Watch: Hall of Fame QB breaks down Tua Tagovailoa’s rookie year

Watch: Hall of Fame QB breaks down Tua Tagovailoa’s rookie year

There was plenty of good in Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa’s rookie season in 2020. The young signal caller was 6-3 as the starting quarterback and showed plenty of the flashes of accuracy and pocket manipulation that made him such a dynamic player in the SEC while at Alabama. Tagovailoa showcased ball security and, with a little extra help from his teammates, would have had plenty more production.

But there is plenty for Tagovailoa to improve upon, as well. Reading the full field quickly, seeing NFL throwing windows (versus the gaping holes in the secondary he was acclimated to at Alabama) and understanding defensive structure are all mental dynamics that got Tagovailoa in trouble in spurts of 2020. And he’ll need to show up in 2021 bigger, faster and stronger after focusing on rehab for the entirety of the 2020 offseason.

If you’ve ever wanted to hear a top-level quarterback break down the X’s and O’s of Tagovailoa’s game, you’re in luck. Hall of Fame quarterback Kurt Warner has started a new video series and one of the very first quarterbacks he studied was Tagovailoa. The end result is 30 minutes of technical talk on where Tagovailoa shined and where he can make the slight improvements that will help take his game to the next level in 2021.

You can watch the entire series below:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ap8SMDjTOUo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9I9szK0GWc&t=566s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t2AnNGOhCF4

Kurt Warner tells crazy story of how a bug bite led to him signing with Rams over Bears

If not for a bug bite and swollen elbow on his honeymoon, Kurt Warner may have been a Bear instead of a Ram.

Kurt Warner holds the title of being one of the most remarkable comeback stories in NFL history. He went from being an undrafted free agent in 1994 to playing in the Arena Football League to eventually winning a Super Bowl with the Rams, turning into a two-time All-Pro and two-time NFL MVP.

It was the Rams who gave him a shot after the Packers gave up on him in 1994, signing him as a free agent in 1998 after he spent three years in the AFL. But his Rams career almost never happened – and it may not have if not for a bug bite.

It sounds ridiculous, but Warner has a true story to tell, and he shared it on Pardon My Take this week. In short, a bug bite prevented him from working out with the Bears before he signed with the Rams in 1998.

Here’s how he told it, which sounds like something out of a book.

“So I’m playing Arena Football and obviously I’m waiting for my chance. So the Bears call me and said, ‘Hey, we want to bring you in for a workout.’ As soon as I get off the phone, I go running into my wife and I’m like, ‘Honey, the Bears, they’re bringing me in for a workout this Friday. I’m flying, I’m going right now.’ And my wife just kind of gave me this look and I’m like, ‘What’s the problem here? Why are you not excited for me? We’ve been working for this forever.’ And she goes, ‘Dude, we’re getting married on Saturday.’ Blew off my whole wedding, didn’t even think about it because I just wanted to work out for the Bears. So I had to call the Bears back and say, ‘OK, sorry, I know it sounds stupid, but forgot all about my wedding. I can’t work out this Friday, but any other time.’”

Warner and the Bears decided that he would work out the next week in Chicago, but Warner’s wife gave him a look again after rescheduling because they would be on their honeymoon. So while on his honeymoon, he and the team rescheduled again for a time when they got back from Jamaica.

This is when things get crazy.

“The night before we left, I woke up the next morning and my throwing elbow was swollen about the size of a grapefruit,” he continued. “To this day, we still don’t know what it was that bit me. They said it was maybe a centipede or a spider. They really don’t know. Of course, I had to call the Bears back again and go, ‘OK. You’re not going to believe this. Yes, the first time it was my wedding, the second time it was my honeymoon. And now, I got bit on my throwing elbow by something in Jamaica,'” Warner said. “And you can only imagine what was going on on the other end of the line, going, ‘Who is this dude? Like, we’re trying to give him a chance to make it in the NFL and this is what he comes up with three times?’

“And so, basically, after that, they hung up and they never called back and I never got the workout. And then about two weeks later is when I got the call from the Rams and flew in and did the workout and they ended up signing me.”

As you’d imagine, the story is better when told from Warner’s perspective, which you can see below.

Warner turned out to be a Pro Football Hall of Famer and became one of the greatest players in franchise history with the Rams, and they have a mysterious bug to thank for it. Of course, there’s a chance the Bears wouldn’t have signed him and he would’ve gotten a chance with the Rams anyway, but you just never know.

The Rams are just thankful he did wind up in St. Louis and helped win them a Super Bowl.

