NFL evaluators praise J.J. McCarthy’s ‘unbelievable mind.’ Would the Chicago Bears target the Michigan QB and local product?

posted in: News | 0

Facing third-and-10 at the Ohio State 22-yard line in the second quarter Saturday, Michigan quarterback J.J. McCarthy had wide receiver Cornelius Johnson split wide to the right as his primary read.

Ohio State had a safety over the top of the left side, and McCarthy liked the matchup for Johnson, who was running a go route and hoped to shake Davison Igbinosun with a stutter step, maybe convincing the cornerback he was breaking off his route near the line to gain.

The Wolverines were thinking touchdown — not first down.

Igbinosun didn’t take the bait and Johnson was covered. McCarthy didn’t have a lot of time to react. Buckeyes defensive tackle Mike Hall Jr. collapsed the pocket with a bull rush. From McCarthy’s blind side, defensive end J.T. Tuimoloau beat left tackle LaDarius Henderson with a spin move. The escape hatch was closing.

McCarthy kept his eyes on Johnson, hoping to hold safety Malik Hartford to the right side as wide receiver Roman Wilson crossed from the left with cornerback Denzel Burke in close coverage. Just before Tuimoloau hit him, McCarthy zipped a pass across the middle — his release is compact and fast — somehow threading the ball between Burke and Hartford and into Wilson’s hands.

Wilson caught the ball at the 5-yard line and squirted into the end zone, putting the Wolverines ahead 14-3 in a game they won 30-24 to improve to 12-0 as delirious fans stormed the field at Michigan Stadium afterward.

It was the kind of big-time throw — McCarthy didn’t stride into it with Tuimoloau bearing down on him — that’s a wow moment for NFL evaluators considering McCarthy at or near the top of a talented crop of quarterbacks for the 2024 draft.

That’s if the junior from LaGrange Park decides to enter the draft after Michigan’s season ends. The Wolverines play Iowa in the Big Ten championship game Saturday at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis (7 p.m., Fox-32). A 22-point favorite, second-ranked Michigan is a shoo-in for its third straight College Football Playoff berth with a victory.

McCarthy has a lot to contemplate, including the future of the Michigan program with the NCAA investigating coach Jim Harbaugh for an alleged scheme to illegally scout future opponents in person. Harbaugh will return Saturday from a three-game Big Ten suspension.

In the time being, McCarthy has meaningful games to prepare for with the Wolverines hunting their first national title since 1997. And for now he can talk about the throw to Wilson, a highlight-reel play for McCarthy, whose passing production was limited in the games Harbaugh was banned from the sidelines.

“I had a good one-on-one on the outside,” McCarthy said, “and he didn’t win. We had a crossing route coming across, so I knew if I kept my eyes on the single receiver (Johnson) that (Hartford) might move over and open up a little space for Roman.”

Rewatch the play a handful of times and you will see Hartford budged only slightly. But McCarthy’s eyes held him long enough to keep that little window cracked open.

“Then I’ve just got to put it in a can of cola, honestly,” McCarthy said.

The touchdown pass to Wilson wasn’t the only big play McCarthy made. Three plays before the score, Michigan put it in his hands on fourth-and-1 from the Buckeyes 29 with a play fake that resulted in a quick throw to tight end Colston Loveland for 7 yards.

McCarthy’s final numbers were not overwhelming — he completed 16 of 20 passes for 148 yards and ran four times for 17 yards — but that has been the case most of the season as the Wolverines are heavily committed to running the ball and haven’t often needed to air it out.

Michigan ranks 122nd out of 133 FBS schools in passing-play percentage (39.5%). That’s one layer to evaluating McCarthy against USC’s Caleb Williams, North Carolina’s Drake Maye and LSU’s Jayden Daniels when considering how the quarterback class will stack up. None has declared for the NFL draft, though Daniels is out of college eligibility. All could be top-10 picks.

The Bears have been doing their homework on college quarterbacks in the event they elect to move on from Justin Fields. Owning the Carolina Panthers’ first-round pick — which, based on current standings, would be No. 1 — as well as their own, currently No. 4, puts general manager Ryan Poles in a position to control the direction of the QB class.

Imagine if a local kid — McCarthy was a five-star recruit at Nazareth before finishing his high school career at IMG Academy in Florida during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 — was drafted to be the savior for the local franchise.

