- Joined
- Jan 14, 2013
- Messages
- 30,663
Rookies are rookies. People need to understand that. Dumbing things down isn't going to make it easier. It takes time to adjust to the pro game.
I know a WR that came into the NFL as a rookie and looked terrible. Had zero impact. Many people were already started to mark him down as a bust after Year 1. I had many conversations with the guy. Got to know him well. I know for a fact he had his playbook down pat in training camp. The guy is intelligent and very well spoken. And even with all of that, he struggled mightily as a rookie. Well, he broke out as a sophomore and the bust talk ended there.
Regardless, I don't think people understand how tough it is to transition as a WR to the pros. It's not just learning your assignments. It's not just learning everybody's assignments. It's not just knowing the route tree. It's not just knowing the audibles. It's not just knowing the sight adjustments and hot reads. It's not just knowing where to split out to and line-up in each formation and play. It's not just knowing verbiage of your offense. No. You have to know all of these things while simultaneously being able to read coverages and know what your QB is thinking. It's overwhelming. Learning the route tree and how to run routes like a pro is extremely difficult by itself. And for every single thing you're thinking on instead of reacting, it's slowing you down on the field and making you less effective.
So when a rookie WR lines up and has to keep up with everything the QB is barking out while knowing all of his assignments on the play for all of the possible options in the route and then once he starts running the route, he's gotta figure out which option he's running, how many steps are in that route, where he should make his break, and how he should make his break. It's a ton of things to think about.
Fans are way too hard on rookies. I've seen a NFL playbook and lets just say it was sobering. I thought I knew a decent amount about football and I felt like a complete idiot after seeing the thing. It WAS like Spanish.
I know a WR that came into the NFL as a rookie and looked terrible. Had zero impact. Many people were already started to mark him down as a bust after Year 1. I had many conversations with the guy. Got to know him well. I know for a fact he had his playbook down pat in training camp. The guy is intelligent and very well spoken. And even with all of that, he struggled mightily as a rookie. Well, he broke out as a sophomore and the bust talk ended there.
Regardless, I don't think people understand how tough it is to transition as a WR to the pros. It's not just learning your assignments. It's not just learning everybody's assignments. It's not just knowing the route tree. It's not just knowing the audibles. It's not just knowing the sight adjustments and hot reads. It's not just knowing where to split out to and line-up in each formation and play. It's not just knowing verbiage of your offense. No. You have to know all of these things while simultaneously being able to read coverages and know what your QB is thinking. It's overwhelming. Learning the route tree and how to run routes like a pro is extremely difficult by itself. And for every single thing you're thinking on instead of reacting, it's slowing you down on the field and making you less effective.
So when a rookie WR lines up and has to keep up with everything the QB is barking out while knowing all of his assignments on the play for all of the possible options in the route and then once he starts running the route, he's gotta figure out which option he's running, how many steps are in that route, where he should make his break, and how he should make his break. It's a ton of things to think about.
Fans are way too hard on rookies. I've seen a NFL playbook and lets just say it was sobering. I thought I knew a decent amount about football and I felt like a complete idiot after seeing the thing. It WAS like Spanish.