Justin Fields confirms to NFL teams that he’s managing epilepsy

Ohio State QB Justin Fields has already been under quite the microscope through no fault of his own. His epilepsy could speed the plow.

Throughout the 2021 draft process, no prospect has been under a more unforgiving microscope than Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields. Despite the fact that he completed 68.4% of his passes over the last two seasons with the Buckeyes for 5,373 yards, 63 touchdowns, and nine interceptions, Fields has been questioned as a *deep breath* one-read quarterback (not true), a slow processor (also not true), a “last-one-out/first-one-in” guy (absolutely not true), a bust like every other Ohio State quarterback (as if everyone from Art Schlichter to Cardale Jones is Fields’ fault, and all Ohio State quarterbacks are built in a secret factory somewhere), and a problematic mechanical thrower because he played baseball in high school (quick — go tell Russell Wilson, Kyler Murray, Patrick Mahomes, and Matthew Stafford).

Now, sadly, there may be another way in which sideline scouts can go after Fields’ NFL potential. And while it’s somewhat serious, it’s manageable and may not affect Fields’ future at all. Per NFL.com’s Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero, Fields has informed NFL teams that he has managed epilepsy since he was a child. Per the report, Fields takes medication for the condition, a neurological disorder that can cause seizures, and he’s never missed any time on the field or in practice because of it. Moreover, doctors are confident that Fields will eventually grow out of the condition, as other family members have.

Hall of Fame offensive guard Alan Faneca, who made nine Pro Bowls and six All-Pro teams, played with epilepsy his entire career, and offered encouragement to Fields after the news came out.

Faneca played for 13 seasons with no ill effects. Rapoport and Pelissero also pointed out that in 2007, Ravens safety Samari Rolle missed six games with three major seizures before doctors corrected his medication.

Now, team doctors are investigating whether concussions could exacerbate Fields’ condition. According to a 2004 study by the National Library of Medicine, “A close temporal relationship between mild head injury and a worsening of seizure control was observed in five patients with epilepsy. Although further study is required, this observation suggests that a head injury that would be considered benign in the general population can have serious consequences such as recurrence of seizures and medical intractability in patients with epilepsy.”

However, seizures can also be caused by head trauma in non-epileptic patients.

What does this mean for Fields’ draft stock? That’s yet to be determined, but by all accounts, Fields’ epilepsy is manageable, under control, and has never caused reduced playing time. And since teams have already been aware of it, it would now be up to the media tied to the Draft Industrial Complex to handle the story responsibly.

Based on recent history, good luck with that part.

Don’t look now, but here’s another dumb take about Justin Fields

No prospect in the 2021 class has had more ridiculous narratives attached to him than Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields. Here’s another.

Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields has already had to deal with more than his share of ridiculous ideas about his NFL potential. First, there was the whole “he’s a one-read quarterback” thing, which was easily disprovable to anyone who’d ever watched his tape with even a cursory glance. Then, there was the whole “he’s a slow processor” thing, which could be easily disproven if you’ve taken a look at Ohio State’s passing game and the plethora of option routes Fields had to consider. Then, there was the whole “He’s an Ohio State quarterback, so he’s going to be a bust in the NFL” thing, as if Fields, Dwayne Haskins, Cardale Jones, Troy Smith, Craig Krenzel, and Steve Bellisari were all built in the same factory somewhere.

Then, there was the whole “Maybe his work ethic is questionable” thing, which doesn’t even deserve a response that doesn’t include profanity.

Recently, ESPN’s Chris Mortensen laid another whopper on the pile, bringing up questions about Fields’ throwing mechanics (which are generally not called into question) with the hypothesis that this mechanical schism was somehow created because Fields has also played baseball. .

No, really.

So… because Fields played baseball in high school, and played it well, we’re supposed to believe that he had some sort of funky, unworkable delivery? Like, huh?

Perhaps we should ask Matthew Stafford, Russell Wilson, Patrick Mahomes, and Kyler Murray about that. All great baseball players, and all would tell you that their baseball backgrounds made them better off-platform throwers as quarterbacks.

