Aaron Rodgersù $200M deal and Russell WilsonĂąÂÂs trade show that the QB is a role unlike anything else in sports. [View in browser]( [FOX SPORTS INSIDER WITH MARTIN ROGERS] In todayâs FOX Sports Insider with Martin Rogers: The latest in the NFL news cycle has shown what can happen when star quarterbacks wield front-office power. ... Analyzing how a true MLB team rebuild works ... and more! The quarterback is the quarterback for a simple reason that goes back to the very origins of football. âQuarterback, halfback, fullback,â wrote Jerry Rice in âAmericaâs Game,â a book covering the history of the NFLâs first 100 years. âFrom the center, the fullback was all the way back, the halfback crouched halfway back, and the quarterback stood a quarter of the way back. So, the QB got the ball first and decided where the other two would go.â These days, thatâs not all the quarterback decides. If the dizzying speed of Tuesdayâs news cycle reminded us of anything â as Aaron Rodgers pledged his future to the Green Bay Packers and Russell Wilson upped sticks from Seattle â itâs that the QB is a role unlike anything else in sports. Present-day QBs are footballâs version of big-business CEOs who donât know how to clock out. Theyâre hands-on â because they can be. They have the broadest of shoulders, not just because of those pads they wear. They increasingly have the willingness and dexterity to be part of everything, all things to all people, as if the rigors of playing a brutally competitive and physical sport were not enough.
ĂąÂÂĂąÂÂĂąÂÂĂąÂÂĂąÂÂĂąÂÂù [STORY IMAGE 1] Wilson, it was reported a few years ago, sometimes arrived at the Seattle Seahawks training facility before 6 a.m. Maybe heâll do the same in the crisp Mile High air of Denver. Itâs part of the job, he claims. QBs donât just throw, they have a lot more to do. The most senior QBs can not only write their own check but lately also go a long way to designing their own roster and impacting what the surrounding personnel looks like. Before things improved in Green Bay, Rodgers and general manager Brian Gutekunst seemed locked in a âhim-or-meâ situation. Hmm, wonder how that one would have turned out? The most important position on the field now extends far beyond it, from influencing teammate decisions to the front office and coaching personnel. Before Deshaun Watsonâs career was put on hold by his legal issues, his tenure with the Houston Texans soured when he was not consulted over the hiring of GM Nick Caserio. [STORY IMAGE 2] QBs can be the pied piper and chief recruitment officer wrapped into one, as proven by the collection of talents that made their way to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers after Tom Brady jumped onto the pirate ship. The Bucs, obviously, wouldnât have won the Super Bowl without Brady, but they probably wouldnât have done so without Rob Gronkowski, Antonio Brown and Leonard Fournette either. Maybe itâs right that QBs should take on some other tasks beyond hurling a pigskin 17 days a year. For they are the $50-million men now, some of them at least, and once Rodgersâ deal gets inked, best believe a new benchmark will be set and it isnât going to go south. They wield the power, and they are more and more primed to use it. Quarterbacks can dominate the news on any given day, no matter what else is going on, even when the league is supposedly shut down for the year â a level of publicity that money can buy, it just happens to be really expensive. [STORY IMAGE 3] A franchise is a golden goose that, truthfully, may or may not lay valuable eggs, but itâs still worth paying enormous sums to give yourself the best possible chance of finding one that might. Finding one thatâs something more? Well, that could give you a shot at a Super Bowl, and all the glorious spinoffs of prestige that come with it. Todayâs QB is a hybrid, part pampered rock star, and part behind-the-scenes mover and shaker. They allow franchises to dream and they know how to sell the fantasy â with a little help from agents and publicists. Thatâs how Dak Prescott, a former fourth-round pick making a couple of million bucks, was able to play hardball over a new deal with the Dallas Cowboys, which would be the most valuable sports franchise in the world were Jerry Jones ever