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Black QBs making history in real time In 2020, Black quarterbacks proved that last season, which we dubbed the “Year of the Black Quarterback,” was no one-off

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Collage of Patrick Mahomes and other starting Black QBs

Black QBs making history in real time

QBR Week

01

In 2020, Black quarterbacks proved that last season, which we dubbed the “Year of the Black Quarterback,” was no one-off. With each week, they further broke down the stereotypes of what a winning quarterback looks like. The days of Brady, Brees and Big Ben are numbered. Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, Deshaun Watson, Russell Wilson and others are bringing a new shade to the top tier of quarterbacks. See for yourself: 10 Black quarterbacks started in Week 1, the most ever in NFL history.

Week 1 Starters

  • Teddy Bridgewater Panthers
  • Dwayne Haskins Washington
  • Lamar Jackson Ravens
  • Patrick Mahomes Chiefs
  • Kyler Murray Cardinals
  • Cam Newton Patriots
  • Dak Prescott Cowboys
  • Tyrod Taylor Chargers
  • Deshaun Watson Texans
  • Russell Wilson Seahawks

Wk 01 Highlight Repeat MVP?

Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson, the 2019 NFL MVP, picked up right where he left off last season in a 38-6 win over the Cleveland Browns, completing 80% of his passes for 275 yards, three touchdowns and a passer rating of 152.1, his third career game with at least three passing touchdowns and a rating of 150 or better, the most for a quarterback in his first three seasons.

Lamar Jackson was spectacular against the Browns this season. Photo by Will Newton/Getty Images

Wk 02 Highlight It takes two

Russell Wilson threw for 610 yards and nine touchdowns with an 82.5 completion percentage through the Seattle Seahawks’ first two games of the season, just the second quarterback to complete at least 80% of his passes and nine touchdowns in any two-game span (Drew Brees, 2019), including 288 yards and five touchdowns in a 35-30 win over the New England Patriots in Week 2.

Wk 03 Highlight The half-billion-dollar man

Patrick Mahomes passed for 385 yards and four touchdowns in a 34-20 Kansas City Chiefs win over the Baltimore Ravens on Monday Night Football, prompting Ravens defensive lineman Calais Campbell to remark, “They don’t give that guy a half-billion dollars for no reason.” In July, Mahomes signed a $ 500 million contract with the Chiefs to become the highest-paid player in NFL history.

Patrick Mahomes flashes his passing skills during his matchup with Jackson’s Ravens. Photo by AP Photo/Nick Wass

Wk 04 Breakout Moment Wanna be a Cowboy, baby!

Thanks to a 450-yard passing game with three rushing touchdowns against the Atlanta Falcons in Week 4, the Dallas Cowboys’ Dak Prescott became the first quarterback to pass for at least 450 yards and rush for three touchdowns in the same game. On top of that, his 1,424 passing yards in Weeks 2 through 4 are the most of any quarterback in a three-game span in NFL history. Prescott would suffer a season-ending ankle injury in Week 5.

Dak Prescott was on a roll before a gruesome ankle injury ended his season. Photo by Matthew Emmons-USA TODAY Sports

Wk 05 Highlight Let Russ cook

Russell Wilson threw for 1,502 yards and 19 touchdowns through his first five games this season, the latter of which marks the second-most passing touchdowns (Peyton Manning, 20) in that time frame in league history.

Russell Wilson reacts after throwing the game-winning touchdown against the Minnesota Vikings. Photo by AP Photo/Stephen Brashear

Wk 06 Highlight Jackson and Vick

Lamar Jackson rushed for 108 yards and one score in the Baltimore Ravens’ 30-28 win over the Philadelphia Eagles, marking his seventh career 100-yard rushing game (37th start), the second-most such games by a quarterback (Michael Vick, 10).

