Pretty good read about Mike Shanahan's thoughts on Griffin. You can tell he sidestepped the question about being a pocket passer ... clearly he thinks that's his drawback and undoing (as most of us do).
What Mike Shanahan thinks Robert Griffin III must do to be successful with the Browns
Robert Griffin III
Robert Griffin III can be successful here if he runs the same kind of read-option scheme he ran in 2012 in Washington, Mike Shanahan says. (John Kuntz, cleveland.com)
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Mary Kay Cabot, cleveland.com By Mary Kay Cabot, cleveland.com
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on September 09, 2016 at 7:19 PM, updated September 09, 2016 at 7:22 PM
BEREA, Ohio — Former Redskins coach Mike Shanahan, who coached Robert Griffin III to NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year honors and a Pro Bowl Berth in 2012, knows exactly what it will take for Griffin to be successful with the Browns.
Griffin, he says, will need to abandon the notion that he's a dropback quarterback and return to the things that made him a superstar in 2012.
Specifically, he'd run the read-option attack that makes defenses change the way they play; and compliment that with a strong play-action passing attack that forces defenders to respect the run as well as the pass.
Ideally, the scheme would be built around a power running game like Shanahan and his son Kyle ran in Washington that year, with Alfred Morris rushing for 1,613 yards.
In that improbable rookie season, Griffin set NFL rookie records for passer rating (102.4), interception percentage (1.27) and rushing yards by a quarterback (815). He finished the season with 3,200 yards passing, 20 touchdown and only five interceptions. He also rushed for seven touchdowns on his 120 carries.
Of course, it ended with Griffin tearing his ACL and LCL in the wildcard playoff loss to the Seahawks, and he never returned to his Pro Bowl form. But Shanahan is quick to point out that Griffin was never injured on a read-option play.
In 2013, Redskins owner Dan Snyder and Griffin decided that he ought to become a pocket passer, and the experiment failed miserably. The Redskins went 3-13, the Shanahans were fired, and Jay Gruden was hired as head coach. Gruden quickly came to the same conclusion: that Griffin wasn't a dropback passer. He ultimately turned the team over to Kirk Cousins and demoted Griffin to third-string quarterback last season.
In an interview with cleveland.com, Shanahan offered his thoughts on what Griffin must do to get back to his 2012 glory Griffin and
Q: Can Griffin ever be the amazing quarterback he was in 2012?
A: He still is that 2012 quarterback. If he runs a system that takes advantage of his skillset, he can be successful. Knowing Hue (Jackson), I'm sure he's going to take advantage of what Robert does best. He'll have to do some of what he did in 2012, along with some of the new things Hue will design for him. But he still has the big arm, he's still fast and he can still do some of the things that led him to one of the best seasons for a quarterback in NFL history.
Q: How did the play-action game factor in?
A: Statistically he was the best in the history of the game and he did a lot of great things. He was fantastic with the play-action game. It complimented what he did in college. We had six new starters on offense and he was able to put up some fantastic stats throughout the year and defenses really had to play the run. He did as good a job as you could possibly ask anybody to with the play-action game that he run.
Q: Can Griffin become more of a dropback quarterback?
A: Every quarterback I've ever been around, they believe in themselves. They believe they can do everything. The great quarterbacks have the uncanny ability to believe that the sky's the limit and whatever needs to be done that they can do it. I just thought it was going to take some time in that situation and obviously we'll see what happens in the future. When I left Washington, I told Dan (Snyder) it's going to take some time. He's never done it in high school, never did it in college.
Shot 3 - Great touch pass by Griffin. #Browns like Empty sets and like to move Barnidge, Duke Johnson & Pryor around pic.twitter.com/BRMXjFXyJq
— Fran Duffy (@fduffy3) September 8, 2016
Q: What happened when you tried to use him more as a dropback passer in 2013?
A: We went to more of a dropback attack in the first three games to see if he could do some of the things we were hoping he could, and we went 0-3. The next five games, we did a lot of things we did in 2012 with the hurry-up offense and we went 3-2. Then, we drifted away from that and went more back to the drop-back the remainder of the season, and it just didn't work out. Ultimately I benched Robert for the last three games and went with Kirk. Again, it's not that Robert can't do it. It's just that he hasn't.
Q: What happened to Griffin after you left?
A: If you put somebody in a situation they're uncomfortable with because they've never done it, it's going to be very hard for that guy to be successful and that's what happened the next couple of years for him. He was in a system that was more of a dropback attack than a play-action attack.
That's what they thought he was and he's not. When you don't play for a couple of years, it's hard to get better doing something if you don't practice it.
