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Tag: quarterbacks

  • Watching Philip Rivers Play Football Makes Me Feel Old

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    Surely the most astonishing detail in this utterly astonishing story is that Rivers was waiting for Steichen’s call. He’d been watching the Colts’ game when he saw Jones go down, and later said that the thought of replacing Jones had immediately crossed his mind. Rivers and Steichen are close; they worked together during Rivers’s final season with the Los Angeles Chargers, in 2019, where Steichen had been the quarterbacks coach. Still, why Rivers might think that anyone would turn to a middle-aged man who had been retired for roughly five years to try to take a team to the N.F.L. playoffs is one of the great mysteries of our age. Rivers, after all, is a grandfather. An actual grandfather. And yet Steichen did call, and he was not calling to inquire how the grandson was.

    So Rivers celebrated his forty-fourth birthday on a Monday, and on Wednesday was signed to the Colts’ practice squad. He arrived in Indianapolis with the gut of a dad who “works out,” which, of course, is what he is. But Steichen appeared set on starting him. The two men waved away concerns about his fitness. Athleticism had never been Rivers’s biggest strength; even in his prime, no defense needed to scheme for the possibility that he might run. And it was true that Rivers knew the Colts’ playbook as well as anyone—he used a watered-down version of it for his high-school team, and had frequently discussed it with Steichen. Most of all, he knew what it was like to lead a team under pressure. Even when Leonard was cleared to return to practice, Steichen hinted that he planned to put Rivers at the helm. Leonard was a rookie. He’d never damned the odds.

    Against the Seahawks, Rivers nearly did it. He even threw the game’s only honest-to-God touchdown. He led the Colts on a drive that ended with a sixty-yard field goal with forty-seven seconds remaining to take a one-point lead, only to watch the Indy defense let it slip away as the Seahawks answered with a field goal of their own. (A late blown lead—in that regard, it was a classic Rivers game.) He can still read coverages and throw a mean checkdown. And yet watching him throw was—how do I put this?—confusing. Unnatural, even. It was like watching a squid eat a hummingbird. Or like seeing the right tackle under center. Rivers played almost the entire game out of the shotgun. His primary strategies, as best I could tell: get rid of the ball as quickly as possible, and get out of the way of Jonathan Taylor, the Colts’ terrific running back. Some of Rivers’s throws did not cross the line of scrimmage, and those that did were hurled ducks. Rivers has always had a quick, shot-put-style release, but he once had a cannon for an arm. Not anymore. Last Sunday, he seemed to struggle to even throw the ball away. There was an odd juxtaposition between how quickly Rivers got rid of the ball and how slowly it wobbled out of his hand. There was no question of any run-pass option or quarterback draw; Rivers couldn’t move his feet. At one point, he slipped on the logo, got up, and lumbered for a few yards, as bodies flew all around him. It was like seeing a film that has somehow been slowed down and sped up simultaneously.

    Given that Rivers nearly led the Colts to a win anyway, I found myself wondering whether the quarterback—universally accepted as the most important position on the field—actually matters all that much. Sure, Tom Brady, blah blah blah. But Eli Manning has as many Super Bowl rings as his brother Peyton. And Dan Marino, widely considered one of the greatest quarterbacks ever, has none. These days, the question seems especially pertinent. Is the San Francisco quarterback Brock Purdy, who was the very last pick in the 2022 N.F.L. draft before leading the 49ers to the Super Bowl two years later, a mediocre Q.B. or an M.V.P.-calibre player? Is Jalen Hurts, who’s been to two Super Bowls with the Philadelphia Eagles in the past three years, any good as a quarterback? Should Sean McVay, the Los Angeles Rams’ offensive guru, get fitted for a helmet? Could a coach just suit up? Maybe what a team needs is a top defense, a good kicker, decent schemes, an excellent running back, and some guy taking snaps who can stay calm in a frenetic situation and won’t screw things up. Maybe the quarterback doesn’t have to be king. Maybe socialism works!