Lamar Jackson runs for a 37-yard touchdown against the Philadelphia Eagles. Photo by Eric Hartline-USA TODAY Sports

Wk 07 Highlight Wilson vs. Murray

Russell Wilson (388 passing yards, three touchdowns, 84 rushing yards) and Kyler Murray (360 passing yards, three touchdowns, 67 rushing yards, one touchdown) put up identical stats in their first matchup of the season. It was the first game in NFL history where opposing players had 300 passing yards and 50 rushing yards. Murray would also get the ‘W’ in overtime.

Kyler Murray dives into the end zone for a touchdown against the Seahawks. Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images

Wk 08 Highlight Like a G6

Patrick Mahomes completed 31 of 42 passes (73%) for 416 yards and five touchdowns in a 35-9 rout of the New York Jets, becoming the first Kansas City quarterback to achieve 400 passing yards, five touchdowns and no interceptions in a game.

Wk 09 Highlight Air and ground

In a thrilling 34-31 loss to the Miami Dolphins, the Cardinals’ Murray passed for 283 yards and three touchdowns and rushed for 106 yards and a score, marking the seventh game this season Murray had scored both through the air and on the ground, ranking second all time for a given season. Murray would break the record in Week 15.

Kyler Murray was in the MVP conversation in only his second NFL season. Photo by AP Photo/Rick Scuteri

Wk 10 Breakout Moment Hail Murray

With 11 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter, and down 30-26 to the Buffalo Bills, Kyler Murray rolled to the left, evaded a defender and launched a 43-yard Hail Mary touchdown pass to wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins to secure a 32-30 Cardinals victory.

DeAndre Hopkins catches Kyler Murray’s Hail Mary pass in the end zone surrounded by three Bills defenders. Photo by Gene Lower via AP

Wk 11 Highlight Russ passes Tom

In a rematch from Week 7, Russell Wilson exacts revenge on Kyler Murray with 239 total yards (42 rushing) and two touchdowns in a 28-21 Seahawks victory over the Cardinals, marking Wilson’s 102nd career win, surpassing Tom Brady (101) for most all time by any quarterback through their first nine seasons, postseason included.

Wk 12 Breakout Moment GOAT conversation

Greatest of all time? Patrick Mahomes passed for 462 yards and three touchdowns against Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, including 359 in the first half (203 to Tyreek Hill in the first quarter), the most passing yards in a first half in the past 20 years.

Tom Brady congratulates Patrick Mahomes after their Week 12 matchup in November. Photo by AP Photo/Jason Behnken

Wk 13 Highlight Who you calling ‘trash’?

Ahead of the Chiefs’ game in Week 13, All-Pro wide receiver Tyreek Hill told HBO his first thoughts about Patrick Mahomes during training camp in 2017: “I thought he was trash.” Mahomes went on to pass for 318 yards and one touchdown that week, adding 26 yards on the ground, in a 22-16 Chiefs win over the Denver Broncos, bringing the team’s record to 11-1 and Mahomes’ career win-loss record to 35-8.

Tyreek Hill celebrates a touchdown with Patrick Mahomes. Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images

Wk 14 Highlight LoveHate Thing

Despite throwing three interceptions, his most since the historic Monday Night Football game against the Los Angeles Rams in 2018, Patrick Mahomes led the Chiefs to a 33-27 win over the Miami Dolphins, prompting him to tweet, “I have a love/hate relationship with Hard Rock Stadium!” after the game in reference to the team’s Super Bowl win at the stadium in February 2020.

Patrick Mahomes didn’t have his best game against the Dolphins, but still found success again in Miami. Photo by AP Photo/Lynne Sladky

Wk 15 Breakout Moment Mega Watson

Deshaun Watson completed 33 of 41 passses (80.5%) for 373 yards in the Houston Texans’ 27-20 loss to the Indianapolis Colts on a fumbled reception by wide receiver Keke Coutee into the end zone. This would be one of seven games by Watson with at least 300 passing yards with a 70 or better completion percentage, the most in the NFL this season.

Deshaun Watson would finish the season as the league leader in passing yards. Photo by Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports

Wk 16 Highlight Mamba mentality

Russell Wilson passed for 225 yards and scored two touchdowns (one rushing) in the Seattle Seahawks’ 20-9 division-sealing victory over the Rams. After the game, Wilson said “Mamba mentality” was why he wore the late Kobe Bryant’s jersey and “Grinch” sneakers to the stadium.

