21 October 2007

Spotlight on Andre' Woodson

By Guest Blogger: Daryl Breault

Brian Brohm will soon know exactly how Brady Quinn, Matt Leinart and Aaron Rodgers have all felt come draft night. All three of those elite college quarterbacks watched another young passer emerge during their senior years and snatch high draft selections, not to mention millions of dollars, away from them. At least Leinart still went in the Top-10; Quinn and Rodgers plummeted all the way down the late first round.

Andre Woodson will be the one who steals the glory away from Brohm, the talented Louisville QB who has been the consensus #1 pick for a year and a half now. Brohm may even see Boston College’s Matt Ryan get selected before him now that Louisville’s season has come apart. Woodson is not a finished product, but his ceiling is incredible. If Woodson reaches his full potential in the pros, he will be a franchise QB for many years, of this I’m certain.

Woodson emerged in 2006, his junior campaign, by leading the Wildcats to a 7-5 record and a berth in the Music City Bowl against Clemson. Woodson was phenomenal in leading the Wildcats to 28-20 win as he threw for 299 yards and 3 TD. It was the Wildcats best season since the Tim Couch-lead teams of 1996-’99. The emerging talent finished the campaign with 31/7 TD/INT ratio and 3515 yards. The young Wildcats struggled against some of the nations elite teams, namely a 59-28 loss to Louisville to start the season and a 49-0 slaughter at the hands of LSU. Georgia gave him troubles with their superior front-4, but the Wildcats still won 24-20.

In 2007, Woodson and the Wildcats have emerged as one the best teams in the country. They upset Louisville in a comeback, 40-34 victory that went down to the wire and was the beginning of the end for Louisville. Woodson led the Wildcats to a 5-0 start by throwing for 16 TD over that span and not tossing his first INT of the season until 3:30 into the 3rd quarter of the fifth game against Florida Atlantic. That INT snapped an NCAA-record streak of 325 consecutive passes without an INT, the streak dating back to 1:04 left to go in the 2nd quarter of the Wildcats game against Georgia on November 4th, 2006. That 8 full games and two half games, and the Wildcats had an 8-1 record over that span.

With 21 TD in 8 games this season, Woodson now has 60 passing TD in his career. He is on pass for 36 this season, which would give him 75 total for his career. If he finishes with a passer rating above 110 this year, it will be his 4th straight season with such a number. He currently is at 149.9, the maximum. Woodson will certainly go down as one of the most productive college QB’s of all time.

Woodson has an amazing arm, leaving no doubt about the caliber of his gun, that’s for sure. That is just one of his NFL-caliber strengths. He has elite size at 6-5’ 230lbs. One of the things that stands out when you watch Woodson is his posture in the pocket and his throwing motion. He holds the ball real high when he drops back to pass, nearly touching his chin, making it difficult for blindside rushers to cause the fumble. His delivery is very compact and fast, his arm moves in a blink and he gets his entire body into it. He is so strong that he can get away with just using his upper body, but he does an excellent job of setting his feet getting into his motion. He has great velocity on his passes, throws a tight spiral, and gets a very smooth arc on longer passes. He can throw bullets 40-yards deep through coverage and he has great faith in arm. The Wildcat offensive line has been much improved this season and Woodson is afforded much time to throw out of the shotgun, which helps to pad his stats. Woodson is not scared of the pressure and takes some Byron Leftwich-esque hits in the pocket because he holds the ball too long sometimes in an effort to make a play. He has good pocket awareness in spite of this, and buys time with his feet much like Payton Manning can by sliding and getting rid of the ball quickly on short passes and screens.

Woodson’s character cannot be understated either. He is a team-leader and has the practice habits that all coaches demand. Woodson has great football acumen and works hard in the film room. He has a great rapport with a talented trio of big play receivers in Keenan Burton, Steven Johnson and Dicky Lyons. Woodson spreads the ball around evenly to all three, keeping any ego in check. The intangibles Woodson possesses will make him a great NFL player.

One of the biggest knocks on Woodson will be the system he plays in as he passes out of the shotgun on nearly 90% of his attempts. Woodson may need some time to work on getting accustomed to taking snaps from center. This issue usually gets overblown come draft time, and the success of Ben Roethlisberger and Alex Smith among other QB prospects has dampened much of this concern among most scouts. Woodson is technically sound enough to overcome this with a little work. He will need to work on dropping back in 3 and 5 step drops. Woodson is very good at going through his progressions and checking down to a back or tight end, but will have to work on getting the ball out faster against NFL defenses. He is guilty of holding the ball too long sometimes, trusting that his receivers will get open and leaving his offensive line to have to block for far too long, resulting in sacks. Woodson is also not very mobile, he will never be mistaken for Donovan McNabb, and is strictly a pure pocket passer. With experience, Woodson will learn when to throw the ball away and when to force the issue. Woodson does see his accuracy waver the longer he has to throw, but having a pro QB coach to help tighten up his mechanics will improve that.