It’s possible Bears fans who were glued to Saturday’s game to watch Ohio State wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. (118 yards, one touchdown) — and dream about what he could accomplish at Soldier Field — were watching the team’s future quarterback.

Standing out in the class

Assuming Williams, Maye and McCarthy declare for the draft and join Daniels, it will be fascinating to watch the scouting process play out between now and April 25.

Williams entered this season as the presumptive No. 1 pick, and while he still might wind up in that spot, he endured a bumpy season for the 7-5 Trojans, who lost five of their final six games. The defense, offensive line and skill-position players surrounding the 2022 Heisman Trophy winner were badly exposed at times.

“I love McCarthy,” one veteran NFL executive said. “He may not have enough juice to get him over Williams, but there is something about J.J.”

Maye and the Tar Heels (8-4) also hit a late-season swoon, losing four of their final six games, as he played about half the season with an ankle injury. Like Williams, Maye didn’t have the best line in front of him, and he had only one high-level skill player in wide receiver Tez Walker.

Daniels led the No. 1 scoring offense in the FBS (46.4 points per game) while throwing for 3,812 yards with 40 touchdowns and only four interceptions and rushing for another 1,134 yards. Losses to Alabama and Ole Miss kept the Tigers (9-3) from reaching the SEC title game, and they also fell in the season opener to Florida State. Daniels benefited from elite receiving talent.

The first thing that jumps out when lumping the four quarterbacks together is that McCarthy’s statistics, other than his 74.3% completion rate, are outliers. He has attempted only 257 passes while the other three average 257 completions. McCarthy’s 2,483 yards are more than 1,100 fewer than the other three have. He has 19 touchdown passes against four interceptions.

After winning their first nine games by an average of 34 points, Michigan went to State College, Pa., on Nov. 11 for a matchup against then-No. 9 Penn State. NFL folks were curious to see how McCarthy would respond against a better opponent.

The Wolverines got out to a 14-9 halftime lead and ran the ball on their final 32 offensive plays. Amid that onslaught of ground-and-pound, McCarthy had a keeper on a designed rollout for a throw that didn’t materialize, and a pass interference penalty against the Nittany Lions wiped out an attempt. Other than that, it was run after run after run to put away a 24-15 victory.

McCarthy finished 7 of 8 for 60 yards, and the large collection of scouts at the game was left to wait for another week to dig in on him as a passer. It was apparent from the outset the Wolverines were ill-prepared to block Penn State defensive end Chop Robinson, and with the Nittany Lions offense stuck in the mud, Michigan was able to punt and play defense without much threat.

“Would have loved to see him throw more than eight (expletive) times,” one scout who attended the game texted as he left the stadium.

One question worth addressing is why Harbaugh and his coaching staff have not put more on McCarthy’s shoulders if they believe he is an elite quarterback.

“That’s Harbaugh,” one NFL general manager replied. “He’s going to do what he does. I give that kid credit. A lot of kids crumble there.”

When the game at Penn State ended and the Wolverines were two wins from reaching the Big Ten title game, something caught the attention of another evaluator who was present.

“The thing I liked, he knew there were a ton of scouts there and he threw it eight times,” he said. “Yet after the game, J.J. was celebrating. He didn’t give a (hoot). You saw him running all over. Tells me loud and clear he is a team guy.”

Rewind to mid-September and a 31-6 win over Bowling Green. McCarthy was 8 of 13 passing for 143 yards with a career-high three interceptions and said afterward he forced too many throws.

“He’s definitely athletic enough in the pocket,” said a national scout with Michigan in his territory. “He’s got all the necessary arm talent. He’s accurate enough. I like his confidence. There’s that fine line of taking risks and not being stupid, and usually he’s at that line. For whatever reason, there’s been a few games this year he’s been crossing that line.

“He’s a legit first-round contender based on what I’ve seen. I’m optimistic about what he can be. I don’t have a strong conviction at this point.”

Schematic advantage?

McCarthy did put up big numbers last year in the 51-45 CFP semifinal loss to TCU in the Fiesta Bowl. Yes, the Horned Frogs returned two interceptions for touchdowns, but he was under consistent pressure from blitzing linebackers and passed for 343 yards and two touchdowns, nearly leading the Wolverines back from a 15-point halftime deficit.

It was the kind of wide-open game that caught the attention of scouts pointing toward his junior season, and that leads into another Harbaugh-related topic of whether Michigan’s system better equips the quarterback for the NFL based on what he’s asked to do.