    Or maybe Rivers should head home to Alabama and enjoy the company of his ten children while he—and the Colts’ tight ends, who were getting smashed trying to catch Rivers’s floating passes—is still in one piece. There are plenty of stories of athletes who excel in their forties. Lindsey Vonn just won a World Cup downhill, at forty-one, five years after retiring, following a partial knee replacement. LeBron James was one of the ten best players in the N.B.A. last year, despite turning forty. We’re not dead yet. I can do more pullups now than I could at eighteen. But the career of a football player is nasty, brutish, and short for a reason.

    Riley Leonard is active. Anthony Richardson is returning to practice. Frankly, Andrew Luck is only thirty-six years old—doesn’t anyone in Indianapolis still have his phone number? Meanwhile, Steichen reportedly has plans to start Rivers again on Monday, against the 49ers, who are fighting for the No. 1 seed in the N.F.C. My knee hurts just thinking about it. ♦

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    Louisa Thomas

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  • Notebook: Bryce Young doesn’t practice; Panthers could get Rob Hunt back this year

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    The Bryce Young ankle saga continued Wednesday.

    And it won’t lose steam anytime soon.

    The starting quarterback for the Carolina Panthers was officially listed as “did not practice” on Wednesday. Such a development wasn’t surprising after he left the third quarter of the New York Jets game with an ankle injury and didn’t return.

    But Young, still, was out on the field with his uniform on, working off to the side with the other injured players. He was doing some light jogging, pedaling on an exercise bike, working through some simple cuts — all without a noticeable limp.

    Such was the fodder that head coach Dave Canales answered to Wednesday.

    “I saw a little bit of it,” Canales said of Young’s work to the side of the field. “He did more than what he did yesterday, so that’s good. That’s our plan right now. Each day, we push him a little bit more, see if we can get him out there in a different capacity. He wasn’t able to practice today, but was working on the side, doing some movement stuff. So we’ll just take it day to day and make the best decision.”

    Carolina Panthers quarterback Andy Dalton and quarterback Bryce Young watch from the sidelines at Bank of America Stadium.
    Carolina Panthers quarterback Andy Dalton and quarterback Bryce Young watch from the sidelines at Bank of America Stadium. Scott Kinser – The USAToday Network USA TODAY NETWORK

    When asked whether Canales was ready to declare veteran backup Andy Dalton the starter on Sunday, the second-year head coach said, “Not right now.”

    He added: “But Andy did take all the reps today with the group. And Hendon Hooker and Mike White are here. First day to get to look at (newly signed Mike White) in-person, to see him throw. He did a great job. Hendon handled most of the scout reps there.”

    Young was playing some of the best football of his NFL career when a sack from a Jets defender — one that ended with defensive lineman Jowon Briggs stepping on Young’s calf, which prompted Young’s right-ankle tweak — took him out of the game. His passer rating those three games: 90.7, 114.8 and 88.4. He also saw six touchdowns and two interceptions in that span, too.

    Panthers quarterback Bryce Young extends fully as he runs on a keeper as Dolphins cornerback Cornell Armstrong gives chase during the game at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025.
    Panthers quarterback Bryce Young extends fully as he runs on a keeper as Dolphins cornerback Cornell Armstrong gives chase during the game at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. Melissa Melvin-Rodriguez mrodriguez@charlotteobserver.com

    Dalton came in and played well in Young’s stead against the Jets. His highlight was a 33-yard pass to Xavier Legette on a late third-and-8 that sealed the contest.

    Canales reiterated Wednesday that the offense doesn’t change that much when Dalton or Young aren’t back there. Receivers Tetairoa McMillan and Jalen Coker said the same things Wednesday. This said, as Canales mentioned, the whole group is “pulling for Bryce.”

    “He’s pushing, and he’s trying to make himself available for Sunday,” Canales said of Young. “But we have to take it day to day.”

    Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young and head coach Dave Canales, right, celebrate the team's 27-24 victory over the Miami Dolphins on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina.
    Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young and head coach Dave Canales, right, celebrate the team’s 27-24 victory over the Miami Dolphins on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    Here’s what else that was notable from Wednesday’s practice.