Kurt Warner perfectly explains the problem with the Rams’ offense and Jared Goff

Kurt Warner has concerns about the Rams offense, and they’re certainly warranted.

After scoring 30 points in three of their first five games, the Rams have topped that mark only once in their last nine. The offense has been stuck in neutral lately, most recently scoring only 20 points against a terrible Jets team.

Jared Goff has only eight touchdown passes and eight interceptions in his last seven games after throwing 12 touchdown passes and only four interceptions in the first seven, proving to be a big reason for the Rams’ offensive struggles. He’s not alone, but any time an offense stalls the way L.A.’s has, the quarterback is going to be at the forefront of that problem.

Kurt Warner perfectly explained what’s gone wrong with the Rams offense during an appearance on NFL Network, pointing to their inability to succeed after defenses take away what they’re trying to do.

“I’m just concerned about this offense because they’re really good when they do what they want to do,” Warner said. “Again, that’s not a newsflash there – most teams are good when they do what they do best. When the Rams run the football and play-action, they’re really good, Jared Goff is really good in that type of scenario. When they fall behind and they have to drop-back throw, when they have to spread it out and he’s got to drop back and read the defense and pick a team apart, that is where this team and that is where Jared Goff struggles.”

Sean McVay said on Monday that he doesn’t have an answer to why the Rams have been so inconsistent, saying it’s something they obviously strive for. But according to Warner, their inability to succeed off-schedule and to adapt are the primary reasons for their troubles on offense.

“And so that’s why we see this tremendous inconsistency with this team,” he said. “Sometimes they come out and they look like world-beaters because they’re able to play within their scheme, and Jared Goff fits that scheme extremely well. But when teams take that away, now you get really concerned because you say to yourself, ‘Well, you can do that, any team can beat the Rams, as well.’

“I am concerned because you have to get more consistency away from your strength.”

Assuming the Rams make the playoffs, which could happen with a win on Sunday against Seattle, they’ll have to find new ways to succeed on offense. Teams have figured out how to slow down the Rams on that side of the ball, and McVay has yet to come up with a proper backup plan to counter what defenses do.

If the Rams can’t adapt, they’ll be bounced from the playoffs early on.

Kurt Warner ‘dumbfounded’ by Rams having no answer for Dolphins’ repeated blitzes

The Dolphins kept bringing pressure and the Rams had no answer.

The Dolphins had an extra week to prepare for the Rams ahead of Sunday’s Week 8 showdown, and looking at the way they beat Los Angeles, it’s safe to say they took advantage of the additional prep time. They saw Jared Goff as a weakness when under pressure and attacked him – relentlessly.

The result was a 28-17 win, largely thanks to four turnovers by Goff, all of which came when he was blitzed. Fans and even the commentators in the booth wondered why the Rams had no answer for Miami’s endless pressure, continually going with empty backfields and no extra blockers to help protect Goff.

Kurt Warner asked the same question on Twitter Monday night, blasting the Rams for having no counter on Sunday afternoon.

Brian Flores was the Patriots’ defensive play caller in Super Bowl LIII when the Rams were stymied on offense. However, McVay was adamant Sunday that it was a completely different game plan than the one Los Angeles faced in the Super Bowl two seasons ago.

“No. No, this was not even close to the same game plan,” he said plainly. “They did activate some 6-1 fronts and had some different things where, you know, they’ve always been a part of their identity has been to zero-pressure. But they did a great job today and it didn’t have anything to do with the Super Bowl.”

Michael Brockers said he’s never seen a team attack a quarterback with zero-coverage blitzes as much as the Dolphins did. Goff didn’t seem surprised by the Dolphins’ approach, but he did admit the Rams weren’t quick enough to respond.

“They did a good job of applying some pressure. That’s kind of how they’re built and we did not respond quickly enough or well enough and that starts with me and I’ve got to be better,” he said Sunday.

Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes approaches two career milestones ahead of Week 2

Mahomes can soon become the quickest player to 10,000 career passing yards and hit yet another passing touchdown milestone.

The growing list of career milestones for Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes is tough to keep up with. In his first three seasons as a professional, he squashed age-old records and out-paced all-time greats. As he enters his fourth season in the NFL, Mahomes is rapidly approaching two more accolades.

After the Chiefs’ Week 1 win over the Houston Texans, Mahomes has 9,623 career passing yards in just 32 career games played. He needs to pass for 377 yards in Week 2 against the Los Angeles Chargers to become the fastest player to 10,000 career passing yards.

