Strangely enough, if you think about it, Savage has actually been O'Brien's only truly "virgin" hand-picked Texans QB.
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Tom Savage Has Been the One Constant Since Bill O'Brien Arrived with the Houston Texans
Patrick Starr
9:29 AM
Tom Savage is the one quarterback that has been the constant in the Houston Texans quarterback room since Bill O'Brien's arrival.
The choice has been made by Bill O'Brien to continue the late season push to the playoffs with Tom Savage at the helm. What is lost in all of this is the fact that Savage was the hand-picked quarterback of O’Brien from day one.
The actual connection started when O’Brien took over the Penn State head coaching vacancy in 2012 and recruited Savage after he transferred to Arizona from Rutgers. Unable to land him, O’Brien kept an thumb on Savage after he transferred to Pittsburgh to finish up his college career.
When O’Brien first took over the Texans job in 2014, he personally took trips to see prospects up close. During that draft process, O’Brien went to Pittsburgh to personally workout Savage. At that workout, O’Brien personally scripted over 100 passes for him at his pro day and, despite conditions being on the cold side, he impressed the 28 teams that were in attendance including O’Brien. The Texans met with Savage at the pro day and had a formal interview with him at the NFL Combine.
It was clear that the Texans had Savage on their draft board and when the 4th round arrived, the Texans selected him with the 135th selection.
The growth of Savage over three training camps has been clear and the intentions were always to have him as a developmental quarterback, to see what he can be when the time was right. The biggest jump for Savage was from year one to year two, especially when he took time out to use goggles with a camera to help him see the field from his point of view. He looked much more developed as a passer in 2015 compared to his rookie season. In 2016, he was clearly the most well-versed in the Texans offense and was the clear cut best quarterback in camp to start the season.
The issue was that by the Texans placing Savage on the injured reserve in 2015, the direction changed and forced the organization to look for the best option available.
On January 11th, shortly after the end of the Texans season, Savage made a proclamation on how he was going to handle the unknown quarterback situation of the Texans future after the failures of Brian Hoyer and Ryan Mallett.
"They can draft 12 quarterbacks," he said in January of 2016 at the end of the season. "I am going to be ready to go. I am definitely excited about competing and that still falls under the category of controlling what I can control. I am not up there. I don’t make those decisions, so all I can do is be ready to compete."
Savage’s season was taken away from him in 2015 due to a shoulder injury he suffered against the Dallas Cowboys in the final game of the preseason. With two quarterbacks in front of him, the Texans opted to place Savage on the injured reserve and use his roster spot for another position group. That proved to be one of the clearest mistakes by the Texans during the O’Brien era.
"Every night, every night," said Savage on thinking about his season ending in 2015. "It was tough, but that is a really tough spot to be in as a coach when you have that awkward timing for an injury like that.”
Injuries have plagued Savage in his three seasons with the Texans. As a rookie, he injured his knee which ended his season in his first appearance as a quarterback. In year two, a shoulder injury in a meaningless fourth preseason game ended the 2015 campaign before the regular season even started and this season, he had a scare with an infection involving his elbow on the trip to Green Bay which required antibiotics and a trip to the hospital to correct.
With the injuries and setbacks behind him, patience came into play for Savage, something he struggled with in his college when his lack of patience made him look for a new school after Rutgers forced him to split time despite being a Freshman All-American. Savage himself said he should have been more patient with his college career and that issue set him in the position he is in now.
Brock Osweiler entered the picture and, as often happens with a calculated risk, the gamble has not materialized as most had hoped. The patience that Savage lacked as a young man paid off in a big way when he finally hit the field for the first time in 735 days to bring the Texans back in a 21-20 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars.
“He’s a very consistent person. He’s been the same guy as far as his personality and how he approaches his day-to-day workload since he arrived here," explained O’Brien of Savage. “He’s a hardworking guy. He’s done a lot to work in the weight room to change his body. He’s worked to get in better shape over the years.”
The work has been done and Savage has been the one constant in the quarterback room over the past three seasons. Quarterbacks have come and gone, he has seen multiple quarterbacks shuffled in and out of the roster. The learning experiences have been there for Savage and now it is his turn to step to the plate.
If there is one thing going for Tom Savage, he has been the only quarterback under O’Brien to be conditioned to think exactly like O’Brien from day one. Savage is a symbol of everything O’Brien wants with the Texans and he was the only hand-picked quarterback with a clean slate ready to mold as an NFL quarterback. Savage is O’Brien’s own product from the Texans way of coaching from day one; he is not like other quarterbacks who have been shaped by other coaching staffs. Savage is an O’Brien product and now the time has arrived to see what he has been coached to do.
"I'm going to win that job," said Savage in that same interview about how his season ended before it began at the end of 2015.
Savage has won the job like he said he would. Now it is up to him to prove that the answer for the Texans has been in house the entire time.
Hmm .. nice article and all that, but I find it very hard to understand how O'Brien had him 3rd string behind that stupid Fitz/Mallet competition last year, regardless of him getting hurt in that 4th preseason game.