    Robert Hunt might be able to come back by bye week

    Despite Canales’ reticence to be too declarative about his quarterback situation, he was quite forthcoming about another key offensive player currently recovering from injury — right guard Robert Hunt.

    Hunt, the jovial 2024 Pro Bowler, hasn’t played a game since Week 2, when he tore his biceps just as the Panthers were vying to make one of the biggest comebacks in franchise history in Arizona. He hasn’t been back out on the practice field in that time, either.

    But on Wednesday — though he was not practicing, as he’s still on injured reserve — Hunt was back on the grass working off to the side, where Young was and where other IR guys have been. He wore a massive brace on his arm.

    Carolina Panthers guard Robert Hunt watches a replay along the team's sideline during action against the Cleveland Browns on Friday, Aug. 8, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina.
    Carolina Panthers guard Robert Hunt watches a replay along the team’s sideline during action against the Cleveland Browns on Friday, Aug. 8, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    Canales told reporters that it was great to see Hunt back on the grass — and that he’s “ahead of schedule” in his recovery.

    “I’ve noticed over the years that guys who believe they heal fast end up healing fast,” Canales said. “That just puts you in a positive mindset to be able to get after your rehab, push the envelope and say, ‘Hey, we had this prescribed for you today; can I do a little bit more? Or is this good enough, can we stop here?’

    David Moore (out with an elbow injury) is another one who’s really attacking his rehab. Both guys are in there pushing each other. But it was good to have Rob out there on the grass, moving around.”

    Canales added that Hunt could potentially return to practice “somewhere around the bye week, so that could be something down the road.” The Panthers’ bye week is Week 14.

    Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young and guard Robert Hunt, right, embrace following the team’s 26-10 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025, at Everbank Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida.
    Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young and guard Robert Hunt, right, embrace following the team’s 26-10 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025, at Everbank Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    The Panthers’ offensive line has undergone immense injury attrition to date. In fact, against the Jets, the unit put out its sixth different starting offensive line in seven games. (Sixth in seventh!) Hunt’s return would be a huge boost of energy to this group — despite the fact that it has held up well despite the changes, furnishing solid-to-explosive days for Rico Dowdle in Weeks 5 and 6 and then Dowdle and Chuba Hubbard in Week 7.

    “It’s definitely encouraging,” starting left tackle Ickey Ekwonu told The Observer on Wednesday. “Obviously, Rob, he’s going to do everything he can to get back out there for us. He’s a fighter and everything, and we definitely appreciate having him around the building as much as he’s been around. It’s hard to mimic his spirit. So it’s definitely nice to have the energy around the building.”

    Carolina Panthers tight end Tommy Tremble, center, celebrates his touchdown catch with guard Robert Hunt, left, and offensive tackle Ikem Ekwonu (79) during the second quarter against the Philadelphia Eagles in a December 2024 game at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images
    Carolina Panthers tight end Tommy Tremble, center, celebrates his touchdown catch with guard Robert Hunt, left, and offensive tackle Ikem Ekwonu (79) during the second quarter against the Philadelphia Eagles in a December 2024 game at Lincoln Financial Field. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images Eric Hartline Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

    Trevin Wallace excited to see Shaq Thompson on the other sideline

    Sunday might mark a pretty emotional return to Bank of America Stadium for one Buffalo Bills player.

    Shaq Thompson, the longtime Carolina Panthers inside linebacker whom the team let walk during free agency in March, is now a contributor for the Buffalo Bills.

    His year in Buffalo is the first one outside the Carolina franchise that drafted him 25th overall in 2015.

    Former Carolina Panthers linebacker Shaq Thompson is shown during a practice.
    Former Carolina Panthers linebacker Shaq Thompson is shown during a practice. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    Trevin Wallace told The Observer on Wednesday that it’ll be “fun” seeing Thompson out on the other sideline, and that Thompson texted Wallace earlier this week. Thompson is still Wallace’s mentor, after all; he watches all of Wallace’s tape and lets him know what he does right and wrong each week — something Wallace really appreciates.