Hall of Fame QB Kurt Warner holds the current record, reaching 10,000 career passing yards in 36 games played. It’s worth noting that Mahomes has never thrown for more than 256 passing yards against the Chargers, so he might have to wait until Week 3 to hold this record.

Last season, Mahomes became the fastest player in NFL history to reach 70 career touchdown passes. Now, with a three-touchdown game against the Chargers in Week 2, he can reach another touchdown-related milestone.

Mahomes passed for three touchdowns in the teams’ season-opening win over the Texans and it became his 16th career game to do so. He’s currently tied with former Colts QB Peyton Manning and Cowboys QB Dak Prescott for the most-such games through the first four seasons of a player’s career. Mahomes needs 12 more three-touchdown performances in order to surpass former Dolphins QB Dan Marino, who holds the record with 27 three-touchdown performances in his first four seasons.

That last one might be a bit of a stretch for Mahomes as he only had five such games last season, but he can’t have every record. To have his name stamped among Hall of Famers in the NFL record books is recognition enough.

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NFL.com prediction has Vikings missing playoffs

The Vikings finished the 2019 season with a 10-6 record and upset the Saints in the wild card round of the playoffs.

The crew over at NFL.com put together a poll of how they think the regular season standings will shake out.

Those being polled include former players like Nate Burleson, David Carr, Kurt Warner, along with writers and analysts.

Out of the 35 people being polled, 18 predicted that the Green Bay Packers will win the NFC North. Fifteen votes went to the Vikings while two went to the Bears.

Surely, though, with the expanded playoffs, the Vikings snuck in as a wild card team, right?

About that . . . 

The Vikings were tied for fifth to get a wild card spot. But to be fair, obviously the 15 people who voted for the Vikings to win the NFC North did not vote for them to get a wild card spot, so this survey is a bit flawed.

Minnesota opens up the 2020 season at home against the Packers. The Vikings opened up as 2.5 point favorites.

Kurt Warner weighs in on 2020 Titans, Ryan Tannehill, Cole McDonald

What does 2020 and beyond hold for Titans quarterback Ryan Tannehill?

The Tennessee Titans went on one of the most improbable-looking runs to the AFC Championship Game after a dismal 2-4 start to the season.

The offense was all but stagnant with quarterback Marcus Mariota at the helm, but seemed to gain new life with Ryan Tannehill at the helm.

Tannehill recorded a career year, leading the NFL in yards per attempt (9.6), adjusted yards gained per pass attempt (10.2), yards per completion (13.6) and passer rating (117.5).

I recently caught up with former NFL quarterback and Hall of Famer, Kurt Warner, who shared his thoughts on what Tannehill’s future in Tennessee could look like.

“I think he’s found a great fit,” Warner said. “You find a guy like Derrick Henry to run the football and for them to be able to dominate running the football and you can be a complementary piece… that can help a lot of quarterbacks to become more consistent and I think that’s what we saw last year. Ryan wasn’t asked to have to carry the team.”

Obviously, Tannehill helped the Titans’ offense to find rhythm, but how much is he truly worth as an individual player to the team? We’ll find that answer out in time.

“He was a secondary fixture that was able to benefit off of the dominant running game, and that to me becomes the real question,” Warner said. “When he was in Miami, they didn’t have that, and so he was asked to do a lot more to make more plays on an every week basis than he did in Tennessee, so when you ask the question about Ryan, it really, to me, comes back to if they can continue to play the way they did last year, whether it be this upcoming year or even throughout his contract.

“The big question is if we have to ask him to throw the ball 35 or 40 times a game, and he’s got to consistently do that for us to win and especially to beat good teams, can he be that guy? Because he’s never really been that guy in his career. So, I’m fascinated like everyone else. Any time you’ve seen one of these outlier-type seasons, where you go ‘OK, he’s never been that, and then, bang, he had that kind of a year?’ You wonder ‘did something just click, and we’re gonna see that the rest of his career? Or did he just hit the lottery and everything worked out?'”

There have been a number of quarterbacks throughout NFL history who have recorded impressive seasons, only to regress or fall into a state of being average after.

Tannehill still has much to prove, no matter how many metrics he led in or how much personal success he’s found.

“Because we’ve seen that with a number of guys that win an MVP or have one of those runs to the Super Bowl where it’s just kind of out of nowhere and then they never get back to that, and I think that’s what I’m waiting on to see with Ryan. Hopefully, things click and he’s grown and he’s earned a good situation where he can be this type of quarterback for the next seven, eight, nine years and it wasn’t just kind of a one-hit wonder because of everything coming together at one time.”

Behind Tannehill, the Titans will have Logan Woodside and rookie Cole McDonald battling it out for the backup position.