“Yes,” said a general manager who has seen McCarthy play this season. “Because he’s running a more pro-style attack. He is in a different offense than all these other guys getting all of the stats.

“Now, he’s in shotgun a lot, too, but he’ll get under center. You can see him work through progressions. He still needs some work at that. He’s accurate but misses throws like they all do. But it’s more of a pro style with what they’re doing with Harbaugh. They run the hell out of it, which helps the quarterback with the play action. He’s an interesting guy.”

That gives McCarthy somewhat of a base, whenever he does enter the league, for understanding how footwork and timing need to match up in an NFL passing offense. The Wolverines identity is to control the line of scrimmage and tempo with their running game, as opposed to some of the offenses producing quarterback talent that are more spread-based, relying on half-field reads.

For an NFL team considering McCarthy, that makes what type of offense the team runs a key factor.

Does it become a difference maker in the evaluation process? Probably not. But it’s part of the calculus, and three years of experience playing for a coach who has won as an NFL head coach and played quarterback in the league creates additional value.

A head for football

The comparison game is always dangerous. You wind up trying to draw parallels between college players and guys who performed similarly and then reached the highest levels of accomplishment in the NFL, which has a way of chewing up and spitting out highly drafted quarterbacks in rapid succession.

“You hate to compare, right?” Harbaugh told Michigan media at the start of the season about McCarthy. “But very much like Andrew Luck. Once in a generation. I knew it first with Luck (whom Harbaugh coached at Stanford). Just the way he took the field for practice as a true freshman. Just the presence they have when they walk on the field and the first time you give them the quarterback position.

“There it is with J.J. First day he walked out on the practice field here at Michigan, that’s what came to mind. It was very Andrew Luck-like, the presence and the demeanor — the everything. Yeah, (it’s) well-documented J.J. McCarthy’s as much of a generation quarterback here at Michigan or anywhere.”

What set apart Luck — a four-time Pro Bowl selection in seven years with the Indianapolis Colts before his abrupt retirement in the 2019 preseason — was elite processing ability and a high football IQ. That’s what scouts are hinting at when raving about McCarthy, who turns 21 next month.

Those pounding the table for McCarthy believe that, from the shoulders up, he’s built to play in the NFL at a high level, even if his 6-foot-3, 202-pound frame is a little on the slender side.

He doesn’t run like Daniels and isn’t as elusive as Williams and might not win a foot race against Maye, but he’s slippery enough in the pocket and can make second-reaction plays. He throws with good velocity and accuracy, and the quick release is a big plus. He can operate from all sorts of platforms.

It remains to be seen how the Bears will order the quarterback prospects when evaluating them and then comparing them with what they have in Fields, who is under contract through 2024 with a fifth-year club option for 2025.

Poles was part of a Kansas City Chiefs organization that zigged for Patrick Mahomes in 2017 when most of the league zagged, ranking Deshaun Watson tops at the position. The Bears, of course, went in another direction altogether by drafting Mitch Trubisky at No. 2 ahead of Mahomes and Watson.

The Chiefs, who had a successful veteran at the time in Alex Smith, were able to see through the inherent challenges an Air Raid system thrower like Mahomes would face and clearly evaluate what he could become under coach Andy Reid.

Does that mean Poles will lead a different wave of thinking at Halas Hall in the offseason? Who knows. But he will be able to draw from that process and the notebooks of questions that were asked and answered along the way to a decision that, in retrospect, was as stunning as it was brilliant.

Listening to McCarthy describe how he processed his choices on the touchdown pass to Wilson against the Buckeyes, it was evident he has been trained to assimilate reads from presnap to the split seconds that follow the snap and then act.

“Unbelievable mind,” one high-level evaluator said. “Can’t make any judgment on him until they play (more) high-level teams.”

A win over the Hawkeyes would thrust Michigan into the CFP again, giving McCarthy one or two of those opportunities. The NFL will be watching.

()

Editorial: Northwestern’s David Braun deserved to be Big Ten Coach of the Year

posted in: News | 0

Amid the flameout of the Chicago White Sox, the Bulls’ horrific start, the Bears’ continuing allergy to winning and the Blackhawks suffering yet another scandal involving off-ice conduct, there’s been one cheering story to remember.

