Man, once he hit the 40 he just kept building speed all the way through 3 of them at the end. Better make a business decision on that.
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Man, once he hit the 40 he just kept building speed all the way through 3 of them at the end. Better make a business decision on that.
I was thinking the same thing. Considering that Rivers has still been an outstanding quarterback, having another progress Steadily behind him seems like the right plan.Yeah you really would've liked to have seen a breakout earlier. That way he would have been better equipped to sit behind Phillip Rivers. So much would've been different.
“We need to be able to sit guys at QB right out of school!”Is Cardale Jones' breakthrough with Chargers too late?
And does the XFL loom?
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Los Angeles Chargers offensive coordinator Ken Whisenhunt had trouble finding the words as to why backup quarterback Cardale Jones experienced a breakthrough on the field in his third season with the team.
"I wish I knew the answer to that, because if that was the case, I would have liked to have seen that two years ago," Whisenhunt said. "Not anything against Cardale -- I'm extremely excited about the way that he's performed in our camp. Maybe it's just the process of growing up a little bit.
"He came out young. And maybe it's being in the same system for a couple of years. It has been different [this year], and that's a credit to him. He's worked hard. You could see it early in the spring. It's nice to see him perform the way that he has on the field. He's done a really nice job."
Jones was a fourth-round selection by the Buffalo Bills in 2016 after entering the draft early out of Ohio State. The Chargers traded a seventh-round selection to Buffalo before training camp in 2017 because of Jones' untapped potential and relationship with coach Anthony Lynn.
Jones recorded an 11-0 record as a starter for the Buckeyes, leading Ohio State to a national championship in 2014 after starting the season as the third-string quarterback. He beat Wisconsin in the Big Ten championship game and Alabama and Oregon in the College Football Playoff after replacing an injured J.T. Barrett late in the season.
Los Angeles Chargers offensive coordinator Ken Whisenhunt had trouble finding the words as to why backup quarterback Cardale Jones experienced a breakthrough on the field in his third season with the team.
"I wish I knew the answer to that, because if that was the case, I would have liked to have seen that two years ago," Whisenhunt said. "Not anything against Cardale -- I'm extremely excited about the way that he's performed in our camp. Maybe it's just the process of growing up a little bit.
"He came out young. And maybe it's being in the same system for a couple of years. It has been different [this year], and that's a credit to him. He's worked hard. You could see it early in the spring. It's nice to see him perform the way that he has on the field. He's done a really nice job."
Jones was a fourth-round selection by the Buffalo Bills in 2016 after entering the draft early out of Ohio State. The Chargers traded a seventh-round selection to Buffalo before training camp in 2017 because of Jones' untapped potential and relationship with coach Anthony Lynn.
Jones recorded an 11-0 record as a starter for the Buckeyes, leading Ohio State to a national championship in 2014 after starting the season as the third-string quarterback. He beat Wisconsin in the Big Ten championship game and Alabama and Oregon in the College Football Playoff after replacing an injured J.T. Barrett late in the season.
Entire article: https://www.espn.com/blog/los-angel...king-through-but-it-is-too-late-does-xfl-loom