Football has become quite the complicated game in recent years.
There's the shotgun, spread, read option, no-huddle, outside zone and inside zone runs, now routes, check-with-me routes, the hurry-up, combination routes, zone blitzes, wide-9s, big nickel, Tampa two, three technique, five technique, crossfire blitzes — you name it, and it's part of the game.
While the game has changed drastically, how you win hasn't varied much as one immutable truth remains: Teams aren't going to win on a consistent basis without a franchise quarterback.
“You have got to have one,” ESPN analyst and former Tampa Bay and Oakland coach Jon Gruden said.
As the NFL Draft approaches, teams — especially Tampa Bay and Tennessee — are scrambling to figure out whether there is a Ben Roethlisberger or Peyton Manning out there. Because if there is, it will alter the direction of a franchise.
“The only model to me that correlates to having big success in the NFL is having a Hall of Fame, franchise quarterback,” Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie said at last month's NFL owners' meetings. “Then you can put any system around that player, and you can rationalize that structure ... because the best structure is a franchise quarterback that's going to play for 10 to 15 years for your franchise.”
It's not easy to identify a franchise quarterback, but when teams do, it can lead to long-term success.
The Steelers are the perfect example.
Terry Bradshaw was the top overall pick in 1970, and the Steelers won four Super Bowls in a decade. Roethlisberger was the 11th pick in 2004, and the Steelers played in four AFC title games and three Super Bowls, winning two championships.
“The bottom line is, the quarterback position is an extremely important one,” Steelers coach Mike Tomlin said. “If you have a good one, you have a horse in every race. If you don't, you better be rock solid in all other areas.
“That's the reality of it.”
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