Anthony Richardson is 22. Benched.
— Sam Block (@theblockspot) October 29, 2024
Bryce Young is 23. Benched.
Trey Lance is 24. Benched.
Justin Fields is 25. Benched.
Will Levis is 25. Benched.
Zach Wilson is 25. Benched.
Mac Jones is 26. Benched.
Kenny Pickett is 26. Benched.
The NFL has a QB development problem.
I found this tweet to be interesting and am curious what others think about this. I know the hit rate on early round quarterbacks has always been relatively low, but it seems like a lot of guys are getting tossed to the side faster than ever. The benching of Anthony Richardson really surprised me...they drafted the guy KNOWING his limitations and that he was a project, benching him this early for Flacco seems incredibly stupid to me. I took a look at quarterbacks drafted in the first couple rounds and am incredibly curious about what the issue is here.
2024:
- Caleb Williams - 1st overall pick - jury is still out
- Jayden Daniels - 2nd overall pick - promising
- Drake Maye - 3rd overall pick - jury is still out
- Michael Penix - 8th overall pick - backup, jury is still out
- Bo Nix - 12th overall pick - jury is still out
2023:
- Bryce Young - 1st overall pick - benched
- C.J. Stroud - 2nd overall pick - stud
- Anthony Richardson - 4th overall pick - benched
- Will Levis - 2nd rounder - likely bust
2022:
- Kenny Pickett - 20th overall pick - benched, traded, bust
- Desmond Ridder - 2nd rounder - benched, traded, bust
2021:
- Trevor Lawrence - 1st overall pick - jury is still out
- Zach Wilson - 2nd overall pick - benched, traded, bust
- Trey Lance - 3rd overall pick - benched, traded, bust
- Justin Fields - 11th overall pick - benched, traded, likely bust
- Mac Jones - 15th overall pick - benched, traded, bust
2020:
- Joe Burrow - 1st overall pick - stud
- Tua Tagoviola - 2nd overall pick - good
- Justin Herbert - 6th overall pick - stud
- Jordan Love - 26th overall pick - stud
- Jalen Hurts - 2nd rounder - stud
2019:
- Kyler Murray - 1st overall pick - good
- Daniel Jones - 6th overall pick - bust
- Dwayne Haskins - 15th overall pick - benched, traded, unfortunately passed away
- Drew Lock - 2nd rounder - benched, traded, bust
2018:
- Baker Mayfield - 1st overall pick - benched, traded, rebounded in Tampa after multiple moves
- Sam Darnold - 3rd overall pick - benched, traded, rebounded in Minnesota after multiple moves
- Josh Allen - 7th overall pick - stud
- Josh Rosen - 10th overall pick - benched, traded, out of the league
- Lamar Jackson - 32nd overall pick - stud
2017:
- Mitchell Trubisky - 2nd overall pick - benched, traded, bust
- Patrick Mahomes - 10th overall pick - stud
- Deshaun Watson - 12th overall pick - stud, then rapist, now bad
- Deshone Kizer - 2nd rounder - bust
2016:
- Jared Goff - 1st overall pick - traded, rebounded in Detroit
- Carson Wentz - 2nd overall pick - stud, hurt, benched, traded
- Paxton Lynch - 26th overall pick - bust
- Christian Hacknberg - 2nd rounder - bust
2015:
- Jameis Winston - 1st overall pick - benched, traded, rebounding in Cleveland
- Marcus Mariota - 2nd overall pick - benched, traded, bust
2014:
- Blake Bortles - 3rd overall pick - bust
- Johnny Manziel - 22nd overall pick - bust
- Teddy Bridgewater - 32nd overall pick - benched, traded, bust
- Derek Carr - 2nd rounder - decent career
- Jimmy Garoppolo - 2nd rounder - decent career
I am really curious what the common denominator is here. From 2014-2023, it looks like 40 quarterbacks have been drafted in the first two rounds. 27 of those guys seem to have been benched, traded, or out of the league pretty early in their careers.
A lot of these players had bust written all over them, in my opinion. Zach Wilson, Trey Lance, Mitchell Trubisky, Daniel Jones, Blake Bortles, etc. I think it is hard to take shots on guys from lesser conferences unless they have sustained success over a number of years AND elite physical tools. Zach Wilson had neither, same for Lance.
But many of the teams consistently drafting towards the top are the most poorly managed (duh) so oftentimes have both drafting AND development issues. Baker Mayfield, Jared Goff, and Sam Darnold have all shown that a quarterback's environment obviously plays a massive role in their ability to succeed. Of those quarterbacks, Goff is the only one who really started their career in a good organization.
Are quarterbacks being drafted too high? Are teams failing them from a development perspective? Both? I feel like there is a combination of both, but think that the draft capital being spent on quarterbacks with massive question marks is the bigger part of the problem here.