Here’s who will play Kurt Warner in upcoming biopic

Zachary Levi will star in Kurt Warner’s upcoming biopic.

Kurt Warner’s remarkable story will be told on the big screen in an upcoming film titled “American Underdog: The Kurt Warner Story.” The biopic will detail Warner’s life and path to the NFL, which included a stint in the Arena League before he landed with the Rams in 1997.

And while we don’t yet know when exactly the film will be released, we do know who will play Warner in it. According to Variety, Zachary Levi will star as Warner, with production set to begin later this year.

Levi was in the movie “Shazam!” which came out in 2019. He’s also known for his role in the series “Chuck,” which ran from 2007-2012.

Here’s what he had to say about playing Warner in the film.

“Kurt’s story is one of relentless faith — in his own abilities but even more so in a higher power,” he said. “When I read Kurt’s story, I identified with the quiet strength he found to persevere – that’s something I think anybody can recognize in their own lives. This is the kind of underdog story that sports movies are all about, and the fact that it’s true makes it even more special. I’m thrilled to be part of bringing his story to audiences.”

In addition to Levi’s casting, Jon and Andrew Erwin will direct and produce “American Underdog.”

New England Patriots join elite NFL MVP fraternity

Tom Brady’s exit and Cam Newton’s entrance in New England makes the Patriots part of a small NFL MVP grouping.

The New England Patriots saw a three-time NFL MVP, Tom Brady, check out. Now, the 2015 league MVP Cam Newton checks into Foxboro.

How many times has a team lost an MVP QB only to add another MVP QB in the offseason? Once.

And if you were wondering how many times a team has lost an MVP and added another in the same offseason, this makes three.

 

Kurt Warner compares his Rams demise to Cam Newton’s situation

Kurt Warner knows exactly the situation Cam Newton is in, and he wouldn’t bet against the newest Patriots QB.

If there’s one person who knows exactly the situation Cam Newton is in, it’s Kurt Warner. There are glaring similarities between their career paths, not necessarily in the way that they made it to the NFL, but with the accolades they collected early on.

Both won NFL MVP awards, were selected to the Pro Bowl three times in their first five years, made it to the Super Bowl (Warner did it twice with the Rams) and were eventually cut after injuries caused them to miss significant time.

Just as the Panthers did with Newton this offseason, the Rams cut Warner in 2004 after a decorated tenure in St. Louis. Warner was scooped up by the Giants and eventually wound up with the Cardinals where he made a fourth Pro Bowl and reached his third Super Bowl, proving he still had plenty left in the tank despite being in his mid-30s.

Newton isn’t quite that old, but Warner is confident the new Patriots quarterback can bounce back in a similar fashion. Warner penned an article at NFL.com detailing his demise with the Rams and why he thinks Newton still has a lot to give as a quarterback.

Like Cam, I’d been slowed by injuries, but I still believed I had a lot to offer. Also like Cam, I was given another chance to show what I had left in the tank. So while we wait to see how Cam’s second NFL act turns out in New England, I thought I’d revisit that portion of my playing days, to help those who have never been in this kind of situation better understand some of what Newton has experienced.

Newton landed in a great situation with the Patriots, who have been the most successful team of the last two decades. He has Josh McDaniels as his offensive coordinator, Bill Belichick leading him as the head coach and a defense that’s still Super Bowl-worthy.

All he has to do is beat out Jarrett Stidham and Brian Hoyer, and he’ll quickly be back on the path to success. Warner’s time with the Giants was rocky, as were his first three years with the Cardinals. But Arizona stuck with him and he returned the favor with a Super Bowl appearance.

Newton probably won’t be given the same level of patience if he flops with the Patriots, but he shouldn’t be counted out too quickly – and Warner is a perfect example as to why.

The good news is, I am a walking example that perception is NOT always reality. 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.

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How to run the perfect routes with Cowboys WR Amari Cooper

In a recent Film Session with NFL Films, Cowboys receiver Amari Cooper revealed why he’s one of the NFL’s best route-runners.

One of the best features of the NFL’s Game Pass site, beyond the ability to watch and analyze game tape from the overhead and end zone angles, is the “Game Pass Film Session” series, now in its second season, and hosted by former NFL players and current NFL analysts Brian Baldinger and Kurt Warner. The series, shot at NFL Films headquarters in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, gives viewers an intricate and intimate look at how the NFL’s best players do what they do.