    Carolina Panthers linebacker Trevin Wallace, center, celebrates his tackle of Dallas Cowboys running back Javonte Williams during action on Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium. The Panthers defeated the Cowboys 30-27.
    Carolina Panthers linebacker Trevin Wallace, center, celebrates his tackle of Dallas Cowboys running back Javonte Williams during action on Sunday, Oct. 12, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium. The Panthers defeated the Cowboys 30-27. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    “I already know that after the game’s over with he’s going to let me know, ‘Hey, Trev, I see you doing this, I think you can do this better,’” said Wallace, the fast-talking, smiley second-year linebacker. “Or if I do something good, he’ll let me know. I already know what it’s going to be.”

    Wallace added: “He’s still invested in me, and knows the player I can be. He’s still invested in what I can become. I love that. Even when he texts me, he says, ‘This is coming from your big brother, your OG. I see you need to do this better.’ … I love that.”

    Miami Dolphins running back De'Von Achane, left, leaps to catch a pass in the end zone as Carolina Panthers linebacker Trevin Wallace, right, applies pressure during action on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina.
    Miami Dolphins running back De’Von Achane, left, leaps to catch a pass in the end zone as Carolina Panthers linebacker Trevin Wallace, right, applies pressure during action on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    Injury report

    Here’s the official injury report from the Panthers on Wednesday:

    Did not participate: OLB DJ Wonnum (rest), QB Bryce Young (ankle)

    Limited: OLB Princely Umanmielen (ribs), OL Damien Lewis (shoulder), CB Jaycee Horn (rest)

    Carolina Panthers linebacker Princely Umanmielen waits for the Miami Dolphins to snap the ball during action on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. The Panthers defeated the Dolphins, 27-24.
    Carolina Panthers linebacker Princely Umanmielen waits for the Miami Dolphins to snap the ball during action on Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025 at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. The Panthers defeated the Dolphins, 27-24. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    Quick hits

    • There are now 52 players still in contention to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame this year after another round of votes have gone through. Four of them are Panthers: LB Luke Kuechly, WR Steve Smith Sr., TE Greg Olsen, CB Charles Tillman. Check out the full list at the PFHOF website.
    • Nic Scourton had a heck of a game against the Jets. Not only did he notch his first NFL sack — he now has the most single-game rookie pressures in Panthers history, since the stat began being recorded (2016). His six pressures Sunday is more than Derrick Brown in 2020 (5) and Brian Burns in 2019 (once 5, once 4). When posed this, the EDGE rusher smiled: “I need more.”
    • Interior offensive lineman Robert Hunt was back on the field Wednesday for the first time since tearing his biceps in Week 2 against the Arizona Cardinals. He was working off to the side — not in individual or team drills — and is still on injured reserve. He wore a massive brace on his arm while doing minimal workouts.

    Alex Zietlow

    The Charlotte Observer

    Alex Zietlow writes about the Carolina Panthers and the ways in which sports intersect with life for The Charlotte Observer, where he has been a reporter since August 2022. Zietlow’s work has been honored by the N.C. and S.C. Press Associations, as well as the Associated Press Sports Editors (APSE) group. He’s earned five APSE Top 10 distinctions, most recently in the Long Features category in 2024. Zietlow previously wrote for The Herald in Rock Hill (S.C.) from 2019-22.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Alex Zietlow

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  • Consider the Quarterback

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    Jalen Hurts, the Philadelphia Eagles quarterback, is a Super Bowl champion, the reigning Super Bowl M.V.P. He has played in two of the past three Super Bowls; in his first one, in 2023, he had put on one of the best performances of his career, never mind that his team ended up losing that year. Hurts has never missed the playoffs as a starting quarterback. He can launch deep balls or find a small crease, rip open the defense, and run. He never seems confused or overwhelmed. He, sometimes literally, carries the team on his back. All he does is improve. On Thursday night, in the N.F.L. season opener against the Dallas Cowboys, he calmly but powerfully took what the defense gave him, in the air and on the ground, leading his team to the win. He looked in control. Then again, he throws in stinkers from time to time. He’s not Lamar Jackson. He lacks the talent of Patrick Mahomes. He doesn’t have Josh Allen’s galvanizing fire. He’s a beautiful tush with arms. Last season, Hurts wasn’t even the most important player on his own offense. He’s a good quarterback but not a great one, at least not yet. A great quarterback is like an obscenity: you know it when you see it.