Many of Woodson’s flaws are fixable with better coaching at the next level. He is one of the best QB prospects to come around in a long time and is far superior to JaMarcus Russell. Looking back on things, the Raiders would have been better off with Josh McCown and Daunte Culpepper, drafting Calvin Johnson, and waiting until this year to draft a QB. The 2008 draft boasts an incredibly strong group of senior quarterbacks, and Andre Woodson will be the first one selected (in my opinion).

Strengths: Size, Arm, Intelligence, ToughnessWeaknesses- Mobility, Deep Accuracy, System
NFL Comparison: Alex Smith, San Francisco

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Alex Smith hasn't shown me much so far in his career. I hope you have someone better in mind as a comparison for Andre Woodson.

Robert Bryant said...

Yea he looks nothing like Alex Smith to me, a much better comparison would be the Redskins QB Jason Campbell.

Anonymous said...

I find it interesting that you say Woodson has passed Brohm and then give a few stats for Woodson as though to prove your point -- without giving the comparative stats for Brohm. So what exactly does that prove? You give last year and his improvement, which while great, still does nothing to prove he is better or should be thought better than Brohm.

You say he has 21 TD in 8 games this year, so what Brohm has 24. You say he has 60 TDs now in his career -- Brohm has 65. Woodson has is on track for 75 total, Brohm has already passed projections and with 4-5 games left will very easily get many more, as he is averaging at least 3 a game.

You say if he finishes with a rating of 110 it will be his 4th straight season with such a number. Hate to tell you, that is not that great of a number -- m any have much better, including Brohm whose average up to this year has been 159.83 and this year is so far 153.45. Please tell me how that is not better?

Your numbers are off and if that is your reasoning, it's not very valid. So he is 6'5" -- a whole inch taller than Brohm. I doubt it makes that much difference when Brohm has ALWAYS played seeing the whole field all the time -- something Woodson is doing the first time this year.

I like Woodson and this he is good and might do really well in the pros. But please, don't try to belittle someone else in favor of him with faulty reasoning. Pro teams might choose him first or not. It will depend on who has the first options to pick--not necessarily who is the best player if the team doesn't need you. Atlanta could be an early pick, which could go for or against Brohm since it is his former coach. Might depend on how feelings were between them when Petrino snuck out, instead of whether a better player is taken or not.

Any team who picks a kid with one good year over a kid who has demonstrated being really good his entire career is a team I would hope my favorite player doesn't go to anyway.

Robert Bryant said...

It is just Daryl's personal opinion, he is not trying to prove anything. Honestly, I think it is a coin toss right now between Brohm, Matt Ryan and Woodson.

Anonymous said...

I never once compared him to Brohm, be it with stats or with measurables. Thank you for the history lesson, but I know what Brohm has done in his career and I'm not belittling that to any degree. But after hearing about this amazing, strapping QB for the last what 6 years? and seeing him on the cover of ESPN and pretty much hearing his name for the last two years, I guess I expected to see a lot more from him. I never said Brohm wasnt a good QB, I'm sure he will be, but that doesn't mean I see him going 1st overall or even being the first QB choosen. I think Woodson and Ryan have passed him in those regards because of the struggles Louisville has had this year and the fact that Brohm is never healthy, even this year he's banged up. Im just saying that when all is said and done, Brohm will get the same treatment Quinn, Leinart, Rodgers and all the other top ranked QBs have faced leading up to the draft.

Too explain my comparison a little though, no Woodson does not remind me in any way physically of Alex Smith, I think they have similar situations as for the system they play in and being ranked really high. Yeah he reminds me a little bit of Campbell too, but I just think thats too easy so ill throw this one out there: Roethlisberger.

Anonymous said...

Matt Ryan is number one because not only is he great in his physical passing traits, he has the great and most underrated trait. Ice in his veins. The same quality that the current MVP has, Tom Brady.

Anonymous said...

ur all wrong ANDRE WOODSON I think is going to be a great nfl QB he dos need to work on moving more and throwing it away but he wants to prove himself all the time and yes i think he is much better than MaTt RyAn

Robert Bryant said...

It looks like my concerns were justified. Woodson was cut today and is no longer in the NFL.