Since the Raiders selected him with the fourth overall pick in the 2015 draft out of Alabama, Amari Cooper has been one of the NFL’s best and most complete route-runners. With both the Raiders and Cowboys, who traded for him in October, 2018, Cooper has helped his quarterbacks in ways a lot of receivers just can’t with his route awareness, technical perfection, and understanding of the passing game.

Cooper recently sat down with Warner and Baldinger to discuss the science of his work, and it’s fascinating to discover just how much a technically proficient receiver can complete an offense. In Cooper’s case, there are times when he’s able to go above and beyond his offensive coordinators to create explosive plays. This touchdown against the Eagles in December, 2019 is a prefect example — Cooper was tired of Scott Linehan calling stop route after stop route and exhorted Dak Prescott to do something different.

“It’s interesting because I actually had another stop route on that play and they were, if you were watching, really sitting on those stop routes,” Cooper said of Philadelphia’s defense. “And I was like, this is ridiculous. So when I broke the huddle I was kind of mad and I was like, Dak, come on. And he was just like, just run it bro. And I guess he thought about it again and he kind of signaled a go route and I was elated when he did that. And I took off, caught the ball, and scored.”

With Warner and Baldinger, Cooper went even deeper into the particulars that make him great.

Releasing off the line of scrimmage

In this touchdown against the Giants in Week 1 of the 2019 season, Cooper talked about how he was able to torch rookie cornerback Deandre Baker on an end zone fade throw from Prescott.

“So, this play? It’s a rookie out there,” Cooper explained. “The first game of the season. And I knew I had him, because he jumped before the play. And I’m like, ‘This guy’s kind of scared. The key to winning that route is — you see that I switched my feet at the line of scrimmage, because I want to give him that hard jab inside so he can jump inside. I want to show the quarterback that I’m open as early as possible, so he won’t come off me. So, I give him that hard jab inside, and that’s all for Dak, so he can see that separation.

“I like being really patient when I have go balls [routes]. I like to run under him [the defender]. Like, if I was to run a speed release right there, I would probably get past him, but the ball wouldn’t be dropping in that bucket yet. That’s why I chose that release.”

As Warner pointed out, Cooper got right up on Baker’s toes with the initial skip release to avoid any separation that would allow Baker to catch up to him once Cooper made his move outside.

Speed release on the slant

When you’re facing one of the best cornerbacks in the NFL — and Buffalo’s Tre’Davious White is certainly one of them — you have to combine the physical and the mental to beat your opponent. One aspect of this is changing up your approach based on the qualities of the cornerback you’re dealing with, as Cooper did here in Week 12 of the 2019 season. It’s a simple slant on tape, but it’s not so simple in Cooper’s head. White is a technician who could likely match up with any jabs and fakes Cooper tried from the line of scrimmage, so the strategy here was to use a speed release — the receiver’s equivalent of the bull rush.

“This is all because I was playing against Tre’Davious,” Cooper said. “Usually, on a slant, I would try to give him a jab inside, release outside, and then go. But he plays over the top [to guard against the deep vertical threat], so I just ran off, because I knew he would protect the go ball. So, I ran him off, crossed his face, used my strength, and caught the ball.”

Thinking three steps ahead

When asked by Warner what his greatest strength as a player is, Cooper said that it’s his ability to think three steps ahead of the guy he’s facing.

“My game as a receiver is to try to make my route look like a different route than I’m actually running.”

On the first offensive play of Dallas’ Week 3 game against the Dolphins, Cooper hit cornerback Xavien Howard with what looked like a “Deep 2” at first — a deep over route. Then, the route turns into a “Sail 7” — a sail route to the outside. You can see how it takes Howard, an above-average defender, right out of the play.

“I’m just trying to really make it feel like it’s a Deep 2 — I want him to feel a Deep 2. It’s all about creativity in your route-running. It’s all about really selling it. When you’re running a double move, or even a route that’s not a double move, you always want to make it look like it’s another route. So, when I’m running this fake Deep 2 to Sail 7, I’m looking at Dak like I’m about to catch the Deep 2. Now, he really feels like it’s a Deep 2.”

Cooper scored two touchdowns in that 31-6 win, and this was one of them — another example of how he’s able to sell defensive backs on one route, while giving them the okay-doke on the way to yet another big play. Here, he beats Howard once again on a little pivot for a five-yard first-quarter touchdown.

As Baldinger posited, Howard is trying to take Cooper’s inside release away, and Cooper still gets inside. Patience is the key here.

