Talk about it in The Den!

Killer: Stafford's got street cred

Friday, June 5, 2009

Tom Kowalski over at Mlive.com has posted an interesting little article about the famous party pics of Matt Stafford, taken as he attended a NASCAR race during college, and the source of at least a few tempests in teapots.  Apparently, the pics have garnered him not scorn but respect in the locker room.  This isn't that surprising; given both the lack of political correctness in locker rooms, and the "strawberries and champagne" reptutation of the last Golden Boy quarterback that got ready for work in that particular locker room.

Frankly, given the fact that Matt Stafford was a three-year starter at a warm-weather SEC school, where football is a religion, and partying is a year-round thing, he'd have to have lived in an abbey not to have partaken in at least a little weekend revelry.  Good Ol' Boy credibility aside, it's sounding like Stafford has already managed to win over his teammates far more than Joey Ballgame ever could.

Discuss it here, in The Den!