Look. If there are legitimate concerns about Justin Fields as a draft prospect, by all means, let’s bring them up. But Fields seems to be the latest victim of the Draft Industrial Complex’s need to create stories about prospects, whether there’s any truth to them at all or not.

Fields has his second pro day coming up Wednesday, so we can invariably expect more ridiculous takes after that. Perhaps about the freshness of his breath, or the sincerity of his smile.

Why Justin Fields’ ‘big problem’ might not be a big problem at all

Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields has been criticized for his slow processing speed. Maybe that’s because we haven’t seen his playbook.

When evaluating players at any level, it’s obviously important to know what concepts they’re running, how those concepts magnify their attributes, and how those concepts may also get in the way of their ultimate athletic potential. It’s a lesson we have to re-learn every year.

Once you’re aware of what a player has to hold in his head and take to the field, it’s far easier to blow any lazy narratives out of the water. Today’s example is Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields, who has already had to deal with one completely false narrative about his NFL potential.

Take it away, Tony Pauline of the Pro Football Network:

“The main concern is that Justin Fields stares down the primary target. He doesn’t look away from the primary target. He doesn’t process things as quickly as they want him to. During the Senior Bowl, I mentioned how there was one team who has broken down all of Justin Fields’ passes in 2020. They said that just seven times, he looked off the primary target. The other 200+ passes he threw to his primary target.”

Pauline went on to write that “There are some people out there that are telling me Justin Fields has fallen down their boards, because while they think while he is a great physical specimen and he’s got tremendous arm strength, and is a great arm talent, they think that there is a concern there about staring down a primary target and not being able to process things that quickly. I don’t know that I completely agree with that, but that is the word from some teams out there.”

If that’s the word from some teams out there, some teams out there need to give their collective heads a good shake and start over. Because while Fields does present legitimate concerns as an NFL quarterback, being a first-read guy is not one of them. Quite the opposite.

Now, where I run into snags with my on evaluation of Fields is in his ability to process what’s in front of him in real time. There are times when he seems to be not as quick on the draw with multiple-progression reads as you’d like. But again, there’s evaluating the player from the perspective without a playbook, and there’s the forensic work of really digging into what the player was asked to do.

It seemed to me that the longer the play went, the more Fields could get himself in trouble by letting things fall apart. Last season, per Pro Football Focus, when Fields had less than 2.5 seconds from the snap to the throw, he completed 75 of 96 passes for 676 yards, six touchdowns, and no interceptions. With 2.5 seconds or more, he completed 83 of 130 passes for 1,422 yards, 16 touchdowns, and all six of his interceptions. The jump in yards per attempt from 7.0 to 10.9 on the other side of the 2.5 second scale will tell you that the longer the play went, the more Fields was prone to testing defenses deep, and that will generally result in a decrease in efficiency and an increase in turnovers.

But there’s one more aspect to Ohio State’s playbook and how it affected Fields — the use of option routes at a level most college teams just wouldn’t do. My Touchdown Wire colleague Mark Schofield sent me two examples from Ohio State’s 2013 playbook that are still in effect in the Buckeyes’ passing game of today, and they’re quite revealing in their complexity and their reliance on the quarterback holding the ball through more advanced route progressions.

Let’s walk through these two examples.

On the “Follow/Drive” concept, it’s an empty look with the trips right receivers running deeper routes unless coverage indicates otherwise. The free safety is the key defender. The inside slot receiver (F3) could run one of three different routes (a protection crosser if the safety is aggressive), as could the outside slot receiver (F2). The outside receiver to the right side might run with free access to the boundary if there’s no aggressive coverage.

On the left side, which is where Fields starts his reads on “8 Duo H-51 Bench Follow, Stitch,” the slot receiver (B2) is running a drag route for the quick conversion if necessary, but he may have to throttle that down depending on coverage. And the outside receiver to that side will run a follow concept that varies depending on man or zone coverage.

