I found it most disturbing how he froze up -- cognitive/decision-making problems?
Secondly, think about it: You're a first round QB prospect who is about to sit across the table from
Chuckie(!) on
national television -- you
know it'll be a chalkboard session -- and you show up apparently unprepared?
May be nit-picky, but ... MLB pitchers can recount games pitch-by-pitch; PGA Tour pros recount rounds shot-distance-result; NBA players can bore you with play-by-play recollections -- and I'm talking about years old games, tournaments. (Ask Nicklaus about 1986 Masters and he'll give you every single shot.)
For a first pick & "$50 million" that would give me pause.
Let's compare two QBs a little bit here:
On the one hand, you have Gabbert who ran a pure spread offense at Mizzou.
He either was in one back shotgun set or no back spread.
He had no TE. The guy who was listed as TE only had the title; he lined up as a receiver.
He doesn't know what kind of routes a TE in the NFL run.
He doesn't know how to utilize a FB or an H-back in the passing game because he never played with one.
With 4 or 5 receivers, there are only so many formations you can line up in and only so many plays you can run.
On the other hand, you have Newton who saw action under Center about 3.5 times a game (remember you have to practice). He's seen the play action fake, the roll out off the two-back set.
Even when he's in the shotgun, he played with 2 backs or 3 backs in the backfield; something you don't even see in the NFL.
Imagine how many different formations he had to get comfortable with.
Out of each formation, they can run a bunch of plays, with variations and options.
His playbook can be at least 2 times as thick as Gabbert's and thicker than quite a few NFL QBs, probably thicker than most (if not all).
A guy has to have football intelligence to be able to digest such a system.
On top of that, the Tigers ran a lot of up-tempo or no huddle.
The QB has to be smart to be able to run a series of play with very little communication from the side line.
It is totally illogical to think that he doesn't have a brain between his ears when he was able to perform all those tasks at a very high level.
This is a guy who can make all the throws (to RB, FB, H-back, TE, WR) in game situation. It takes more than a good passer to do that.
His brain has got to function at a high level to shift gears between so many different personnel groupings/formations like that.
To think otherwise is totally illogical.