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Non-athletic qualities of a great QB

Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:20 pm
Posted by TigerBert
Member since Oct 2015
3018 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:20 pm
"PHYSICAL": Ok, everyone knows that a strong arm, good eyesight, footwork, physical stature and athleticism/agility/etc are all important to be a QB. These are prerequisites to the position from a physical perspective, and along with development for accuracy and execution, determine whether the Qb in question meets the bar or not. There are hundreds of QB's who meet this bar of measure in each season of HS and college play.

"MENTAL": Now, after a QB is determined to have these qualities, or to have the potential to craft the QB to these, the attention goes to other measures...

These are the separators, and the teams which are able to find the best in these qualities, atop them meeting the physical qualities, are the ones who can be championship and/or "special" QB's. These are extremely hard to come by and acquire.

Here is a list of the more mental aspects, and a GREAT QB must have most, if not all of these.

1) Playbook memory - The QB must have very strong recall of the entire playbook. There should be no hesitation on behalf of the OC to call any play, any time he wishes. This is "Long Term Memory". It is the kind of memory that allows one to recall info for a "facts-based" test. If this is not natural, extreme time can be spent on the players own time to drill it all in.

2) Logic/Reasoning - The QB is capable of identifying trends/patterns, and the flow of the game, and to use reasoning skills to proactively adjust before the snap, after the snap, and in consultation with the coaches/team thereafter (sidelines, signaling, at half, etc...) The QB should be able to offer insights and recommendations for adjustment to the coaches.... (Game Management is mostly a subset of logic/reasoning, but good game management also incorporates other skills in-game communications, adjustments and leadership with the team and coaches, and of course time management skills.) A Qb with this skill set will rarely leave you thinking "WTF?" for in-game situations.

3) Working/Dynamic Memory - This is determined by how well and QB can juggle numerous bits of information simultaneously in their mind. The ability to retain information from a scan of the field in one direction, and receiver and other players positions on the field, while processing other elements of the field at the same time, is indicative of their skill in this area.

4) Executive Processing Speed - This is determined with how quick a player can mentally move from one bit-or-set of information to another and then back. It is more than running through a single simple task quickly. If a Qb is unable to do so quickly, they will often be a serial information processor, and for a QB, they will either call a timeout too soon or too slow, and also be too slow to process the defensive in relation to themselves and their team mates.

5) Visual Processing ("Field Vision" is strongly a function of this cognitive skillset) - The capacity to easily imagine and visualize numerous physical items in relation to one another aid the QB to see things with clarity/accuracy, instead of seeing a blur of indistinguishable haze. This is extremely hard to develop at the HS-and-below level, so very few QB's arrive at college campuses with this skillset, and that means that the coaching staff MUST be able to craft practice and training drills and conditions to incrementally develop this capacity for a QB. How a coaching staff does or does not do this, could be the most important element of the QB's development (or lack thereof).

One question that comes to mind is the recruiters and coaching staffs understanding of these factors in their evaluation, selection and training of the teams QB. I think some schools have a system in place that considers these either explicitly or implicitly (perhaps even subconsciously).

If I had a chance to spend time with Cam and Les, these are the things I would love to be able to listen to and understand about their process. Of course, that is a pipe dream, so I just hope they do, and more importantly, I just hope they are implementing real changes to recruitment, evaluation and development for our Tigers.

However they do it, I am hopeful for the future. I can't point to anything, and I am not a homer, but for some reason I think they are crafting significant changes.
This post was edited on 1/21/16 at 3:40 pm
Posted by themunch
bottom of the list
Member since Jan 2007
71274 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:26 pm to
BErt? is that you man?
Posted by S
RIP Wayde
Member since Jan 2007
168602 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:31 pm to
managing the game

This post was edited on 1/21/16 at 3:32 pm
Posted by OKTiger83
Norman
Member since Feb 2013
3300 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:31 pm to
Must bring his lunch pail
Posted by KingBeingking
Member since Jul 2014
2420 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:34 pm to
quote:

Must bring his lunch pail


Trey Quinn for QB??
Posted by beauxroux
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Nov 2010
2152 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:36 pm to
1) He has to be a leader on the field and in the huddle-- see Peyton Manning, Tom Brady, Drew Bree's, etc.

2) He has to have the ability to instill confidence in the players around him-- in the QB's play and have a calming effect on them.
Posted by geauxtigers33
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2014
13735 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:40 pm to
Some people might not want to hear this but recruiting a qb to college is about minimizing risk. A QB that is under 6' has more inherit risk than a QB that is of prototypical height. Is it right? No. Do i believe that there is way more to being a QB? Yes. If recruiting didn't get the following it does this would probably be different. Most of the mental side can be taught with time. You can't teach height, arm strength, and athleticism.
Posted by LSU_Tigahs66
Member since Aug 2014
678 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:49 pm to
= Lindsey Scott!! Yes, we know.
Posted by SportTiger1
Stonewall, LA
Member since Feb 2007
29855 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 3:58 pm to
quote:

Bert
quote:

a great QB


We know it's you man.
Posted by releauxded2469
Boise, ID
Member since Jan 2015
1956 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 4:29 pm to
Must be able to execute toss dive left and toss dive right per Les Miles.
Posted by ThePoo
Work
Member since Jan 2007
61125 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 4:35 pm to
High IQ

gives it 150%

good fundamentals

scrappy

high motor

A lot of heart

gym rat

locker room guy

technician on the field

team player
Posted by chilge1
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2009
12139 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 4:37 pm to
In order to be a successful QB, you have to have a short memory... to be able to move on from that interception or sack, or dropped touchdown pass and continue to execute at a high level on a moment's basis.

That's pretty much more important that anything you listed.
Posted by AaronDeTiger
baton rouge
Member since Jun 2014
2168 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 6:46 pm to
Inherent
Posted by TheHat7
Member since Oct 2015
7189 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 8:20 pm to
I'll take a 6-0 Qb and an avg arm with a brain over a 6-3 forest gump mind and a cannon anyday
Posted by Grim
Member since Dec 2013
12489 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 8:27 pm to
Haha can you imagine if I actually read all that
Posted by mattytiger123
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Jul 2014
3120 posts
Posted on 1/21/16 at 8:55 pm to
quote:

High IQ 

gives it 150% 

good fundamentals 

scrappy 

high motor 

A lot of heart 

gym rat 

locker room guy 

technician on the field 

team player




Quinn, Moore, and LaCouture come to mind
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