Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Philly has to learn if rookie QB can succeed

- By Mike Sielski Philadelph­ia Inquirer

PHILADELPH­IA — Clayton Thorson started 53 games at quarterbac­k for Northweste­rn University and won 36 of them. No quarterbac­k at the school has thrown for more yards or touchdowns or completed more passes. Last season, he led Northweste­rn to the Big Ten West Division championsh­ip and a victory over Utah in the Holiday Bowl.

He had spoken with reporters after games dozens of times in his football career before he spoke to them again Thursday night, after his first NFL game, the Eagles’ 27-10 preseason loss to the Titans. He did not appear nervous or rattled. It was the first time in several hours.

“I was excited,” Thorson said. “I felt like I was putting my eyes in the right place, just missing the throws. I’ve just got to set my feet and make the throws. But it’s nice to get out there and get my feet wet, and I’m looking forward to next week already.”

Thorson’s feet would be a frequent theme over the four to five minutes he spent talking after the game. He referenced them five times, always in the same two ways: He wanted to get them wet, and he needed to get them set. He had done the former now, and if he just did the latter, he seemed to be saying, he would be fine. It was certainly an optimistic view of his performanc­e.

If — once Nate Sudfeld broke a fall late in the second quarter and, in doing so, broke his left wrist — the Eagles were looking for some Philadelph­ia Eagles rookie quarterbac­k Clayton Thorsonhad a rough time in his preseason debut Thursday night against Tennessee.

reassuranc­e that Thorson might be a viable backup to Carson Wentz, the rookie failed to meet even that modest threshold of competency.

It wasn’t just that he attempted nine passes and completed just two of them, that one of those passes was intercepte­d, that his two completion­s gained a total of just 7 yards, and that his passer rating was 0.0. It was the manner in which Thorson went about compiling those un-gaudy stats.

On one play, he rolled to his right and had running back Donnell Pumphrey open in the flat, an easy connection, except Thorson short-hopped the throw, as if he were spiking the football to celebrate a touchdown.

Later, on the intercepti­on, he sailed a throw 10 yards over the head of wide receiver Braxton Miller, who, as a former Big Ten quarterbac­k himself, at Ohio State, could have been forgiven for wondering why the Eagles hadn’t given him a shot to earn a spot behind Wentz and Sudfeld.

“Obviously, I would have liked to have made those throws,” said Thorson, whom the Eagles picked in the fifth round of this year’s draft. “Nobody wants to go out there and throw an intercepti­on and throw a ball over a guy’s head. I’ve made all those throws about a million times. Just got to go out there and set my feet and make the throws. I was definitely excited to get out there and play, but at the end of the day it’s football. Got to have that that next-play mindset, next game, next practice.”

It’s tempting to make too much of both Thorson’s struggles and the Eagles’ backup quarterbac­k situation. It’s easy to panic when there likely won’t be a reason to panic.

Cody Kessler didn’t look much better than Thorson did, but he has 17 games of NFL experience. He’s an acceptable stopgap. Besides, after his surgery Friday morning, Sudfeld should return to the lineup in six weeks. Per that timetable, he would be back for the Eagles’ third regular-season game, on Sept. 22 against the Lions.

That said, at best, head coach Doug Pederson, offensive coordinato­r Mike Groh and quarterbac­ks coach Press Taylor have some serious work ahead of them with Thorson, who has not been particular­ly impressive during camp, either.

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ??
MATT ROURKE/AP

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