Childress to Continue Jackson Evaluation
Like a supportive counselor, Vikings coach Brad Childress is committed to 24-year-old
Tarvaris Jackson. Through injuries, interceptions and other
misjudgments, Childress is standing behind his second year quarterback.
Jackson, who has only started five of nine games because of injuries
this season, is expected to start Sunday’s home game against Oakland.
Childress and other team decision makers
are invested in Jackson. The team moved up in the 2006 draft to select
Jackson, considering him a promising talent with his strong arm and
athleticism. He started the final two games of the 2006 season. In
total he played in four games, throwing four interceptions and two
touchdown passes. He completed 47 of 81 passes and had a 62.5 percent
rating. This season his rating is down to 50.6. He has thrown two
touchdown passes and five interceptions while completing 51 of 110
passes.
Childress wants to “evaluate him (Jackson)
through a course of a string of games.” He will watch for “indicators”
about Jackson the rest of this season but will do so with the
perspective that this is his quarterback’s first full season.
“I would just like to have a feel for a standard of performance,”
Childress said. “What I am going to get, week in and week out. …”
Despite a knee injury last season, and
2007 troubles including groin and finger injuries, Childress wants to
believe that Jackson is not as he said earlier this week a “China doll,” a fragile player susceptible
to one hurt after another. He hopes Jackson can stay on the field, gain
confidence and reach a maturity where he’s not thinking so much about
the Vikings’ system but instead is focused on the other team’s defense.
A former NFL personnel evaluator told
Sports Headliners earlier this fall he thought the Vikings could
have developed Jackson more slowly. “They had Brad Johnson, a
perfect quarterback to develop Tarvaris Jackson underneath, and (they)
released him,” he said. The source also said Johnson, who became a
Dallas Cowboy during the off-season, has such a high football
intelligence he can offer valuable suggestions for the weekly game plan and
is superior at
changing plays on the line of scrimmage.
A better Jackson performance Sunday will
boost a Vikings offense that ranks second to last in passing
yards per game among NFL teams. With a 3-6 record, playing without
injured running back Adrian Peterson and coming off a no-momentum
34-0 loss to the Packers in Green Bay, Childress is hoping for better
results in the Vikings’ last seven games.
“There are seven weeks to go in this
football season, five of which are NFC games, four of which are at
home,” Childress said. “I just expect this football team to rebound and
that will be a large part of our message as we head to the Oakland
Raiders this week.”