The Green Bay Packers are a crockpot team in a microwave league when it comes to seasoning a quarterback for the toughest job in all of sports.
And that makes Jordan Love the NFL's most intriguing player — and most unpredictable wild card in a wide-open NFC North — as the league kicks off its 104th season with the Lions visiting the defending Super Bowl-champion Chiefs on Thursday night.
Weeks after the fickle 49ers gave up on 23-year-old Trey Lance's future after 262 snaps in eight games over two seasons, the steadfast Packers are handing their post-Brett Favre/Aaron Rodgers/first-ballot-Hall-of-Fame-QB-for-31-seasons era fate to the 24-year-old Love after 157 snaps in 10 games over three seasons behind Rodgers, who's now with the Jets.
Lance started four games, which is the same number of high draft picks (three first, one third) the 49ers spent to move up and select the Marshall, Minn. native third overall in 2021. Love has started one game since the Packers spent a fourth-rounder to move up four spots to take him 26th overall in 2020.
"It's not easy for a first-round quarterback to come in and have to wait his turn in today's NFL," Packers coach Matt LaFleur said. "That doesn't happen, in my opinion, often enough in this league. I do think there would be a much higher success rate amongst these quarterbacks if you allowed them to develop and learn.
"I think confidence is a big deal in this league. In life, too, right? It doesn't matter if it's in this league or life, you got to be confident in what you're doing to be able to produce to the best of your ability. I think when guys are afforded an opportunity to learn and grow they got a much better chance at succeeding."
LaFleur isn't saying Love is the next Rodgers or Favre or future Hall of Famer. If anything, the fifth-year head coach is tapping the brakes a bit in saying, "I think we all need to temper our expectations for him. … It's going to be a process, but it's going to be exciting for him and for us."
Even Rodgers needed a little time to figure things out as a 24th overall draft pick who sat for three years behind Favre. After throwing only 59 passes in seven games with no starts his first three years, Rodgers was 6-10 in 2008 before going 11-5 in 2009, winning the Super Bowl in 2010 and posting the first of his four league MVPs in 2011.