Saturday, 4 April 2009

Meet Mike Gerardi: Temple's Duck

By Mike Gibson
I'm sure someone other than Bill Parcells said it first:
"If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it is a duck."
I'll give credit to Parcells because I like the way he says it, nodding his head like you all should know what he does.
"If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it is a duck."
You can say the same for quarterbacks.
Temple quarterbacks in their final high school seasons:
Adam DiMichele, Sto-Rox _ 2,706 yards and 36 touchdown passes.

In the mix currently:

Vaughn Charlton, Avon Grove _ 1,337 yards, 9 touchdown passes.

Chester Stewart, DeMatha _ 1,348 yards, 17 touchdown passes.

Aaron Haas, St. Joseph's Prep _ 1,430 yards, 21 touchdown passes

Mike Gerardi, Parsippany Hills (N.J.) _ 2,300 yards, 35 touchdown passes

Chris Coyer, Oakton (Va.) _ 1,407 yards, 15 touchdown passes (and 15 TD runs)
Despite �defined measurables� like 40 speed and vertical leap, quarterbacking now, as always, is better measured by a poised athlete�s ability to hit another athlete in the open field while under pressure.
It doesn't matter if the QB is running or if the receiver is running.
It doesn't matter if there's a 6-5, 280-pound guy charging at you.
Or, during the same play, all of the above is happening at full speed.
It's about your ability to do your job and hit the receiver.
Meet Mike Gerardi, Temple's Duck.
If Gerardi looks like a quarterback and throws like a quarterback, it's because he is a quarterback and a pretty darn good one.


Mike Gerardi

It would not be a stretch to say Gerardi was born to be a quarterback.
He's been one since Pee-Wee ball and excelled at a really high level from the time he first put on the pads.
I don't buy that stuff about "if he's so good, why didn't he get a scholarship offer" that so many negative fans parrot.
Good quarterbacks slip through the cracks all the time. At one time, UConn showed some interest but backed off.
For every Henry Burris, who was wanted by just about everyone out of Spiro (Okla.), Temple has had a Matty Baker _ a kid who was wanted by no one but became a winning quarterback.
Looks to me like Gerardi could be cut out of the Baker mold, a high-achiever in high school who somehow slipped through the cracks.
At Parsippany Hills in New Jersey two years ago, Gerardi threw for 2,300 yards and 35 touchdown passes. That performance made him a first-team New Jersey all-state performer at quarterback. The other quarterback on the first team was Matt Simms of Don Bosco, son of Phil Simms.
"Really the surprise has been Mike Gerardi. He's really come in. Every time he's gotten in, he's led us down and scored or played really well. So he's getting a lot of reps now." Matt Rhule
Offensive coordinator
Temple University
In prep school last fall, he tossed 16 TDs against no (zero) interceptions.
So, while most things in spring practice are pretty secretive these days, it should not be surprising to hear this out of offensive coordinator Matt Rhule's mouth when talking about Gerardi on Owlsports.com:
"Really the surprise has been Mike Gerardi," Rhule said. "He's really come in. Every time he's gotten in, he's led us down and scored or played really well. So he's getting a lot of reps now, because want to see who can lead us, who can move the football, who can push."
That could very well be coachspeak, something designed to light a fire under incumbents Vaughn Charlton and Chester Stewart.
Even if Mike Gerardi lights it up in the Cherry and White Day game on April 18, we probably won't even know then.
Nobody should be awarded the job because he's been here longer or it's his turn or because his feelings will be hurt if he doesn't get the chance.
At this point, it's about even money that Charlton, Stewart, Gerardi or even incoming freshman Chris Coyer takes the first snap against Villanova on Sept. 3.
That's the way it should be.
Nobody should be awarded the job because he's been here longer or it's his turn or because his feelings will be hurt if he doesn't get the chance.
It's all about moving the team and scoring touchdowns.
It's all about who gives your team the best chance to win a championship.
Nothing more. Nothing less.
Somebody is going to have to knock Rhule's socks off between now and Sept. 3.
So far, it's been Gerardi but we have months to go before we know who wins this most important of competitions.

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