to sell up. And despite that apparent disparity, it was a fair fight. Quarterbacks, in the form of high draft selections, are remedies for the downtrodden and a reason to hope. Just think how Trevor Lawrenceâs arrival in Jacksonville was greeted. They have the license to swagger even when it is not an obvious fit for them to do so. Joe Burrow comes across as a humble kid from rural Ohio when you talk to him, but heâs an NFL quarterback (who almost won a Super Bowl in year two) so if he feels like wearing sunglasses indoors and outrageous mink coats, heâs going to. [STORY IMAGE 4] Successful QBs are even the catalyst, apparently, for greatness in other sports. LeBron James, midway through his 56-point explosion for the Los Angeles Lakers last weekend, told the Los Angeles Ramsâ Matthew Stafford, âI had to put on a show with you in the building,â as Stafford sat courtside. They are capable of reinventing themselves without doing very much â Mitch Trubisky went from being a bit of a punchline in Chicago to the verge of a $10 million contract within the past year. His total pass attempts in that span as Buffalo Bills back-up? Eight, and one of them was an interception. It is the only position where you could mortgage your future yet be in no apparent hurry to see that future arrive, a warped version of âwin now.â Trey Lance cost the San Francisco 49ers a haul of draft capital ahead of a season where he would mostly sit, and they would eventually lead in the fourth quarter of the NFC Championship Game. It is a position where for all the analytics and what we think we know, it was still possible for a guy who never managed to stick anywhere as a long-term starter (Nick Foles) was able to outduel, outplay (and out-catch) Brady in a Super Bowl. This only serves to show there are no guarantees with quarterbacks except for this: the QB is the big man on campus. And if heâs not smart enough to know that and capitalize on it, he probably doesnât have what it takes to stick around very long. Mr. QB has all these hats â game manager, team leader, signal-caller, man of many talents and wielder of ultimate power. The guy who stands a quarter of the way between the offensive line and the fullback â and at the center of everything else. [STORY IMAGE 5] [IN OTHER WORDS] - Whatâs next for the Broncos and Seahawks? [Eric D. Williams breaks down what to expect]( after the blockbuster Russell Wilson trade.
- How to rebuild in MLB: From tearing it all down to finally contending again, [Jordan Shusterman breaks down the process of rebuilding a baseball team.](
- As the Seahawks trade the face of their franchise, Kevin Jackson says [Seattle sports fans know the feeling of seeing their legends leave town.]( [VIEWER'S GUIDE] DePaul at St. Johnâs (FS1, 7 p.m. ET)
The Blue Demons and Red Storm square off as part of Big East Tournament play. Phoenix Suns vs. Miami Heat (ESPN, 7:30 p.m. ET)
Devin Booker and the Suns visit Miami for a matchup of marquee squads. Georgetown at Seton Hall (FS1, 9:30 p.m. ET)
Big East Tournament games continue as the Hoyas and Pirates clash. [BET OF THE DAY] [BET OF THE DAY] Odds provided by [FOX Bet](
Packers to win the Super Bowl (+1000) From FOX Sportsâ Geoff Schwartz: With Russell Wilson moving out of the NFC, Aaron Rodgers and the Packers are clearly the best quarterback and team in the conference, and they should make the Super Bowl. Their biggest quarterback hurdle is Matthew Stafford, but the Rams' roster will undergo massive changes this offseason with free agency and injuries. Who else in the NFC poses a risk? Kyler Murray? Trey Lance? Dak Prescott? Yâall know Iâm always high on the Cowboys, but that doesnât mean I trust them. Speaking of trust, let's be honest: The Packers have underachieved a bit during their past three seasons â 39 regular-season wins and no Super Bowl appearances. Thatâs the most wins over the three-year stretch without making the big game. So while the Packers are the most talented team and have easily the best quarterback in the NFC, nothing is guaranteed with them. But nonetheless, Iâm rolling with the Packers out of the NFC. [FOLLOW FOX SPORTS] [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( Download FOX Sports App: [Fire TV](
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