If you don’t think Justin Herbert is great, that’s a you problem

In the matter of Justin Herbert, it’s time to move the discussion beyond cherry-picked stats and loud, wrong, self-elevation.

Over the last few weeks, slandering Los Angeles Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert has become an unfortunate cottage sub-industry that tells us a lot about what’s wrong with the business of sports talk disguised as analysis. Those who have decided that Herbert has not unlocked that mythical “next level” required of all “elite” quarterbacks would like us to know that they have gone beyond the highlight plays, and revealed the soft underbelly that tells us the truth.

At that moment, their analysis is not about Justin Herbert at all — it’s all about the guy making noise. When Emmanuel Acho insists that Herbert is just a “social media quarterback” (i.e., capable of a few highlight plays, and a whole bunch of meh around them), and when other, more respected analysts charry-pick stats without the benefit of tape to ostensibly bring us a deeper, greater, truth? You are now watching the World Series of Woolgathering, as opposed to anything relevant or true. Acho has now recorded a “Social Media Freestyle” to triple down on his alleged analysis… so again, this is just a few people attaching themselves to Herbert as if they were pilot fish. This isn’t legitimate analysis.

Even if you want to perform a mea culpa now, it’s still going to be all about you. Justin Herbert is your innocent bystander.

If we want to get into the reality of where Herbert is at this point in his career, well, let’s do that. Because the evidence is pretty clear that Herbert, in his third NFL season, is playing the position about as well as anybody could in his circumstances. Other top-tier quarterbacks (and yes, Herbert is just that) have receivers who can gain separation. They have offensive lines that are at least functional, for the most part. They have offensive play-callers who aren’t actively working against their attributes.

Right now, Herbert has none of those things. But he is still the quarterback you want — the quarterback you win because of, not the one you win with or in spite of. He is transcendent, because he keeps transcending all the little disasters around him, and if you can’t see that (probably because you’re not looking on purpose), I don’t know what to tell you.

With that, let’s take ourselves out of the equation, and take a good look at where Justin Herbert is right now. Stats and tape and nothing else.

We promise.

4 takeaways from Chargers’ victory over Dolphins

The win was the Los Angeles Chargers’ first victory this season against a team with a winning record.

In a must-win game to keep their playoff hopes alive, the Chargers beat the Dolphins on Sunday night.

Here are a few of my takeaways from the game.

Chargers respond to Emmanuel Acho calling Justin Herbert ‘social media quarterback’

The Chargers continue to prove they have one of the best social media teams.

Former NFL linebacker and current analyst for Fox Sports Emmanuel Acho has made headlines this season for his takes. In this case, for his strong dislike of Justin Herbert.

But recently, Acho raised eyebrows after calling Herbert a “social media quarterback,” meaning Herbert makes special throws that go viral on social media, which leads to people overlooking his bad moments.

This remark specifically came after last Sunday’s 30-27 loss to the Chiefs, when Herbert threw an interception with 26 seconds remaining that sealed the game.

“On social media, they don’t show you interceptions. That’s not fun,” Acho said. “People aren’t gonna retweet a pick. People aren’t gonna retweet a bad sack. People aren’t gonna retweet a bad decision. That’s who Justin Herbert is, a social media quarterback.”

The Chargers, who have one of the best social media teams in all of sports, made a response on Twitter. They mocked Acho for his comments and created a compilation video of Herbert, including him at the Pro Bowl last year.

Check it out: