Matt Waldman’s RSP NFL Scouting Glossary: Tracking Directly Overhead with Larry Fitzgerald - a podcast by Matt Waldman

from 2022-10-05T13:07:06

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Matt Waldman uses a pair of masterful receptions from Larry Fitzgerald's college tape to illustrate the value of receivers who can track the ball directly over their head. .

Not All Receivers Are Good Ball TrackersThis post features Larry Fitzgerald, but it begins with a player finishing up his career in the CFL.  Whenever I think about tracking the football I think of this one-time NFL prospect with an early-round contract. For NFL fans, the receiver is a recent punchline.

It's not meant to be. This player is good enough to get paid to play football, which is better than most people who've ever donned a helmet and pads.

It's vital to have this perspective about evaluating football talent because fans and media are too quick to react to the extremes with information. Media corporations generate a lot of revenue by fostering environments that encourage reactionary thinking."Best or worst"thinking is a plague of our present society but it's profitable.

This receiver was an elite NFL athlete with promising production at a good SEC program. It led to a healthy amount of pre-draft buzz for him that reached its peak during his week at the Senior Bowl.While watching this player on the practice field, I got a text from a veteran scout and analytics professional with a lot of consulting projects for most of the NFL GMs in the league."If the South Squad spent five minutes with the drill where a receiver's back is to the thrower and the ball arrives over his head, the coaches would learn fast that [the player not mentioned here] has difficulty tracking the ball."When I got back to my office, I pulled clips of as many vertical targets as I could find from this player's games. There were plenty of targets where he tracked the ball over his shoulder — enough for highlight packages on YouTube.

If you went deeper, this receiver was often facing the quarterback when he caught a vertical target and his wins over the shoulder had some technical flaws.Tracking difficulties were a notable part of this receiver's struggles in the NFL.

The bigger question is why players earn early-round picks and significant playing time only to wash out because of a flaw that, as a scout mentioned to me, would take five minutes to uncover.It comes back to the law of supply and demand.

The top college programs draw elite athletes with promising receiving skills. Most college programs have to make a choice:Recruit a strong athlete and hope he becomes a technically good receiver.
Recruit a strong technician and hope he becomes a better athlete.Sometimes players from both categories improve on these hopes to the extent that they can become successful professionals. More often than not, the NFL is evaluating prospects who became an elite athletes and gained marginally better technique or elite technicians and gained marginally better athletic ability.

There are also physical skills that don't always earn the focus they should. Tracking the football is one of the common ones.

It's assumed that if you play wide receiver, you're inherently a good ball tracker. However, as the demands of the game increase with the level of play, the required skills for tracking the football become far more demanding.
There Are Layers to Tracking the BallThe simplest definition for Tracking the Ball is the act of finding the ball in the air and looking it into your hands. This is enough for teaching a kid to play catch. There's a lot more involved with receiver play:

Identifying the trajectory of the ball: Simply finding the ball in the air can be more difficult for some routes than others.Gauging the trajectory of the target and reacting with the optimal hand position to attack it.

Attacking targets with a sub-optimal hand position lowers the odds of winning and/or protecting the target from a defender.Gauging the trajectory of the target and positioning the body to maximize the catch opportunity....

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