<h1>Great memory turns Gabbert into top prospect
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By Les Carpenter
</span>, Yahoo! Sports</span>
Apr 19, 12:14 pm EDT</div></div></div>
Blaine Gabbert rattled through math problems so easily as a child, remembering
everything from multiplication tables to batting averages, that his
mother, Bev, began to imagine something magnificent going on in her
oldest son's head.
"He's almost got a photographic memory,"Â she says over the phone from the family house just outside St. Louis.
This is the attribute that might just take Gabbert far in his pursuit
to be a starting quarterback in the NFL. He already has those other
things the NFL desires: standing 6-foot-5 with the ability to fling the
ball three-quarters of the field in the air. But it is his mind that
might push him farther, for in the complex world of football offenses
little matters more than memory.
"Once you say it to him it is set in stone,"Â says
David Yost, University of Missouri offensive coordinator and quarterback
coach. "His ability to process the information is amazing. You give it
to him, he retains it."Â
The NFL has all kinds of tricks designed to test a quarterback's
intelligence. Over the past few weeks, as Gabbert has talked to the
teams that need a quarterback in this draft â€"
Carolina Panthers,
Buffalo Bills,
Arizona Cardinals,
Tennessee Titans and
Washington Redskins
â€" the challenges have come out. Teams have handed him pens and asked
him to draw from memory his offense from college. Then they dictate the
elements of their own offense, often one he has never seen before. After
he has scribbled this on the same board, they erase it and tell him to
write it all over again.
<div style="width: 220px;">
<div>Gabbert shows off wheels at the combine.
(US Presswire)</span>
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Here is where the NFL men learn about the minds of their future
passers. Can they learn fast? Can they adjust? Ultimately the result is
often more important than if the quarterback can hit a receiver on the
dead run with a 65-yard throw.
And the reports that have trickled back to Missouri where Gabbert
played quarterback are that he has dazzled with his ability to decipher
offenses. And it is probably the biggest reason he has risen as a junior
who left college early to one of the top two quarterbacks taken in next
week's NFL draft.
"I guess I'm good at remembering and picking things up quickly,"Â
Gabbert says over the phone with a bit of an embarrassed laugh. "I've
always retained things quickly."Â
Few characteristics are greater for NFL quarterbacks than their mind.
Offenses have become so complex, with so many different variations and
adjustments made each week that a quarterback who can understand what is
going on becomes invaluable. The 700-page playbook Al Saunders
introduced to the Washington Redskins when he was hired as their
offensive coordinator in 2006 immediately became legend around the
league, until it was revealed that 700 pages was actually normal for an
NFL team and that Saunders' book might really run closer to 1,000 pages
with all the other options the plays demanded. Many others are similar
in size.
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<div>David Yost
(US Presswire)</span>
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At Missouri, Yost sometimes changed the Tigers' offense depending on
the team they were playing, a common adjustment professional teams make.
He learned early that Gabbert, who
reportedly scored 42 out of 50 on the Wonderlic test
during the NFL scouting combine, could handle the change. Where most
quarterbacks he worked with usually needed to see the play on a board or
have it explained with video, Blaine almost always understood when the
play was first described.
For instance, while preparing for the Insight.com Bowl against Iowa
late last year, Yost mentioned a particular red zone defense Iowa likes
to play to Gabbert and quickly offered a solution. Later that day, in
practice, a red-zone situation arose and Gabbert immediately made the
change even though it was something he had barely discussed with Yost
hours before.
Subtle emergence
In an autumn where the quarterback news was dominated by Stanford's senior-to-be Andrew Luck and Auburn's Cam Newton,
who might be the most scrutinized Heisman Trophy winner in years,
Gabbert was an afterthought. His Missouri Tigers won 10 games yet he was
never much in the conversation as a first-round draft pick for this
spring. He could throw long but he played in Missouri's spread offense
in which the quarterback is almost always in the shotgun. It's the kind
of offense that's generally perceived not to translate well to the NFL.
So in many ways Gabbert is kind of a new discovery. Obviously the
pros knew about him. but they didn't seem to understand exactly what
they were getting. One big misconception is that he was not fast or
athletic compared to Newton who can tear down the field. Lanky with
blonde locks that spill out from beneath his helmet, Gabbert looks like
he wouldn't be very agile or fast. But Gabbert ran a 4.62 40 yard dash
at the combine and is, if nothing else, elusive. At Missouri he rushed
for 458 yards.
He also knows how to play under center having worked since midway
through high school with a private quarterback coach Skip Stitzell, who
often drove to the Gabbert's St. Louis-area home. Stitzell only
instructed Blaine on running a pro-style offense â€" even while Gabbert
was in college â€" figuring it to be the best base from which to learn.
"I have a joke with Blaine that everyone says he's going to have to
learn to stand under center and do three-, five- and seven-step drops,"Â
Stitzell says by phone from his Fayette home. "No he doesn't. I think
he's actually better under center than in the gun. He's got better
rhythm and timing. He's very good at the play-action stuff which you
need to do in the NFL."Â
"Would another year in college have made him a better quarterback?"Â
Yost asks. "Sure. But talking to NFL people I don't know if another year
would have made him more marketable to the NFL."Â
So he left.
"The timing was right,"Â Gabbert says. "I know I need to challenge
myself at the next level. From a quarterback standpoint I knew I was the
best quarterback coming out of college football."Â
<div style="width: 320px;">
<div>Gabbert had a school bowl record of 434 passing yards in the loss to Iowa.
(US Presswire)</span>
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He does not say this in a cocky way. Rather his tone never changes.
It is something he is sure of, something he believes. He had a decent
junior year throwing for 3,186 yards and 16 touchdowns in 13 games and
probably could have improved on all of those numbers had he come back
next season. It was a surprise to some that he came out, but then,
Gabbert can surprise.
Like when he says that if he hadn't been such a top athlete he might
have gone the way of his good friend growing up, Steve May, who went to
West Point. When the rest of his teammates ask to play the traditional
"Halo"Â in the Missouri locker room, Gabbert insists on the game "Call of
Duty,"Â showing a unique understanding of World War II battles and
generals' tactics.
He says he loves to read about war history, often reading on planes
when his colleagues are more likely to be sleeping or watching movies.
His favorite book is "Lone Survivor"Â by Marcus Luttrell, the story of a
Navy SEAL who was the only member of a four-man team to live through an
attack in Afghanistan.
In a league where coaches often look to the memoirs of military
leaders for inspiration, Gabbert's interests will undoubtedly be an
asset. As will his memory.
"He's the smartest guy I've ever worked with,"Â Yost says.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=lc-carpenter_memory_improves_gabbert_stock_041911
Edited by: Highlander