Road Start Next Challenge for QB Jackson
If
Tarvaris
Jackson's role is not to mess up (and it is), then the Vikings
second year quarterback did okay in the third regular season start of
his NFL career yesterday at the Metrodome as the Vikings offense
produced one touchdown and the defense two in a 24-3 opening day win
over Atlanta. The test may become more challenging next Sunday when the 24-year-old Jackson starts his second career
regular season road game when the Vikings play in Detroit's Ford Field.
The game will be the
Lions' home opener. Detroit probably will be performing with confidence after
defeating Oakland 36-21. Playing in a loud dome like Ford Field will
test Jackson's composure. In the Vikings-Atlanta game the crowd
seemed to bother the Falcons who had consecutive false starts in the
second half. In the first half Falcon quarterback Joey
Harrington apparently called a timeout because of crowd noise.
"It was loud out there
and you really can't hear anything," said Roddy White, Falcons
wide receiver. "You gotta learn to deal with it. ... Probably the
loudest stadium I've ever been in so far."
Jackson completed 13
of 23 passes, including a 60 yard swing pass that went for a touchdown
to rookie running back Adrian Peterson. Jackson threw one
interception, made a second half scramble for a first down and looked
composed. He over threw some receivers, used mostly short and
intermediate passes, and was careful not to run when he shouldn't.
Former Viking Mike Morris, now a KFAN Radio personality, said
Jackson's performance didn't surprise him.
"He's still over
throwing that long ball," Morris told Sports Headliners.
"He missed Sidney Rice, led him out of bounds over near
the Falcon bench. Troy Williamson, over threw him. He was open
over on the Viking bench. Some of the intermediate stuff was good
to see, but he's got to sharpen up. ..."
Morris said Jackson is
"struggling with his defensive reads." He described Jackson's passes as
"too flat, too hard and needs to put some arc on the ball," and give
receivers more opportunity to get under the ball.
Falcon cornerback
DeAngelo Hall said Jackson is a "hell of an athlete" and liked the
Viking quarterback's performance. "Well, I think it was good," Hall
said. "They didn't ask him to do too much. They were able to run
the ball pretty much at will. I think Chester Taylor going out
(with an injury) kind of hurt us a little bit. Adrian Peterson is
a bigger style of back and just was able to run the ball and deliver the
blow all day."
What does Morris think
about Jackson playing in Detroit? "Well, no. 1 it's the first away game
for him to get under his belt," Morris answered. "He's going to have to
pick it up. He's going to have to work on a lot of different
things. He had two or three passes (today) that he threw where they
shouldn't have gone, almost picked off. ..."
Will Jackson be
nervous next Sunday? "Oh, yeah, absolutely," Morris said "That's
what makes it work, though. Fear and desire are two sides of the
same coin. They really are."
If it's comforting, at
least Jackson can know Ford Field isn't as noisy as the Metrodome,
according to White. "I've played in Ford Field but it wasn't as
loud as this right here," White said.