“It’s really like a slant/out,” Cooper said. “I’m really trying to make it look like a slant as much as possible, and he played it phenomenally. That’s the best you can play it. I tried to jab him outside a little bit to make it seem like one of those quick slants, went inside for a couple of steps, he kind of grabbed me a little bit — playing me with his hands, like what a good cornerback would do — and I just fought through it. I won this route at the top — just fighting through it.”

Warner pointed out another subtlety of this route combination — Cooper had to stay aligned to the line of scrimmage when he went inside, or he wouldn’t have been able to take Howard back outside. Then, Cooper’s vertical push back outside put Howard at a geometric disadvantage.

As Cooper then said, the consistency of the timing of these routes plays a major factor in a quarterback’s confidence.

“I’m trying to be open as soon as possible, because I don’t want Dak to come off me. If he gets a look that he’s not used to, or he hasn’t seen in practice as far as the relationship between me and the DB, he’s not going to feel comfortable with it. He’s going to go to the next read.”

Cooper said that when he first went to Dallas, his coaches didn’t have that route in the playbook. He had to show how it would work in practice.

“My first week there, we always do red zone one-on-ones. And I ran it, and I killed the guy [the defensive back in practice]. We put it in against Tennessee my very first game, and I scored on it.”

“So, it’s about showing the guys that it actually works. And once you show them that it works, you can go to them and say, hey, this is what I think will work.”

That probably had a bit to do with Prescott’s confidence in overruling Linehan against the Eagles. When Amari Cooper comes to you with a concept, you should listen to what he has to say.

Responding to disguised coverages

One very interesting thing that came up in this film session happened during Cooper’s touchdown against the Redskins in Week 2 of the 2019 season. Here, the Cowboys utilized pre-snap motion with receiver Randall Cobb, and based on the defensive back’s movement with him, Cooper thought Washington was playing man coverage. That’s generally what happens, and why smarter offensive coaches use motion to help their quarterbacks and receivers discern coverage before the snap. However, Washington had some trickeration in mind.

“I’ve been seeing a lot of that lately — a guy would follow a guy in motion, but it wouldn’t be man; it would be zone. So, yeah — I’m looking at Cobb, and I’m looking at the guy following him [cornerback Jimmy Moreland], and I’m thinking it’s going to be man, but it’s not.”

The theoretical problem with misdiagnosing coverage is that more often than not, receivers are told to alter their routes based on the coverage. As Cooper detailed, this was indeed the case for him as the outside man in this motion to a bunch formation.

“If I’m running that sit route versus man, I have to run it off him [the cornerback]. I have to win it if he’s pressed. But if it’s zone, I’m just reading it. I’m just trying to find an open spot. I kinda see him out my peripheral coming down, and I’m just hoping the ball beats him there. Luckily, it did.”

It’s been said that luck is the residue of design, and that’s often the case with the most technically proficient and mentally prepared NFL players. Amari Cooper has the physical gifts to be one of the NFL’s best receivers, but that’s not why he is exactly that. As this film session showed, there’s so much more that goes into the preparation for every position in football than you may think.

Game Pass is currently free through July 31, 2020, and I highly recommend that any football fan who doesn’t watch it now checks it out.

Kurt Warner: Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes can improve his footwork

NFL Network analyst Kurt Warner highlights an area Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes can improve on in 2020.

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Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes is known for his ridiculous highlight-reel throws. However, when it comes to improving for the 2020 season, it might come down to the normal throws according to NFL Network Analyst and Pro Football Hall of Fame QB Kurt Warner.

Warner recently appeared on NFL Network and was asked about the ways in which Mahomes can get even better for the upcoming season. Warner prefaced his answer by saying he believed it’s a loaded question. How can a guy who has crushed league records, become NFL MVP and Super Bowl MVP in just two seasons as a starter possibly get better? The answer for Warner comes from Mahomes’ self-scouting.

“I heard Patrick Mahomes talking about it last year,” Warner said. “How he goes back and he self scouts and he self scouts his technique and specifically his footwork. That’s one thing that I’ll notice. When you get talented guys like Patrick Mahomes, like Aaron Rodgers, they’re so used to getting away with doing things with their special arms and special arm talent that they get away with bad footwork sometimes. Their feet will be moving and going one direction, [while they’re] trying to jam throws in the other direction. We saw a couple of these in the Super Bowl as we’re looking at here. He finds himself stepping one direction, trying to throw it another direction, the balls will get away from him a little bit and lead to bad plays. Now he’s usually able to overcome that with the special plays that he makes. But if he can clean up his footwork and become more efficient from throw to throw to throw, not just the big throws, but on the normal everyday throws that you’re asked to make, I think Patrick Mahomes can get better than he’s been over these first few years. And we all know he’s been incredible.”