That’s David Braun, who began this year as Pat Fitzgerald’s new defensive coordinator at Northwestern University, was tapped on an interim basis to coach the team after Fitzgerald’s firing, and led the Wildcats to a wildly improbable 7-5 record and a bowl berth.

Braun deservedly had the interim tag removed two weeks ago, and days ago was honored as Big Ten Coach of the Year.

Have yourself a year, David Braun.

Braun’s accomplishment goes far beyond his team’s record. There were questions about whether Northwestern’s football program ought even to continue following the disturbing disclosures of hazing that destroyed Fitzgerald’s coaching career.

Simply focusing the team on the task of competing in football games, let alone winning them, amid such controversy was an incredible feat. But the turnaround isn’t tied just to competently running a football program under such circumstances.

It’s easy to forget: Under Fitzgerald, the team won a grand total of four games over the past two years.

Braun’s personal story is a heartwarming one. On sports talk station 670 the Score, Braun spoke earlier this week of how he moved his young family to Chicago, thinking in part that working for a coaching icon such as Fitzgerald would provide more job security than virtually any other such post in college football.

Life, the apt saying goes, is what happens when you’re busy making other plans.

Sudden uncertainty just as Braun’s family was settling in and his kids were enjoying their new schools wasn’t ideal. Anyone who’s encountered a sudden roadblock in life — so, pretty much everyone — can marvel that Braun’s determination, focus in the face of massive distractions, and ability to inspire his student — athletes won the day.

Fitzgerald’s dispute with NU over what he’s owed per his contract will linger on.

But how refreshing that when the topic of Northwestern football comes up, we think now of qualities such as resilience, fortitude and teamwork. Not dehumanizing locker room rituals.

Coach of the year, indeed.

Join the discussion on Twitter @chitribopinions and on Facebook.

Submit a letter, of no more than 400 words, to the editor here or email letters@chicagotribune.com.

()

Will the Chicago White Sox trade Eloy Jiménez? What’s the plan for Oscar Colás? Questions about the team’s outfield.

posted in: News | 0

The Chicago White Sox locked up one corner outfield spot last offseason, signing left fielder Andrew Benintendi to a five-year deal.

Right field is a question this offseason. And designated hitter might be added to that list.

Eloy Jiménez, who was the team’s primary DH and also played 14 games in right field in 2023, has been mentioned in trade speculation. The slugger appeared in more than 100 games (120) for just the second time in his career. He played in 122 games as a rookie in 2019, with injuries hampering him in 2021 and 2022.

Jiménez hit .272 with 18 home runs and 64 RBIs in 2023. He missed most of May after undergoing an appendectomy.

“I made it very clear that the White Sox are willing to listen on any of our players,” general manager Chris Getz said during a video conference call Nov. 17. “When it comes to Eloy, we just had a visit with him in the Dominican Republic as a check-in, and he’s off and running with his offseason program. He looks really good. He looks motivated and determined.

“He needs to maintain that. But Eloy’s potential with his bat, it’s just been lack of consistency mainly because of missed time. Teams are interested. It just has to make sense on both sides.”

As the discussion continues pertaining to Jiménez’s future and the team’s plan at DH, here are three questions to monitor this offseason for the Sox outfield.

1. Where does Luis Robert Jr. have room to improve?

The center fielder became the first player in Sox history to have at least 35 doubles (36), 35 home runs (38), 80 RBIs (80), 90 runs (90) and 20 stolen bases (20) in a season.

Robert earned All-Star and Silver Slugger honors for the first time in his career and set career highs in doubles, home runs, RBIs, steals, at-bats (546) and games (145).

“You look at what he provided on both sides of the ball, he was one of the top players in the game,” Getz said at the GM meetings on Nov. 7.

Robert, 26, said there is “room to improve.”

“One of the keys for me for the success I had, I was able to recognize pitches in the strike zone,” Robert said through an interpreter during a Nov. 9 video conference call.

“I think I can really improve with my offense, especially being more disciplined in the strike zone. That’s my goal. And improving on just playing daily.”

2. What should be expected of Andrew Benintendi in his second season with the Sox?

The Sox are hoping an offseason not spent on the mend will benefit Benintendi.

When the five-year, $75 million contract was announced last January, Benintendi had been bouncing back from a broken hook of the hamate bone in his right hand suffered that September with the New York Yankees.

