How can you fix a quarterback?
That is the dilemma facing Sean Payton, as he looks to resurrect the career of Jameis Winston. The former Tampa Bay Buccaneer is coming off a season where he threw 30 interceptions, and was left on the outside looking in when the organization added arguably the greatest quarterback of all time in Tom Brady.
As with any potential medical diagnosis, the first step is to figure out the problem, and then to come up with a solution. Here is the two-step process facing the New Orleans Saints over the next few months.
Diagnosing the Problem
We often look at quarterbacks, particularly when evaluating them, and wonder about their processing speed. How quickly do they make the right read and decision? Watching Winston, however, I wonder if there is another “speed” issue: Play speed. Take, for example, this interception against the Houston Texans:
This play comes on a 3rd and 1 situation. Winston knows pre-snap exactly where he is going to go with the football. But even with that, watch how slow the football comes out of his hand. He sets himself, stares at the route, gives it a chop with his feet to reset himself, and then the ball comes out, far, far too late on this route. The cornerback is already driving down on the route.
The issue isn’t with his processing speed, as he’s made up his mind where to go with the ball before the snap. It is with the play speed, or how long he takes to get the ball out.
Look at this play, a Pick Six against the Atlanta Falcons:
This is a relatively easy curl/spacing concept to the three-receiver side of the formation, with a backside go route. Very similar to some of the concepts broken down earlier. With the Falcons dropping into a soft zone coverage over the concept, Winston knows almost immediately after the snap that he will come to the wing tight end. But he again pauses after hitting his drop depth, and that extra second allows the linebacker to undercut this route for the interception.
The end zone angle illustrates in detail the delay in Winston getting the ball out of his hands:
Again, the issue is not the time it makes Winston to make up his mind, but rather the time it takes to get the ball out of his hands once he does. Look at this end zone angle. Winston knows by the first step in his drop that he is throwing the sit route to his tight end. But…he still throws this with a three-step drop and a hitch. Now, the pass gets slightly deflected at the line of scrimmage, which takes a little bit of velocity off the throw, but the play speed is the biggest issue here.
Next let’s break down an interception against the Los Angeles Rams. This turnover comes in the fourth quarter of an 11-point game, with the Buccaneers trailing. Before the snap, this is what Winston sees:
Now, put yourself in his mind for a second. You see one safety deep in the middle of the field, shaded to the trips side of the offensive formation. You see one cornerback off, nearly ten yards from the line of scrimmage across from the outside, or #1, receiver on the left. The backside CB is also ten yards off the line of scrimmage. You are thinking this is some variation of Cover 3.
The Buccaneers run a two-receiver concept to the left side of the field, with a vertical route from the outside receiver and an out pattern from the inside receiver:
Now, if Winston is expecting Cover 3 here, he is probably going to read the flat route as his primary target. He will expect the cornerback to drop vertically with the boundary go route, and the inside receiver will have an advantage leverage-wise on his route to the flat.
Now, this route combination, termed Ohio for you Madden players, is a perfect way to attack a Cover 2 scheme. Say the defense were to rotate into a Cover 2 scheme, then Winston would have a chance for a big play. If the cornerback squats on the flat route you can throw the vertical route behind him, provided you get the ball into that window before the safety rotates over. If the cornerback sinks under the vertical, you take the flat route. This route design was created to attack exactly that defense, and it spurred the creation of trap coverage, where the cornerback shows that he will drop under the vertical route on the outside but reads the inside receiver and breaks on any release to the flat. But that is a nerdy football discussion for another time.
As luck would have it, the Rams do rotate into Cover 2. Here, the cornerback starts with off technique but eventually sits on the flat route. Now, here is how Steve Axman, who coached Troy Aikman in college, describes this read in his book “Attacking Coverages with the Passing Game:”
The quick-game inside-receiver speed-out-route combination is a quick, high-low fade/speed-out isolation on a cover-2 cornerback. The widest receiver must outside release in an effort to get the cornerback to turn his back to the inside receiver’s speed-out route. If the cornerback runs with the fade route, the quarterback quickly throws low to the inside receiver’s speed-out route. If the cornerback stays squatted waiting on the speed-out route, the throw is made over the cornerback’s head in the hole to the fade route. If in doubt, the quarterback should throw the ball “low” to the inside receiver’s speed-out route quickly to give the speed-out route receiver the ability to make the catch and knife upfield quickly before he gets to the cornerback. Attacking Coverage with the Passing Game pg. 88
Here, everything happens too slowly from Winston. He waits and does see the cornerback squat for a split second, but the ball comes out a step too late and when combined with some pressure in the pocket, the pass arrives too late for the receiver and the CB recovers to make the interception:
If Winston pulls the trigger a step quicker he avoids the late pressure at his feet and likely completes this. Or, if he heeds the advice of Axman and just takes the flat route – the option when there is doubt – he avoids the turnover. Instead, the Rams are going the other way.
Next is this interception against the Carolina Panthers. This comes on the opening play of the game:
The Buccaneers run a mirrored curl/flat design on the play, with Evans running a curl on the left and the tight end releasing to the flat. The Panthers run a Cover 3 scheme here (you see the free safety come into the picture late in the middle of the field) and the underneath defender matches the tight end’s release to the flat. Winston’s read is the right one, to throw the curl route against and outside-leveraged cornerback who needs to respect potential vertical threats (you see James Bradberry jump to the outside for a second, wary of a potential out-and-up). But Winston gets the ball out too late again, using an extra hitch step in the pocket. That allows Bradberry time to recover, and when the throw is a step too far to the outside, the CB is in position to make the interception.