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Footballguy
Lions' Martz thinks he can salvage Harrington's psyche
www.usatoday.com/sports/f...port_x.htm
New Detroit offensive coordinator Mike Martz admitted he was just like every Lions fan when it came to the perception of quarterback Joey Harrington.
"I came in prepared to think Joey was beyond reclaim, and that's not the case at all," Martz says. "The more tape I look at of him, the more excited I get about him.
"When you've been blamed for everything, you get defensive. I probably should know.
"That gunslinger I saw in Oregon will come back."
That's about as bold a quarterback guarantee as the one Joe Namath once delivered on in Super Bowl III. But if anyone can resurrect Harrington, it's Martz, a quarterback guru of the highest order.
Because if Martz can't reclaim Harrington, no one can.
Though the buzz at the combine was that new Lions head coach Rod Marinelli would make a big play for Drew Brees, Martz insists Harrington has the tools. But he needs more help on the offensive line, and he needs those talented but erratic receivers to be more disciplined in their route running and their video study.
Most of all, Harrington needs his confidence restored.
"He needs to understand that we believe in him and we think he is going to get it done," Martz says. "There's terrific potential there, and I'm the facilitator. It's my job to get it out of him."
www.usatoday.com/sports/f...port_x.htm
New Detroit offensive coordinator Mike Martz admitted he was just like every Lions fan when it came to the perception of quarterback Joey Harrington.
"I came in prepared to think Joey was beyond reclaim, and that's not the case at all," Martz says. "The more tape I look at of him, the more excited I get about him.
"When you've been blamed for everything, you get defensive. I probably should know.
"That gunslinger I saw in Oregon will come back."
That's about as bold a quarterback guarantee as the one Joe Namath once delivered on in Super Bowl III. But if anyone can resurrect Harrington, it's Martz, a quarterback guru of the highest order.
Because if Martz can't reclaim Harrington, no one can.
Though the buzz at the combine was that new Lions head coach Rod Marinelli would make a big play for Drew Brees, Martz insists Harrington has the tools. But he needs more help on the offensive line, and he needs those talented but erratic receivers to be more disciplined in their route running and their video study.
Most of all, Harrington needs his confidence restored.
"He needs to understand that we believe in him and we think he is going to get it done," Martz says. "There's terrific potential there, and I'm the facilitator. It's my job to get it out of him."
As one who kept giving Harrington the benefit of the doubt, and giving him chance after chance after chance, I'm waaaaay past him now. Detroit needs to move on...

The WCO and Harrington (or WCO and the WRs) were not a good mix, and he had an ever changing group of WRs, TEs, RBs and a poor O-Line. How many of his "bad" throws were because of a bad route (WCO relies on timing between WR and QB and the WR has to be in the right spot at the right time). I'm not giving Harrington a completely clean slate (he deserves his share of the blame, and has taken it on sports radio here near Det), but I do think he has been misused and underappreciated. Add to that a changing cast of inexperianced or 2nd string WRs, and many young QBs would struggle.