Mahomes is well ahead of Warner on this one. The major thing he’s been working on this offseason has been his footwork. Mahomes revealed in a recent chat with Steelers legend Troy Polamalu that he’s been working on his footwork while he’s forced to remain at home because of the coronavirus pandemic. It’s the one thing he can work on without being around teammates and the coaching staff.

It wasn’t long ago that draft analysts were saying the biggest reason that Mahomes couldn’t be successful in the NFL was his footwork. Perhaps this offseason was the perfect storm for Mahomes to improve in that one area.

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Kurt Warner explains how Stephon Gilmore compares to Deion Sanders

There are some lovely parallels between Gilmore and Sanders’ games.

New England Patriots cornerback Stephon Gilmore drew a flattering comparison this offseason. NFL Network analyst and retired Rams quarterback Kurt Warner was asked whether there’s a player Gilmore resembles in playing style from Warner’s time in the NFL.

Warner dwelled on the question for a long while before sharing a player who Gilmore parallels stylistically.

“He reminds me of Deion Sanders the way he studies his craft and is a student of the game,” Warner told ESPN. “That’s what Deion was so good at — the technique, the little things, and the ability to understand the game. Obviously, Deion was ridiculously talented. But he understood the game in such a way, especially playing man coverages, strengths and weaknesses, reading body language and doing all that stuff. That reminds me a lot of Stephon, the way he plays the game,” Warner said after deliberation.

“Maybe not the top-end athleticism that Deion had. Maybe not the speed that Deion had. But the same kind of craft he plays with, so he would probably be the guy. Deion was a guy who would get up in your face a lot.”

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Kurt Warner, Carson Palmer drop interesting comments on Bengals QB Joe Burrow

Kurt Warner, Carson Palmer had some interesting things to say about Cincinnati Bengals QB Joe Burrow.

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Two notable former quarterbacks brought up Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow recently and had some interesting comments about his path to the NFL and journey once there.

Both Kurt Warner and Carson Palmer talked Burrow on Arizona Sports’ Doug & Wolf (h/t Matt Layman, 98.7 FM). Warner said he liked that Burrow was compared to him before the draft:

“If you gave me one thing on the field and said, ‘Hey, we’ve got to play the whole game this way,’ I’m saying, ‘We’re going five out, and we’re going to block five and we’re going to put the pressure on the defense and you leave it up to me to make those decisions and get the ball to my playmakers,’ which is very much what LSU did in that great season that he had last year. So I like the comparisons.”

It’s no small feat for a quarterback like Burrow to be compared to Warner. It’s an even smaller feat to have Warner confirm he likes the comparison.

As for Palmer, he just sounds excited to see Burrow get to work in a city he calls home:

“The best thing he can do is go in there and work his butt off. He’s a hometown kid. He grew up an hour northeast of downtown Cincinnati. That city’s in his blood. He’s got family and high school teammates and teachers and so many people pulling for him. He’s going to have a ton of support.

Burrow has already been seeing the hometown love big time since the long-awaited move went official and the Bengals drafted him No. 1. Most recently, his “Color Rush” jersey blew up the sales charts.

While fans await the official Burrow debut in Bengals stripes, it sure doesn’t hurt to hear two prominent names like this offer this sort of commentary — and they’d know a thing or two about Burrow and his situation.

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Kurt Warner pours some cold water on the Drew Lock hype

“I’m not a believer that he is there yet or will be there this year,” Kurt Warner said of Broncos quarterback Drew Lock.

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Kurt Warner, who won a Super Bowl and two NFL MVP awards during his playing days, now works for NFL Network as an analyst. He doesn’t make explosive statements simply to get a reaction like some pundits do so when Warner comments on quarterbacks, it’s usually worth listening to his opinion.

Warner thinks it’s a little too early to hype up Denver Broncos quarterback Drew Lock, who went 4-1 as a starter last season.

“Do I believe he is definitely a franchise quarterback? I don’t have the answer to that quite yet,” Warner said during a recent appearance on NFL Network. “We saw moments. We saw the big-time throws that we knew he could make at this level. I didn’t see the consistency. I didn’t see the decision-making top to bottom, week in and week out that I want to see from a franchise quarterback.

