
Nate Longshore
@mrlongshore • 28,417 subscribers
Dad | QB Method 20+ yrs Developing QBs (HS → NFL) Building Quarterbacks Through Structured Curriculum & Defensive Mastery 🎥 QB Room Membership ↓
Videos

Jared Goff’s high school tape is a strong case study in transferable quarterback traits. At Marin Catholic, he was a three-sport athlete, a 39-4 varsity starter, and threw 93 touchdown passes. The production matters, but the operation matters more. You see mobility on tape, but not reckless escape. He could move, extend, and avoid pressure, yet his first instinct was still to keep his eyes downfield and distribute the football. That is the difference. A lot of young quarterbacks feel pressure and immediately abandon the structure of the play. Goff stayed connected. Even as protection broke down, his base, posture, and repeatable stroke gave him a chance to keep the play alive without turning it into chaos. Mobility gives you access. Fundamentals give you control. Command is knowing how to use both while still doing the job: delivering the football.
Nate Longshore62,581 views • 15 days ago

Tate Martell was 45-0 as a high school starting quarterback. Gatorade Player of the Year. MaxPreps Player of the Year. One of the most productive and accomplished high school quarterbacks of that era. His game is worth studying because the production matched the tape. He operated with confidence, played fast, created off schedule, and consistently put pressure on the defense with both his arm and legs. At the high school level, he was a clear example of high-level quarterback play. Command of the offense, competitive poise, playmaking ability, and the ability to win every week. A 45-0 record is not accidental. It reflects talent, preparation, team structure, and a quarterback who consistently gave his offense answers.
Nate Longshore95,057 views • 1 month ago

This might be the best 3-minute explanation of throwing the football out there. Tom Brady does not describe throwing as an arm action. He describes it as a full-body transfer of energy. The throw starts in the ground. The feet create force. The stride organizes direction. The hips carry energy. The shoulders store and release torque. The arm stays relaxed enough to deliver the football instead of forcing the football. If the quarterback strides with his head in front of his chest, power leaks. If the front shoulder flies open, direction leaks. If the lead arm pulls across the body, the vector changes and the ball starts to spray. The mechanical standard is simple: Stride. Torque. Throw. The best part of Brady’s explanation is the relationship between speed and relaxation. When most quarterbacks want to throw harder, they tense up their upper body. Brady says the opposite. Move faster into the target, but relax the arm even more. That is high-level efficiency.
Nate Longshore75,573 views • 27 days ago

Patrick Mahomes was not a finished NFL prototype in high school. He was a three-sport athlete at Whitehouse High School in Texas, and you can see the transfer on tape. Baseball shows up in the arm angles, velocity, and release freedom. Basketball shows up in the spatial awareness, body control, and ability to create when the play leaves structure. The production was real. Over 4,600 passing yards, 50 touchdowns, and nearly 1,000 rushing yards as a senior. But the more important part is the trait profile. Watch the deep ball placement off schedule. He is not just throwing it far. He is escaping pressure, changing platforms, and still giving the receiver a playable ball downfield. That still shows up on Sunday afternoons. When the pocket breaks, Mahomes does not lose access to the field. He extends, resets the angle, and delivers with placement. You also see the situational awareness. He draws the defense offsides, recognizes the free play, and immediately attacks vertically. That is command. The lesson is not that every quarterback should play like Mahomes. The lesson is that transferable traits matter. Multi-sport movement. Arm access. Spatial awareness. Off-schedule accuracy. Situational command. Talent was visible early, but the separator was how many ways he could solve the play.
Nate Longshore27,043 views • 11 days ago

Brett Favre once explained his practice mentality in one sentence: “As far back as I can remember, when I went out to practice, every throw that I made, I wanted it to be the best throw you’ve ever seen.” That is not a casual practice mindset. That is a standard. Favre did not become one of the greats because every throw was perfect. He became one of the greats because every throw mattered to him. Practice was not just a place to get through the script, warm up the arm, or wait for Sunday. It was where he trained his intent, his confidence, and his competitive identity. Quarterbacks reveal themselves in practice. Ball carriage discipline, base integrity, stride control, repeatable stroke, and accuracy all show up before the ball is ever judged by the result. When a quarterback treats every rep like evidence, the room feels it. The receivers feel it. The coaches feel it. That level of determination compounds. Greatness is rarely built in the highlight. It is usually built on a Tuesday, during a routine throw, when nobody in the stands is watching and the quarterback still demands the ball leave his hand with purpose.
Nate Longshore104,154 views • 2 months ago

Peyton Manning’s description from his Quarterback show is the reality of the job. Every play, the quarterback is the focus. He has to know the protection, the route concept, the defensive structure, the pressure indicators, the clock, the situation, and the responsibilities of ten other players while the stadium is loud and the pocket is collapsing. That is why quarterback development cannot be reduced to arm talent. A quarterback has to communicate clearly when no one can hear, solve the math problem before the snap, confirm the picture after the snap, and still deliver the ball with timing and accuracy. Then comes the part no drill can fully simulate. Win or lose, the quarterback stands in front of it. He gives credit when the offense succeeds and absorbs responsibility when it fails. That burden is not unfair. It is the position. There is only 1 starting quarterback for a reason. The talent threshold is high, but the command threshold is higher. The best ones are not just gifted throwers. They are accountable operators who understand that every snap demands structure, discipline, and ownership.
Nate Longshore42,609 views • 1 month ago