“He had a tough offseason because he had that surgery,” Sox manager Pedro Grifol said near the end of the 2023 season. “(I’m) actually looking forward to watching him come in spring training really, really strong and doing what he’s capable of doing.”

Benintendi played through some right hand soreness in ‘23, slashing .262/.326/.356 with five homers and 45 RBIs in 151 games.

“His bat-to-ball skills are very good,” Getz said on Nov. 7. “He can put together a quality at-bat against both righties and lefties. He’s focused on getting stronger and more athletic to help him on the defensive side. Certainly that will bode well for him.

“He was excited to get to the finish line this season and get rolling into his offseason program because he’s determined to be an impactful major-league player, and I believe he has the ability to do that.”

3. What’s the plan for Oscar Colás?

Colás earned a spot on the opening-day roster out of spring training as the projected starting right fielder.

But the rookie ended the season in the minors after slashing .216/.257/.314 with five home runs and 19 RBIs in 75 games.

He made 59 starts for the Sox in right — second on the team to Gavin Sheets’ 61 — and is likely in line for more development at Triple-A Charlotte.

“Obviously the talent remains. Everyone has seen the tools and what he’s capable of doing,” Getz said on Nov. 7. “He’s got to find a way to play more under control, understand how pitchers are attacking him.

“He’s probably best fit in the minor leagues for the time being and using the experience he had at the major-league level to help him in the future. But we certainly haven’t given up on Oscar, just because you don’t give up on talent like that.”

So the Sox are pondering the best fit in right field for 2024.

()

McCarthy’s exit and the ripple effects back home

posted in: Politics | 0

Former Speaker Kevin McCarthy‘s announcement that he would resign from Congress at the end of the year throws his own political future — and the fates of vulnerable California Republicans — into murky territory.

His resignation comes as a disappointment, but not a surprise, to his loyal supporters in Congress. McCarthy is well-liked in his Central Valley district, but he would have faced withering campaign attacks over a dysfunctional Congress and his failure to rein in far-right members.

It doesn’t exactly make for a great mailer.

“He’s the hometown boy who made good, but then he had a tragic end,” Mark Salvaggio, a former Bakersfield City Council member, told POLITICO. “The reaction here locally is sadness, disappointment … but people understand. They respect his decision.”

McCarthy aimed to strike an optimistic tone in announcing his departure, promising to stay “in the fight” even though he’ll no longer be in a position to do much fighting. He can still attempt to recruit candidates and raise money for them, but there’s a big difference between having the speaker in your corner and having a former member.

“It’s going to be hard for them to replicate the operation that Kevin had,” said Rob Stutzman, a top Republican operative in California who has known McCarthy since his time in the statehouse in Sacramento. “They won’t be able to. Johnson doesn’t have the relationships and fundraising prowess.”

McCarthy’s ouster from leadership in October had already threatened to leave Republicans in Biden-won House districts rudderless, especially in fundraising. As speaker, McCarthy elevated the California GOP in both visibility and power.

Without him even in the building, incumbents like Reps. David Valadao, Mike Garcia, John Duarte, Ken Calvert and Michelle Steel could be in serious trouble.

Mike Madrid, a California Republican consultant who makes no secret of his disdain for the Trump-era version of his own party, put it in simple terms: “Investing in the California Republican party is like investing in Blockbuster. The only reason people would was because they had a relationship with Kevin.”

Madrid said the bigger impact could be on the state party infrastructure. He said he expects Republicans will be able to fully fund candidates in battleground races without McCarthy. (Worth noting: GOP candidates currently have more cash on hand than Democrats in seven of the state’s 10 most-watched House districts.)

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to call a special election for the remainder of McCarthy’s term. It would be held simultaneously as the March primary and November general election, meaning the candidates would likely appear multiple times on the ballot.

Potential replacements include state Sen. Shannon Grove and Assemblymember Vince Fong. Neither Grove nor Fong returned messages on Wednesday asking about a bid for the seat, but both released public statements praising McCarthy for his years of leadership.

Grove, one of the more right-leaning Republicans in the California statehouse, received huge recognition this year for forcing passage of a human-trafficking bill that some Democrats had initially tried to block. Fong, who used to work as McCarthy’s district director, maintains close ties to the former speaker, and even called him “one of my best friends” in an Instagram post on Wednesday.

Jeremy B. White and Melanie Mason contributed reporting.

Like this content? Consider signing up for POLITICO’s California Playbook newsletter.