Russell Wilson paid tribute to Kobe Bryant before leading the Seahawks to the NFC West title. Photo by AP Photo/Stephen Brashear

Wk 17 Highlight Back to back

Lamar Jackson rushed for 97 yards in the Baltimore Ravens’ season finale, a 38-3 win over the Cincinnati Bengals, ending the year with 1,005 rushing yards. It was the second season in a row that he surpassed 1,000 rushing yards after running for 1,206 yards in 2019.

Wild-Card Round Sundown in Nashville

In a 2019 AFC divisional-round rematch, the Baltimore Ravens’ Lamar Jackson redeemed that playoff loss in a 20-13 road win over the Tennessee Titans, rushing for 136 yards and a score, joining Colin Kaepernick (2013) as the only quarterbacks in NFL history to rush for more than 100 yards and a touchdown in a postseason game.

Lamar Jackson earned his first career playoff win in the wild-card round. Photo by AP Photo/Mark Zaleski

Divisional Round ‘All good’

Patrick Mahomes passed for 255 yards and scored two touchdowns (one rushing) through 2½ quarters against the Cleveland Browns before being knocked out of the game with an injury that placed him in the concussion protocol. The Chiefs would secure the team’s third straight trip to the AFC Championship Game behind backup quarterback Chad Henne. After the game, Mahomes tweeted he was “all good” and posted #HenneThingIsPossible in support of his teammate.

Patrick Mahomes was injured after a tackle by Browns linebacker Mack Wilson. Photo by Jay Biggerstaff-USA TODAY Sports

Conference Championship Round Mahomes returns to Super Bowl

In a 38-24 win over the Bills, Mahomes passed for 325 yards and three touchdowns, booking the 25-year-old’s second trip to the Super Bowl in as many years. If Mahomes were to beat Brady’s Buccaneers, it would make him the youngest two-time quarterback champion in NFL history.

Era of the Black Quarterback

What’s next? Mahomes likely has the top spot on lock for the next decade (or at least until the end of that 10-year, $ 500 million contract). But Wilson, Watson and Prescott continue to show they have excellence streaks in them. Murray, like Jackson, has the wheels to always make him a legitimate threat. Jalen Hurts and the soon-to-be drafted Justin Fields are fascinating unknowns.

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) celebrates after defeating the Miami Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium. Photo by Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

Below are the week-by-week QBR totals for the top six Black quarterback performers from the 2020 season.

Looking ahead to 2021

The 2020 season commenced with a record-breaking 10 Black starting QBs, and while it didn’t end with as many, the future appears bright with these signal-callers, among others, leading their respective teams.

Lamar Jackson Ravens

His numbers dropped after his MVP season in 2019, but he’s still the most dynamic quarterback in the league and could be a true No. 1 receiver away from a Super Bowl berth.

Patrick Mahomes Chiefs

The world’s newest half-billionaire picked up where he left off after last year’s Super Bowl win, leading Kansas City to another Super Bowl berth. At 25, Mahomes is the face of the NFL.

Kyler Murray Cardinals

The No. 1 overall pick from 2019 entered the MVP conversation in the middle of the season. Although his performance dwindled in the latter weeks, Murray proved he is a top-tier quarterback.

Dak Prescott Cowboys

Dak was having a career year before a broken ankle ended his season in Week 5. His status in Big D is up in the air, as the Cowboys could either franchise-tag him again or let him walk.

Deshaun Watson Texans

After a career year, the biggest question surrounding Watson is where he’ll be playing next season, as his relationship with the Texans’ front office has deteriorated.

Russell Wilson Seahawks

“Let Russ Cook” turned to “Let Russ Microwave” by the end of the season. With a new offensive coordinator in 2021 and the returning duo of Tyler Lockett and DK Metcalf, Wilson will be cooking again next season.


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