    Why does it matter so much? A quarterback is not just another position on a football field. It’s a uniquely American institution—a calling, connected to foundational myths about leadership and manhood. “The very idea of the quarterback was and remains bound up with who we are and how we see ourselves on a national scale,” the journalist Seth Wickersham writes, in his new book, “American Kings,” which sounds grandiose until you realize just how much pressure rides on the shoulders of a quarterback, on and off the field. There are actors and musicians who are more famous, businessmen and politicians whose decisions are of far greater consequence. But there is no one else who has to manage such a distinctive mix of violence and spectacle, and who is exposed to such risk of public failure week after week. “The reason to do it is the holy hell,” the Hall of Fame quarterback Steve Young tells Wickersham. “It is everything a human being can be thrown into.”

    Wickersham knows what it’s like to walk the halls of an American high school as quarterback; and, having been moved to wide receiver, he knows what it’s like to walk the halls as someone who’s not. His book is an attempt to understand the difference. He spent years researching in the archives and talking with some of the best to ever do it—John Elway, Tom Brady, Young, Warren Moon, Joe Namath, the Manning family—and with the families of some of the men who made the position what it is, including Johnny Unitas, Y. A. Tittle, and Bob Waterfield. He spoke with good quarterbacks who fell short of greatness. He interviewed coaches and agents and development gurus. He shadowed a handful of prodigies and, critically, their fathers. Wickersham wants to know what might have happened to him if he had lived out his dream, the dream.

    The answers are fascinating but often ugly. To a certain degree, “American Kings” is not so different from any parable about the perils of ambition. Genius in one area of life can be stunting in other domains. Greatness has costs, sometimes horrific ones. The stories are saturated with alcohol, not to mention depression, domestic violence, toxic parenting, pain—a lot of pain, psychological as well as physical. Football, it seems, can unleash the kind of narcissistic personality that normal society might constrain. To be a quarterback means being selfish and sometimes delusional. Someone at Elite 11, one of the top quarterback camps, tells Wickersham that the camp is “collecting little assholes.” “I had to draw on a part of me that was emotional, aggressive, angry, decisive, irrational. All those things,” Brady says, at one point. Near the end of the book, Elway is sitting at a bar, profoundly lonely, reflecting on his life as a competitor. “Emotionally, you get a little . . .” he says, before pausing, “warped.”

    Wickersham was writing a profile of Andrew Luck, after Luck’s unexpected retirement and withdrawal from public life, when he started working on the book, and spent a lot of time at Luck’s house, in Indianapolis. Luck, who had been an engineering major at Stanford, had designed the house, quarters fit for a quarterback. There had been a film room and a physical-therapy room. But now the film room was a home office, and Luck was making eggs for his daughter instead of getting his ankles taped. He had walked away from the game because of the severity of his injuries, and because of what it was doing to his personality, he told Wickersham. Being a truly great quarterback required him to be a control freak, to put himself first, to be someone he didn’t like. Luck isn’t one of the central characters of the book, but his story haunts it. It revealed something essential, Wickersham told me. Quarterbacking isn’t something you do. It’s not a job. It’s something you are.

    The challenge, and opportunity, for Luck after football was to figure out who he was without it, though he doesn’t swear off the sport altogether. He’s the general manager for Stanford’s football program now. Elway is a tragic figure, but he ends the book glad for his life. Steve Young—who wasn’t born an artist like Elway or Joe Montana but, rather, was a good student who took notes—serves as a kind of wise stand-in for the author at times. At an alumni game at Brigham Young University, Young, on the field with much younger men, can’t resist the chance to test his spiral one last time. Wickersham, too, revisits his own quarterbacking days, finding himself unwilling to let go of his idealization of the role and his sense of failure. At the end of the book, during the week of the N.F.L. Combine, in Indianapolis, he grabs a beer with his old center and asks why he failed as a quarterback. “You had no chance,” his lineman replies. “We couldn’t block.” Wickersham listens to his friend describe his strengths, and hears it in a benediction. He’s given the chance to think of himself, once more, as what he was: “his quarterback.”

