Quarterback Offer Breakdown: Peyton Matocha

Not really ideal but seems like a kid we could use down by the goal line as a run/pass option from short yardage
 
Advertisement
Great job as always, really enjoy your stuff. I did think he had a compact and quick release. Do you agree w that? Or is that part of his mechanical deficiencies?
 
Peyton Matocha is a 6'4" 204 dual threat quarterback from the great state of Texas. He finished his senior campaign for St Thomas (No. Not mine. The other one) just shy of 3700 yards with 35 touchdown passes and another 14 on the ground. What will this signal caller bring to new offensive coordinator Dan Enos and the Miami quarterback room? Hope you have your volume up, our clips have Audio.



Footwork/Rhythm Does not possess flawless footwork and will need to improve this area on the collegiate level. (And will) Matocha will double tap his left foot from the gun and occasionally leak multi-directionally instead of a straight line. Shows the capability of rhythm throws but excels when not in rhythm by showing confidence in using alt platform mechanics.



Accuracy Shows very good ball placement on the run and can throw the ball in the ideal catch radius. .571 Career High school completion percentage at the high school level. Arm Strength Can improve with mechanical improvements. Will not get consistently to an ideal power base position with his arm slot and will short change power as a result. Wide side out throws shows some non-linear trajectory and float. Arm strength classified as average to slightly above average with ability to improve with mechanical refinement and consistency. Arm Mechanics Will need to work on a consistent repeated delivery. Will drop arm to generate power then other times will bypass power base position all together.

Mobility Is zone read capable and shows numerous big play runs at the high school level. With modest weight gain can easily factor in the QB power concepts. Has great awareness in the pocket and senses the pressure well. Can extend the pocket naturally and shows the trait repeatedly on film.

Clips:



Off platform throw out of necessity due to linebacker pressure. Matocha shows the ability to adapt and instinctively will sacrifice "perfect mechanics" in order to deliver a strike on time.



Red Zone play with anticipation. Matocha notes the man coverage and delivers the ball once his receiver easily beats his press corner. Great ball placement for six.



Red zone play with primary read taken away. Matocha shows the ability to change quickly and throw from and alternate base once again.

https://twitter.com/romancane/status/1089365859716468736

Facing a blitz and pressure, Matocha takes a shot and still throws a perfect pass for the touchdown.


Roman Rank: Matocha was made a priority by coach Enos and it is easy to see why. Matocha has certain things you can't teach. His ability to sense pressure, adapt on the fly and his overall improvisational skills lead him to make plays other quarterbacks simply cannot. He is a mobile guy and he can bail out an OC in a blink. That helps. I like when my quarterback shows the ability to adapt when things can't be perfect. That includes the offensive coordinator.

Ultimately I think Matocha will need to improve mechanically. Both with his footwork and his arm slotting you see a variable nature that is in definite need of refinement. Is he a kid that falls in the howitzer class of quarterbacks that can make every throw on the field? No. But the good news is, he has the ability to improve that with a collegiate strength and development program and a proper throwing mechanic analysis. I still would say Matocha is a natural thrower of the football. This isn't something where mechanically he is dead locked with no room to improve. He most certainly can.

Former quarterback coach Jon Richt essentially said they would not take another quarterback after missing out on Michael Johnson Jr. last year. Enos understands the importance of the most important position on the field. (Sorry other position groups) You will have attrition after spring. There is absolutely no way around this one. You can see it developing from a mile away. So Matocha is the perfect candidate to improve under Enos and potentially emerge in a prime position to challenge for the starting job one day. This a current QB2 that in time can be a QB1 who shows plenty of QB1 flash potential on his current film. Rank: 3.75 stars



Roman:

Great write up as usual.

My take is that you are correct, his mechanics need some work but he's fixable, because I see a few basic things that are not necessarily habit locked.

I always start bottom up: look at the feet.

He has a tendency to be off stride, and that leads him to angle off his torso, and this is why I think you are seeing,... and I agree, … his elbow is pulling off line and this leads to weak (and sub optimal) arm action.

what say you?
 
Advertisement
You don’t always need a gun at the college level. Walsh and Dorsey proved that. What’s between a kid’s ears counts more than anything.
 
Pretty much NO quarterback should ever do that, especially one that doesn’t have a bazooka for an arm.

In high school you have a preponderance of LBs and DBs that run 5+++ 40’s.

Try that in college and more often than not it’s a pick six.
Elite guys do that at any level and still get picked, Mahomes was doing that **** all year and looked great at it Rodgers does it as well probably better then anyone
 
Advertisement
Roman:

Great write up as usual.

My take is that you are correct, his mechanics need some work but he's fixable, because I see a few basic things that are not necessarily habit locked.

I always start bottom up: look at the feet.

He has a tendency to be off stride, and that leads him to angle off his torso, and this is why I think you are seeing,... and I agree, … his elbow is pulling off line and this leads to weak (and sub optimal) arm action.

what say you?

To a T. I'll take it beyond that, he's a double tap left kid with a propensity to drive in an arc instead of a straight line.

I mean i'll give a kid whose 1st step is drive (distance) 2 (gather) *in direction and in line with target 3 plant & throw

But he seems to be going where the wind takes him at times. Now if you don't start great with your first steps, you won't end well with your arm. (My opinion)

And I think that compounds the problem because he's now learned to compensate by throwing on time from various platforms. It's almost sometimes out of necessity.

Good thing here is, where some mechanics seem rigid and non natural and essentially tapped out, this kid can improve with reps and work.

Honestly the thing keeping him from 4 star is his arm strength and arm mechanics (stemming from his inconsistent drop)
 
Advertisement
Remember just a month ago when Jarren was rumored to be transferring and everyone was freaking out about maybe having just two scholarship QBs on the roster? Manny restocked the cupboard.

It is apparent when Manny got this job he made a list of what the Canes need and he I$ checking it twice and sometimes thrice.
 
Last edited:
Advertisement
You don’t always need a gun at the college level. Walsh and Dorsey proved that. What’s between a kid’s ears counts more than anything.

I don't deny that. That's why I predict the future miami starter moving forward is the one who develops the championship mind set on and OFF the field.

In terms of Matocha, he has another gear still. I think he'll have improvement just with some mechanical tweeking.
 
Competition looks weak and slow in those highlights

In terms of running the ball? Yes. That factored in. Reason I called him zone read capable. Do I think he is going to real of multiple 60 plus rushing touchdowns at the next level like he did in high school? I do not. If that was the case I would have called him a zone read threat. But IMO things like footwork, rhythm, anticipation, arm strength and even accuracy (His wide receiver talent should be throttled in line with the competition) can all be gaged effectively from this level.
 
A little bit longer version of his playing. Looks good. A lot of QBs come out of nowhere. Josh Allen was the 2nd QB picked at #7 in last years NFL draft and was an unknown, had to go to Jr College because no team in DI picked him up and ended up U of Wyoming.

 
Advertisement
Back
Top