Carson Palmer's little brother Jordan Palmer has been signed
to a two year contract. A 6th-rounder drafted by the Redskins,
Jordan Palmer has a tough road ahead, competing for the backup
role (behind Carson) against three other quarterbacks.
"Every big brother dreams he can play with his little
brother and every little brother dreams he can play with his
big brother," said Carson. "But he's got his work cut out for
him."
From Bengals.com:
If it's a dream come true, it's also true that dreams are
made and not born.
"Every big brother dreams he can play with his little
brother and every little brother dreams he can play with his
big brother," said Carson Palmer, the big brother. "But he's
got his work cut out for him."
After a lifetime of tagging along with a brother four years
his senior, Jordan Palmer signed a two-year deal Wednesday that
puts him on the practice field and in the film room with
Carson. But this isn't continuation of some backyard catch.
To Jordan Palmer, this is pure business.
"I understand I need to develop and coming into the league I
want to learn from the best," said Jordan, who has been
searching for a team since last Sept. 1. "In my opinion Carson
is the best quarterback in the league. I'm biased, but when it
comes to mechanics, accuracy, work ethic ... I was there when
he came back from the (knee) injury. I've just got a lot of
respect for him as a player."
The feeling is mutual. You can hear the respect in Carson
Palmer's voice, which, by the way, sounds like a taped version
of Jordan's.
Carson Palmer
"He's very athletic. He's got great size, he can throw running
around and he can throw the ball all over the place," said
Carson's pocket scouting report. "He's got everything
physically. But he's got some catching up to do. He's got three
guys in front of him that have at least a year in the offense
and he doesn't have a long time to learn it."
Once upon a time Jordan Palmer didn't want to follow in his
brother's footsteps. He went to a different high school, never
gave USC a thought, and hoped last year that the Bengals
wouldn't draft him.
"He didn't want to be Little Carson," Bill Palmer said
Wednesday after his two sons finally became teammates. "But
this is a different situation. He made his own way in other
places and he'll do that now, too."
Jordan Palmer, a sixth-round pick of the Redskins last
season after a record-setting career at Texas-El Paso, said
both he and Carson are comfortable with a move they didn't want
last spring because they wanted Jordan to get a shot to play
for a starting job.
"We talked about it before I did it and he's OK with it,"
Jordan said.
After being released by Washington despite playing just two
series in the preseason, Jordan is looking to gain a foothold
in the NFL. With No. 2 Ryan Fitzpatrick a bit in limbo as a
restricted free agent, Jordan joins a fifth-rounder from last
season in Jeff Rowe, a player the Bengals probably gave similar
ratings to Palmer during the draft process.
"I think this can work out; I'm excited about it," Jordan
said. "I can learn from a top guy and he's got a guy that he
knows is with him and supports him all the way on and off the
field. I know how effective having a guy like that can be after
watching (Jon) Kitna here and Shane (Matthews) and Doug
(Johnson) and the guys from last year."
Jordan Palmer
Jordan Palmer has some of his own numbers to build a resume. He
started 42 games for UTEP and finished his career with 11,084
passing yards and 88 touchdown passes, both school records. As
a senior in 2006, he set single-season records for passing
yards (3,595), completions (282), completion percentage (65.7)
and passer efficiency (149.6).
But he arrived in Washington with five other quarterbacks
and when his scheduled debut was washed away in a thunderstorm
that canceled the second half of a preseason game, he was left
with the two series in which he didn't have a passer rating.
But earlier in August during a scrimmage against the Ravens he
threw a 24-yard touchdown pass. He admits his transition was
slowed by his adaptability to the system.
"I need to play well. No matter how many reps you get, you
need to play well and produce," Jordan Palmer said. "(Former
offensive coordinator) Al Saunders' system was very complex.
Talking to Carson and explaining some of the stuff we were
doing, he would say, 'That's a little over the top.'
"That was probably the biggest thing. I don't think
physically it was that big of an adjustment for me. I had fast
receivers in college. I played against fast guys and big guys.
To me it was definitely the mental aspect of it. It was a big
challenge for me. I put in a ton of time. I didn't pick it up
right away, but there were guys who said it would take a year
to learn that system."
But that should hold him in good stead when the spring camps
start in May because offensive coordinator Bob Bratkowski's
scheme has some characteristics in common.
"It was a numbers system like it is here," he said. "I'm
glad it's in this style and not a West Coast offense that uses
different terminology and it's not a new language. We'll talk
brothers stuff first, but I'm sure we'll talk about Xs and Os.
He's helped me a lot. But once we get here, he's got to focus
on the starting job and I've got to focus on trying to get a
spot."
When Bengals president Mike Brown spoke with Bill Palmer at
last year's Senior Bowl and asked if he thought it was a good
idea if the two were on the same team, the father understood
they wouldn't like it because they each wanted the same thing.
They wanted a shot for Jordan to play and that wouldn't happen
behind Carson.
"As it turned out, it's now a whole different game now,"
said Bill after several tryouts and Jordan's decision to hook
on with the Bengals and bypass a shot with the Arena team in
Arizona.
"It's clearly a friendly environment. They know him there.
He's thrown with T.J. (Houshmandzadeh) and Carson in the
offseason."
And Bill says there are going to be some double-takes. There
already is because the 6-5, 231-pound Palmer looks and sounds
like a dead ringer for his brother.
"The way they drop back, their throwing motions, it's the
exact same," Bill Palmer said.
Jordan looks forward to the practices. It won't be that much
different than it's always been.
"I love competing against Carson," he said. "Throwing in
one-on-one, trying to be the most accurate. I love going
against the best and he loves going against guys that go all
out. It's going to be fun."
Another reason the Bengals figure it's a good move is it's
never a bad day when you add a solid individual. Jordan is the
more outgoing of the two, the one more likely to be generating
some noise in the locker room. But if Jordan mirrors Carson in
voice and looks, he also arrives with the same set of
intangibles.
"He's a great guy; a team guy," Carson said. "He'll do
whatever he can to make the team better and bust his butt to
make it happen."
Plus, Jordan knows this doesn't happen all the time.
"It's kind of cool because guys like Tiki and Ronde (Barber)
don't play the same position," Jordan said.
Indeed, according to the Elias Sports Bureau the only other
brother quarterback tandem to play on the same team in the
Super Bowl era is Ty and Koy Detmer for the '97 Eagles,
although Koy was on injured reserve.
Elias says there have been dozens of brother combinations on
the same NFL team with the most recent this past season in
Dallas with linebacker Akin and nose tackle Remi Ayodele.
In 2005, linebacker Chris and defensive lineman Nic Clemons
played together in Washington and in 2002 wide receiver Jake
Reed and defensive back Dale Carter were in New Orleans. Also
in 2002, cornerback Andre and wide receiver Kevin Dyson played
for Tennessee.
The most famous brother act in Bengals history is the
Griffins of Columbus, Ohio with running back Archie and
cornerback Ray playing together from 1978-83. Safety Jim and
defensive end Ross Browner were Bengals in 1979 and 1980.
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