Core runs do not stay efficient by accident. If you want to live in outside zone, split zone, or any foundational run concept, the defense is eventually going to overplay the action. That is where compliments matter. Nakeds, boots, keepers, and movement throws punish defenders for chasing the run. But the next layer is the counter punch to the compliment. When the defense starts reacting to the naked, the quarterback cannot just run into the edge player or throw the obvious flat concept. He has to pull up while selling naked, let the run action pull down the boundary defenders, let the field defenders chase the tendencies, and replace the void with the deep cross. The boundary No. 1 keeping his route skinny as he occupies the corner in the deep third. That spacing creates the window for the deep cross runner working back across the field. That is offensive structure. Core run + Compliment + Counter punch = Efficiency. The best offenses do not just call plays. They build answers in sequence.
Nate Longshore10,346 views • 1 month ago

Every team fights the same battle every year. Selfishness versus team-first culture. Jon Gruden asks Drew Brees the right question here because every good offense eventually has to manage the same tension. Skill players want the ball. Contracts matter. Roles matter. Production matters. But inside a real offense, not every valuable route ends with a target. Sean Payton’s Saints had enough structure in the plan for players to understand where their opportunities lived. When a player knows he has designed access in the game plan, he is more willing to run the clear out route with detail, hold the safety with conviction, or expand the flat defender for somebody else. That is where culture becomes more than a slogan. Team-first football is not asking players to accept invisibility. It is building enough clarity that every player understands how his assignment supports the concept, the quarterback, and the drive. Sometimes the ball finds you. Sometimes your route creates the throw. Both have value if the standard is winning. Every season, offenses either mature through that tension or fracture under it. The best teams do not eliminate ambition. They align it.
Nate Longshore13,336 views • 2 months ago

Coach Saban’s “nothing” speech is a clean reminder for every quarterback. You are entitled to nothing. Talent without discipline gets you nothing. Preparation without focus gets you nothing. A good arm without execution gets you nothing. If the details are casual, the result will eventually expose it. Quarterback play is built in the invisible work. Front discipline, progression sequencing, pocket integrity, situational awareness, and emotional control do not appear by accident on Friday or Saturday. They are earned through preparation that refuses to accept casual standards. The position does not reward what you think you deserve. It rewards what you can repeatedly command.
Nate Longshore11,272 views • 1 month ago

Drew Brees talking about tearing his ACL as a junior in high school is a reminder that quarterback development is not always linear. At that stage, the fear is real. You are not just dealing with the injury. You are dealing with the thought that the season is gone, the team opportunity is gone, and maybe the player you thought you were is gone too. That is where the growth starts. The rehab process forced Brees into a different kind of development. He gained weight. He got stronger. He had to work through discomfort without the immediate reward of a game on Friday night. The quarterback position eventually tests more than talent. It tests emotional control, discipline, patience, and the ability to keep building when nobody can promise the outcome. The best part of his story is not simply that he came back. It is that he came back with a different internal standard. The injury became a filter. It taught him how to suffer productively, how to stay committed through uncertainty, and how to build confidence through repeated work instead of temporary success. Every quarterback wants growth without interruption. Football rarely works that way. Sometimes the most important development comes from the season you did not get to finish, the rehab nobody sees, and the decision to come back with more command than you had before.
Nate Longshore10,651 views • 1 month ago

Nick Saban’s “Illusion of Choice” message applies directly to quarterback development. Young players often believe they have unlimited options. They can study when they feel like it. They can train with partial focus. They can skip the small details because their arm talent, athleticism, or past production has always been enough. But the position does not work that way. If you want to be good, the choices narrow quickly. Your athleticism requires agility work, not occasional movement training. Your poise demands detailed pocket presence, subtle climbs, clean resets, and the discipline to maintain a throwing profile under pressure. Your football IQ mandates hours invested into learning the nuances of the game, from front recognition and pressure indicators to coverage rotation and situational decision-making. The game demands what it demands. That is the real lesson. Discipline is not a personality trait. It is the acceptance that the standard is not negotiable. The quarterback who wants command must choose the process before the result. Study the front. Confirm the rotation. Protect the drive. Throw with structure. Respond with composure. Players may feel like they have more choices than ever. The serious ones understand they really have fewer.
Nate Longshore10,642 views • 2 months ago

Bear Bryant. The difference between winning and losing was found in the little things. How you seek improvement when nobody’s watching. Championship habits aren’t loud. They’re consistent. That mindset applies to quarterbacks more than any position on the field. The details stack, they compound, then they show up as results. That’s the lens we build everything through inside the QB Room. Daily fundamentals, situational mastery, nuanced strategy, and respect for the grind. Do the small things like they matter… because they do.
Nate Longshore12,040 views • 5 months ago
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