On “8 Duo RT G-50 Field Option,” we have another empty package with trips right. Now, the inside slot man to the right takes one of three angular routes based on coverage at the eight-yard point. The backside slot receiver has a similar construct at 10 yards. And the outside receiver to the back side is running either a boundary vertical route, or kicking it inside at 10 yards based on coverage.

It’s a bit more complicated than a bunch of simple slants on two-level RPOs. When Mark sent me these plays, I was immediately reminded of the 2004 Patriots playbook I’ve seen, in which there were option routes all over the place.

Here’s “1 Out ZAC Slot” from that playbook — the diagram is from my book, The Genius of Desperation. 

Here, the fullback (lined up wide left) runs a 14-yard in, unless he has to run an outside release because the defender is cheating up expecting something quicker. The halfback reads the blitz, hits a sneak route through the A-gap if he’s free, and digs sharply to the right. The “X” receiver does a slight adjustment, reads the coverage, and could either come back inside or loop to the seam. The “Z” receiver motions from the right slot and heads six yards upfield into a four-way option. The “Y” receiver could run a chute route, or me might hook inside.

Asking Tom Brady to do that is one thing. Asking any college quarterback to take on this level of complexity is another. Because when your offense has this many options, here’s your tax as the quarterback: Not only do you have to remember all the possible options for as many as five receivers on any given play, you also have to wait for those options to play out and the receivers to present themselves.

So, perhaps Justin Fields isn’t a slow processor. Perhaps Justin Fields is a potential next-level mind who has passed multiple processing tests at an NFL level before he ever enters an NFL facility. As ESPN’s Dan Orlovsky recently pointed out, it’s past time to stop thinking of Fields as an athlete, and to start thinking of him as a high-level quarterback.

At least one more evaluator (yours truly) is on that bandwagon after today’s research.

Players we’ll miss most from the Big 10 and Pac-12: Ohio State QB Justin Fields

Ranking the 10 football players we will miss watching the most from the Big 10 and Pac-12: No. 1 Ohio State QB Justin Fields.

The Big Ten announced its decision Tuesday to postpone fall sports. Minutes after, the Pac-12 made the decision to postpone its season as well.

With two of the Power Five conferences not playing, the entire college football season is now up in the air. The SEC, ACC and Big 12 still have plans to have their conference-only seasons, but there are a number of players, coaches and teams that college football fans will miss watching dearly.

The No. 1 player we will miss watching most this year from the Big Ten and Pac-12 is Ohio State junior quarterback Justin Fields.

Fields is a Kennesaw, Georgia native and was likely entering the final year of his college career before heading to the NFL draft.  He played in 12 of 14 games as a true freshman for Georgia in 2018.  Backing up Jake Fromm, Fields completed 27 of 39 passes for 328 yards and four touchdowns, also rushing for four touchdowns.

The former Georgia quarterback had an incredible sophomore season at Ohio State, throwing for 3,273 yards, 41 touchdowns and just 3 interceptions. He was a Heisman Trophy finalist and made it to the College Football Playoff, losing by six to the Clemson Tigers in the semifinals.

Besides Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence, Fields is the face of college football.  He has been a big advocate of letting the players play, starting a petition on Sunday to reinstate the 2020 Big Ten football season.

Fields is a fierce competitor and will be greatly missed on the field this fall.

What Happens To The 2021 NFL Draft If There’s No 2020 NFL Season?

How do you prepare for the 2020 NFL Draft if you don’t know if there will be a season? Even harder, what will the 2021 NFL Draft look like?

How do you prepare for the 2020 NFL Draft if you don’t know if there will even be a season? Even harder, what will the 2021 NFL Draft look like if there’s no 2020 season?


