Charlie Whitehurst had a bad game on Sunday. Everyone has already said that. All quarterbacks have bad games. Heck, Carson Palmer only managed half of Whitehurst's 35 passer rating on Sunday. The difference with Whitehurst was there were a few plays that stood out as indictments on his ability to play quarterback in the NFL. Plays that are not about having a bad game, they are about a player's viability. One such play came very early in the game. Hugh Millen discussed it on Hardcore Football with Ian Furness on Monday. It was a throw on 3rd and 13 to Ben Obomanu on what is called a corner or flag route that was severely under-thrown. Let's walk through it to see how it developed, and why it was an inexcusable miss.
So why is this so egregious? A quarterback needs a few things to go right in order to make a big play. Primarily, he needs protection and he needs a receiver to run a good route and give him a place to throw. Whitehurst had plenty of time, and a massive pocket. He was able to take all the time he needed to select his target, and had space to step into his throw to give it everything he had. He had multiple receivers that were open by more than a step. In the case of Baldwin and Obomanu, they were open by at least two steps. That's serious separation in the NFL. Whitehurst chose the right receiver to target since a completion could have led to a touchdown. All he needed to do was throw the ball 55-60 yards down-field. For a guy that is supposed to have a good arm, that should not be a problem. If it is a problem, he either should have selected a closer target or thrown the ball sooner. Whitehurst will not get a better designed play, executed with more precision than he got on this one.
People will tell you it takes a team to lose a game, and it is never on one guy. This play is a prime example of everyone on the field doing their job except the quarterback. There were other plays like this, that I may choose to breakdown as well. These are the plays that stick out when evaluating a quarterback. These are the plays that cause a person to write-off a player. This is not about having a bad game. It's about not being good enough to play the position.
People will tell you it takes a team to lose a game, and it is never on one guy. This play is a prime example of everyone on the field doing their job except the quarterback. There were other plays like this, that I may choose to breakdown as well. These are the plays that stick out when evaluating a quarterback. These are the plays that cause a person to write-off a player. This is not about having a bad game. It's about not being good enough to play the position.






4 comments:
Really nice analysis. I love these kinds of illustrations. really helps people like me that dont have immense knowledge of the game learn more. Keep up the good work
I hate him so much right now.
I really think this team had a shot to compete this season and I feel like Whitehurst single handedly sucked all the wind out of the sails. After the Giants game many of us had forgotten which QB we needed to draft so that we could focus our fandom on winning games and competing for the division. Now I'm torn again. F-ing Whitehurst.
As I got ready and hyped up for the game Sunday morning, I decided to watch some highlights of Charlie when he was with Clemson all those years ago. The clip is up on youtube, new to this site so I don't know if it's cool to post the link here, but what I noticed is that A TON of Charlie's throws were severely underthrown. It didn't matter in the college game because his receivers were beating the DB's by 4 or 5 steps. We see that in the NFL, it doesn't really work out so well. I'm shocked to hear myself say "get well soon Tarvaris!" I really only want to see him behind center the rest of the way and if he gets injured again or we tank the season, Josh Portis time! Great site btw, excellent analysis.
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