Shot 4 - Hue Jackson will use Griffin in read option situations. Here is a 'Power' Read play where he keeps the ball pic.twitter.com/b2WBKcqO0t
— Fran Duffy (@fduffy3) September 8, 2016
Q: But doesn't the read-option expose him to getting hurt?
A: Robert has never gotten hurt running the read-option. He had a concussion as a rookie when he scrambled and held onto the ball too long and got hit. He didn't hurt his ACL on a read-option play. I actually think the read-option helped keep him healthy. The key is, you have to be willing to slide and throw the ball away. It seems like Robert is doing those things now.
Q: Haven't teams caught up to the read-option?
A. No, just look at Russell Wilson last year. He ran the ball better than Robert did as a rookie. And this was his fourth year running it. When people say have defenses caught up, well, why has Russell Wilson had the success he's had? And he's going to keep having success, because you don't have to run it but three times times a game and if people haven't prepared to stop it, you can run it six times a game. That's how they beat Green Bay in the playoffs. Most people in general are not sure what the read-option is. You have three choices: you give it to the back, you pitch it or you run the football.
Russell knows when to hand it off, when to keep it and when to slide. Your job is to never get hit. Robert did take too many hits, but from what I've seen, he seems more willing to slide.
Q: Why is it still so effective?
A: Even if you only run it two or three times a game, the defense has to prepare for it. Just to have that in there, you don't have to run it, but when people know you have it in your arsenal, not only does it help the running game but it helps the play-action game and it keeps the pass-rush from getting after the quarterback because they have to play run first so there's a lot of advantages vs. disadvantages.
Q: Griffin got hot and went 6-0 in his final six games as a rookie. What was the key?
A: We started out 3-6, we were having a lot of success on first and second down, but on third down we were ranked 32nd in the league. Over the last seven games we were tied for fifth on third down and that's the main reason we went 7-0 as a team (including Kirk Cousins' victory in Cleveland).
After studying the first half of the season, instead of reading the the whole field, we went to one side or the other, we went to 1-2 (in the progression), then you run it or dump it. That gives a young quarterback a feel on how quickly the ball must come out. He must also know his outlet if the run isn't there — and slide. Don't take a hit. We got better the second half of the season and it's part of the reason we got in the playoffs. We made it a lot easier on Robert and he did a much better job.
Shot 2 - But Hue Jackson does a lot of things to leverage his ability to threaten defenses vertically #Browns pic.twitter.com/4lgLC8YAcm
— Fran Duffy (@fduffy3) September 8, 2016
Q: Did Hue Jackson seek your advice when he was signing Griffin?
A: No, I have never talked to Hue. I've met Hue before and I've watched him afar because he's always believed in the running game so I have followed what he's done throughout his career. I believe he'll play to Robert's strengths and do a great job with him. I would make the reads pretty simple. You throw it to that guy, or that guy or run it. Until you can see that he can handle a situation, and then give him more rope as he proves himself. But what you have to do is build this kid's confidence up.
Q: Is is true you never wanted Griffin in the first place?
A: I was never against drafting Robert. I just thought the compensation was crazy. We had the sixth pick in the draft and we all saw Robert's ability. There were a lot of positive signs about Robert and there's no question we were going to pick him with the sixth pick of the draft. I just didn't think we were good enough as at that time to make that type of commitment. We moved up to No. 2 and gave up two No. 1s and a No. 2. After Robert tore his ACL, a lot of people came out and said I didn't want Robert. That was completely false. I just didn't want to give up that much.
Q: Why didn't you want to give up that much if you liked so many things about Griffin's game?
A: There were just some unproven traits to give up that much in return. You've got to be 100% sure because if you're not right, it sets your franchise back. He had never operated a pro-style offense at Baylor. He had never thrown consistently from the pocket. I thought there were other quarterbacks in the draft who could play without giving up that much.
Q: But after everything you've been through with Griffin, you still called Rams coach Jeff Fisher in the offseason and told him to sign Griffin?
A: I felt I owed that to Robert. I felt he deserved another chance in the right environment.
Q: Is it true Griffin reached out to you after that?
A: Robert gave me a call. He thanked me for recommending him to Jeff Fisher. I told Robert 'I didn't blame you for wanting to be a dropback quarterback, because there's nobody in their right mind that would come up to the head coach after the year you had and say we've got to change all of these things.' I understand you're young. I said, 'hey go to a place where the coordinator is proven and has a good running game and he'll use you the right way and you've got a chance.' I think Robert has that in Cleveland.
Q: So you think this can work?
A: I'm rooting for Robert to run a system similar to what we ran in 2012 and not put all the pressure on him. Get a good play-action package off of it. Hue's done a great job with different offenses and I'm hoping he can get the best out of him.
http://www.cleveland.com/browns/index.ssf/2016/09/what_mike_shanahan_thinks_robe.html