CFN 2020 NFL Draft Prospect Rankings
from the college perspective …
QB | RB | WR | TE | OT | OG & C
DE | DT | LB | CB | Safeties
Greatest NFL Draft Picks From Each School
ACC | Big Ten | Big 12 | Pac-12 | SEC
32 Greatest Draft Picks of All-Time
Full 2020 NFL Draft Order
CFN Top 106 Player Rankings (1st 3 rounds)

Contact/Follow @ColFootballNews & @PeteFiutak

All apologies in advance – this is one of those only-questions-no-answers things, because I have no earthly clue what the best possible solution is.

And I really, really hope this is a wasted theoretical exercise.

Work with me here.

The 2020 NFL Draft is just fine. Cincinnati takes Joe Burrow, Washington does whatever it’s going to do at the two, and we all love every moment of a sports event that actually matters.

And then …

Hypothetically, the doomsday scenario happens and there’s no 2020 NFL season.

Of course we all want football as long as it’s safe – with safe being loosely defined as everyone on the field being confirmed negative for the coronavirus – but how do you practice, train, travel, play, etc. without testing everyone daily, and on and on and on with all of the practical and logistical issues?

For now, at least consider the possibility that all of a sudden it’s July, and 345 Park Avenue doesn’t have it. After brainstorming every plan and idea, the NFL can’t find a way to make it work for 2020.

What happens to the 2021 NFL Draft?

You can’t just cancel it.


CFN in 60: Why You Don’t Take A QB Early

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Eligible college players will be ready to make the jump, NFL teams have contracts to deal with, free agency will still happen, players will get older, some will retire – you need to have a 2021 draft.

Do you keep the same draft order from 2020? Good luck selling THAT to teams picking late in the 2020 first round.

Do you come up with some sort of lottery for just the top ten picks? Again, have fun getting Kansas City, San Francisco and Green Bay to be on board, and have an even better time convincing Cincinnati, Washington and Detroit to give up their prime positions when they don’t have anything on the field to go off of.

Do you create a tiered lottery with teams without a 2020 first rounder getting their slots back for 2021? Maybe teams keep their 2020 positions with picks 1-5 all in Tier 1, teams 6-12 in Tier 2, and on from there.

What the hell do you do with conditional picks, or worse yet, traded first round picks? Miami gets Houston’s 2021 first rounder, Jacksonville has the Rams’ first, and don’t even start with all the past trades that kick in along with whatever deals come from the 2020 draft.

It would be the mess of all messes to get the 32 owners as well as the Players Association to agree on how it to do something that’s fair to everyone.

But NFL teams had better have a plan in place for every possibility.

If you’re a pragmatic NFL general manager worth your paycheck, how do you draft this weekend without having an answer to one key question?

If you were told right now that there isn’t going to be a 2020 season, would you change anything about your draft strategy?

Do you move heaven and earth now to trade up to grab a quarterback early, knowing you might have a free year to develop your guy?

Do you move heaven and earth now to trade up to grab Tua Tagovailoa, rolling the dice that you might get a full 12 months or more to let his hip get even better?

Do you plan your draft around positions that are fine for this season, but will be an issue next year once contracts expire or change? GMs do that no matter what, but maybe a player currently on a roster is more valuable to sign back up if he has a year off. Maybe he’s easier to let go because he’ll be a year older and you see strength at the position around your 2020 slot in the 2021 draft.

Try this out.

Cincinnati takes Joe Burrow with the first pick on Thursday night. There’s no 2020 NFL or college football season, and with the first pick in the 2021 NFL Draft, the Cincinnati Bengals select … Trevor Lawrence.

Welcome to the mother of all trade talk scenarios – and a dream for sports media everywhere.

Does Washington take a massive home run swing and trade Dwayne Haskins for a whole lot of prime picks/players now, thinking there might be a shot at Lawrence or Justin Fields if the same draft positions hold for a 2021 draft without a 2020 season?

Or will teams simply go full steam ahead and not even entertain the possibility of there not being a season?

Do your draft, don’t get caught up in hypotheticals, the future will take care of itself, take one game and draft pick at a time, and …

This is going to be the weirdest NFL Draft ever.

Let’s just hope it’s not topped in 2021.

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