“So, there was enough to see moments and go, ‘Man, if we can build on this and he can become more consistent and we can put players around him,’ as John Elway did, then he’s got the potential to possibly be that guy. But I’m not a believer that he is there yet or will be there this year. I think there’s a lot of work to be done.”

In five games last season, Lock completed 64.1 percent of his passes for 1,020 yards with seven touchdowns against three interceptions. That was enough to get fans in Denver excited about the future but Warner wants to see more consistency from Lock before jumping on the hype train.

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Kurt Warner, Adrian Wilson describe 2 different Super Bowl halftime experiences

Warner felt guilty for the James Harrison interception return and Wilson was just angry halftime was so long.

It was many years ago, but Arizona Cardinals fans will remember when their team was in Super Bowl XLIII against the Pittsburgh Steelers. They will also remember the end of the half when quarterback Kurt Warner was picked off at the goalline by James Harrison, who returned the interception for a touchdown.

Instead of a potential 14-10 lead for the Cardinals entering the half or at least a 10-10 tie, the Steelers went ahead 17-7.

Warner and former Cardinals safety Adrian Wilson described how halftime in the locker room felt.

On one hand, there was Warner, who felt guilty during the extra long halftime.

“It felt like they put me on a stool right in the middle of all the other 52 guys and everybody was just staring at me like ‘you just blew the Super Bowl for us,'” he recalled on Arizona Sports 98.7FM. “I couldn’t wait to get back out there in the second half. It was a long, long halftime.”

He wanted to be able to erase the mistake and in his mind, his teammates were blaming him.

“That was a tough moment for me just knowing what was going through everyone’s mind there at halftime,” he said.

Wilson, on the other hand, felt differently.

“I remember taking a shower because it was the longest halftime in the history of halftimes,” he said, also on Arizona Sports 98.7 FM, citing how very few players on the team had any idea how a Super Bowl halftime went.

“I just remember sitting there and the 15-minute mark had passed by, somebody came into the locker room and said, ‘hey guys, we’ve got 15 more minutes.’ I’m like, ‘a 30-minute halftime?’ At that point, I was irate,” he recalled. “I didn’t care what happened right before halftime. I didn’t care about any of that stuff because I knew we still had a chance and we had the opportunity to play the second half and make adjustments.”

Wilson just wanted to play. In that sense, he reacted in his mind like Warner. He doesn’t think anyone on the team blamed Warner.

“That whole halftime thing, I know Kurt probably blames a lot of that on himself, but half of those guys n the locker room, we didn’t know what was going on,” he said. “We were just happy to be there.”

As the story goes, the Cardinals took the lead on a Larry Fitzgerald touchdown catch with under three minutes to go, but then the Steelers answered with a game-winning drive that ended with Santonio Holmes’ famous touchdown catch.

Despite the halftime adversity, whether it was Warner’s guilt or Wilson’s anger, the Cardinals overcame that tragic play at the end of the half and almost won it all.

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Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on Apple podcasts or Stitcher Radio.

Ep. 267

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Ep. 266

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Kurt Warner considered comeback with Cardinals

The team never showed interest but he would have considered it had they reached out.

It wasn’t that long ago when Hall of Fame quarterback Kurt Warner, who retired after the 2009 season, said he considered a return to the NFL. He talked about in 2018 when the Arizona Cardinals signed Sam Bradford and drafted Josh Rosen.

Warner admitted he really did think about it, although there was never any interest from the Cardinals.

“I thought about it,” he said on Arizona Sports 98.7 FM this week. “I actually went out back and started throwing the football.”

At that point, he had already been enshrined in the Hall of Fame and made a member of the Cardinals Ring of Honor.

“I would have definitely considered it had they been interested first and second I really felt I was back in shape to the point to be able to help the team,” Warner continued. “It’s definitely something that wasn’t just throwing it out there haphazardly. It was something I highly considered and probably would have probably explored had they shown interest in doing that.”

He was 46 years old at the time. It probably couldn’t have gone much worse than it did with Bradford and Rosen. They ended up 3-13 and with the No. 1 pick in the draft. Of course, that led to the hiring of Kliff Kingsbury and drafting Kyler Murray, which seem to be positives right now.

It would definitely have been interesting to see a comeback nearly a decade later but, considering the team didn’t even really think it was an option, it probably was simply Warner seeing the state of the position and having that itch to play come back one final time.

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Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on Apple podcasts or Stitcher Radio.

Ep. 266

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Ep.265

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