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    Louisa Thomas

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  • Where Does Texans QB Davis Mills Rank Among NFL Backup Quarterbacks?

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    In the last 48 hours, two teams in the AFC, one of whom is in the Houston Texans’ division, named their starting quarterbacks. The Cleveland Browns named 40-year-old Joe Flacco the winner of a four way competition for first string quarterback, and the Indianapolis Colts named Daniel Jones the victor over Anthony Richardson on their QB battle.

    Here’s the thing — Flacco and Jones both stink, and yet they start for NFL teams. I bring this up as a reminder for you to give thanks and praise to the football gods for blessing us with C.J. Stroud.

    Now, here’s the other thing — the football gods can be cruel, as we found out in 2023, when Stroud was knocked out for two games while sitting in concussion protocol. In the two games Stroud was absent, the Texans found a way to go 1-1, and keep their successful quest for an AFC South title alive. Sometimes, in the NFL, you’re going to need your backup quarterback.

    Fortunately, the Texans have an experienced backup in Davis Mills, who is entering his fifth year in the league, all of them with the Houston Texans. In fact., some of you, those who haven’t had 2021 and 2022 erased from your memory, will recall Mills starting 26 games combined over those two seasons.

    In evaluating where exactly Mills sits on the power rankings for backup quarterbacks in the NFL, here are three things you need to take into account:

    Mills has had a very good 2025 training camp
    There was the opening drive of the preseason opener against the Vikings, where Mills took the Texans on a 10-play, 74-yard jaunt for a touchdown. Then, in the second preseason game, Mills led the team on a drive right before halftime, in which they scored a field goal. I can also tell you, as someone who’s been at nearly every minute of practice, he has had the most “WOW” throws of any of the Texans’ quarterbacks in practice. In short, Mills is inspiring confidence.

    Mills has experience in multiple systems, including the ones OC Nick Caley is steeped in
    Part of the reason why Mills has gotten up to speed so fast in the new system, authored by new OC Nick Caley, is because he’s been forced to learn brand new systems three times now in his NFL career, prior to Caley’s arrival. Also, Caley’s system has been branded by some of the longtime Texans players as being similar to Bill O’Brien’s offensive system, a system in which Mills played in 2021, under O’Brien understudy Tim Kelly as the OC.

    We do need to remind everyone about Mills getting passed over in 2023
    On the downside, the team did have a chance to turn to Mills when Stroud suffered his concussion in 2023, and after a season of grooming Mills as the backup, they turned to Case Keenum instead, and Keenum led the Texans to a last second win over the Titans. I’d like to think Mills has grown since then, and that DeMeco Ryans’ confidence in Mills has grown, otherwise, Keenum might still be in Houston.

    So, who do we rank ahead of Mills?
    In looking at the full list of backup quarterbacks in the National Football League, here is how I would place the upper half of those backups into tiers:

    TIER ONE
    GARDNER MINSHEW, Chiefs
    KIRK COUSINS, Falcons
    JIMMY GAROPPOLO, Rams

    TIER TWO
    ANDY DALTON, Panthers
    JAMEIS WINSTON, Giants
    TANNER McKEE, Eagles
    DAVIS MILLS, TEXANS
    MAC JONES, Niners
    JACOBY BRISSETT, Cardinals

    TIER THREE
    MARCUS MARIOTA, Commanders
    MALIK WILLIS, Packers
    KENNY PICKETT, Browns
    JAKE BROWNING, Bengals
    COOPER RUSH, Cowboys
    SAM HOWELL, Vikings

    So there you go. I think Mills has elevated his game to where the Texans can easily go 2-2, if Stroud had to miss a month, and I think Mills would be capable of going 9-8 over a full season for a team with the Texans’ defense and coaching staff.

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

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    Sean Pendergast

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