Warner said he hadn’t taken an extensive deep dive into the former Hawaii Rainbow Warrior’s tape, but did have some thoughts on him.

“You see some good things,” he said. “I think the biggest thing when I watched Cole was just kind of the up-and-down inconsistency of play, and that to me is something you always watch when a guy gets to the next level. If you can’t play at a consistent level or be consistently accurate at the college level, how do you become that at the NFL level? He’s got some play-making ability, but it just didn’t show up consistently in college.”

Like many others, Warner also expressed some concern about McDonald’s elongated, flawed throwing motion.

“It’s really wacky, especially when you watch it at the combine, watching him throw, it’s all over the place,” he said. “It’s hard for me to see a guy with loose mechanics like that being able to become consistent and accurate, but I guess that stranger things have happened. I know he’s worked with Jordan Palmer, who talks highly of him and thinks he has a chance.”

As for the Titans as a whole moving forward, this is a group we’ve seen have more than their fair share of ups and downs. Do the Titans move beyond the 9-7 overall regular season record we’ve seen out of them so many times and the host of lackluster finishes that have left fans disappointed in the past?

Warner sees the Titans moving backward.

“I personally think that we’re going to see a relapse,” he said. “I just don’t know if they can dominate running the football the way they did last year, especially come playoff time and everyone knowing they’re going to run (the football) and losing a couple pieces up front.”

2019 was a fairy tale year for Tennessee, and it’s going to be no easy task to expand upon.

“I feel like so many things came together for them last year, including Ryan coming in and playing at that level and the ability to dominate the line of scrimmage week in and week out,” Warner said. “I just don’t see that happening. I saw a team last year that, to me, was a good team but not a great team… I just don’t know if they have enough talented play-makers across the board… to get back to the level that they were last year.”

Kurt Warner shares a similar experience to Patriots QB Cam Newton

Kurt Warner shares a similar career trajectory with Newton.

Although Cam Newton’s journey to the New England Patriots may seem a little unorthodox, he isn’t the first quarterback to take a similar type of route. Pro Football Hall of Famer Kurt Warner had a similar career trajectory as Newton.

Early in his career, Warner was the star quarterback for the St. Louis Rams. While in St. Louis, he was named to the Pro Bowl three times and won a Super Bowl. After two consecutive First-Team All-Pro nods in 1999 and 2001, Warner was at the mountaintop of professional football.

He then was released by the St. Louis Rams in 2004, as he battled a hand injury. Signing a one-year $3 million deal with the New York Giants, Warner was never able to capture the same magic in New York that he had in St. Louis.

It wasn’t until he got to the Arizona Cardinals that things began to turn around for him. Beginning his career with Arizona in 2005, he began to revitalize his stardom.

The pinnacle of his time with the Cardinals came in 2008. That season, he threw for 30 touchdowns and 14 interceptions, helping lead the Cardinals to the Super Bowl. Throwing for 377 yards, he completed 72.1 percent of his passes in an eventual 27-23 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

If there’s anybody who knows about bouncing back, it is Warner. Warner knows about making the most of opportunities.

“The good news is, I am a walking example that perception is NOT always reality,” Warner writes. “I was given two more opportunities — with the New York Giants and Arizona Cardinals — to prove that the overriding perception of me as a player was not accurate. I was able to return to form, playing at a Pro Bowl level and reaching the Super Bowl once more.

“Knowing Cam’s track record and the competitor that lies within him, I would not be surprised if he once again rose to the top of the league.”

We shall see if Newton can capture the same type of magic Warner had. If nothing else, Newton now at least has a blueprint to look toward as he tries to find success.

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The 13 MVP QBs who changed teams

Take a look at an NFL Throwback video showing the 13 MVP quarterbacks who changed teams.

Tom Brady is going to be the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ quarterback if and when the 2020 NFL season kicks off.

Brady comes to Tampa after building his Hall of Fame career with the New England Patriots, where he won six Super Bowls, four Super Bowl MVPs and three regular season MVP awards to go along with over 500 touchdown passes. Canton is just waiting for him to call it a career before they start work on his bust.

Brady will be looking to win his seventh Super Bowl with the Bucs this season, and if he can lead them to Super Bowl LV in Tampa, he’ll be the first quarterback ever to play a Super Bowl in his home stadium. But Brady won’t be the first MVP quarterback who’s changed teams during his career.

NFL.com put together a video of the 13 MVP QBs who’ve worn different jerseys, including Kurt Warner and Peyton Manning.

Take a look at the full video here.

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