Almost six hours after Utah State finished obliterating New Mexico in October 2018, David Yost sat in the quarterbacks room at the Aggies’ facility, grading his team’s 61-19 win. It was around 10:30 p.m., otherwise known as when college kids in Logan, Utah, would embark on that night’s extracurricular adventures.
Yost, then Utah State’s offensive coordinator, watched as his quarterback, a 19-year-old redshirt sophomore named Jordan Love, completed 23 of 34 passes for 448 yards and four touchdowns while running for another in the Aggies’ seventh consecutive victory.
Yost thought he was alone, just him and the soothing film of his signal-caller eviscerating yet another opponent.
“All of a sudden, I hear something,” Yost said. “ … I hear some giggling or laughing or something, and it was somewhat loud. So I just peek out and it’s coming from our running back room, which is like the next room over by the offensive staff room. So I go out the door, I go and open up the door. And there are about eight dudes sitting there at about 10:30 at night on a Saturday night after a win, and they’re all players.
“And Jordan is sitting right in the middle. He’s running the clicker.”
Yost asked what they were doing.
“Just watching the game, coach,” they responded.
“Most of the other guys were all seniors or juniors, and they’re all hanging out at night watching the game video from that day. And Jordan’s kind of leading the whole group as far as running the clicker and being loud in that way,” Yost said. “It was just funny how I don’t think a lot of other guys who are going to be picked in the first round a year later were hanging out at 10:30 watching their game after a 50-point win when there’s a lot of other things to do that late for college guys.”
Talk to other former coaches and teammates, however, and you’ll realize that’s typical Jordan Love, a football junkie who teammates gravitate toward for his infectious personality and appealing leadership, no matter the time of day.
Perhaps more important right now than what Love will do on the field for the Packers is how he meshes with his future Hall of Fame superior Aaron Rodgers and the rest of a Packers locker room, whose culture last season improved drastically from previous years. The Packers chose Love with the 26th overall pick in the 2020 NFL Draft, undoubtedly the most controversial of all 255 selections this year.
Rodgers has four years remaining on an extension he signed in August 2018, and before the draft said he wants to play for the Packers even beyond that. Last season, he guided them to the NFC Championship Game and posted an NFL-best 6.5 touchdown-to-interception ratio (26:4).
How his relationship with Love unfolds will be one of the NFL’s most intriguing storylines this coming season, if only because of how unceremoniously the relationship between Rodgers and Brett Favre began in 2005, and the Packers’ plans to one day replace Rodgers with the 21-year-old.
Whether Rodgers likes Love and how the rookie fits in may seem like trivial matters, but their relationship will prove to be important while embarking on a potentially awkward next chapter in franchise history.
“He’ll show up with his eyes wide open, his ears open and probably his mouth shut,” Yost said. “Won’t say much, he’ll ask questions when he has one. He’ll talk just to fluff it up. … I think over time, Aaron will figure out how good of a person this guy is and how this guy just wants to learn and just do everything he can to be the best player he can be. They’ll have a really good relationship.”
Love arrived in Logan a sinewy 6-foot-4, 190-pound quarterback at only 17 years old and fourth on the depth chart.
Even as he scraped the bottom of the quarterback pecking order as a first-year redshirt, Love befriended junior starter Kent Myers, who took Love under his wing. They routinely were the last ones in the facility watching film, with the teenager peppering the first-stringer with questions: what he saw on certain plays and how to apply what they learned in the classroom to the field.
Love shadowed and studied him, and the next season he earned spot snaps late in the first quarter or early in the second quarter of some games. In Utah State’s eighth game of the season, with the Aggies sitting at 3-4, the redshirt freshman Love assumed the quarterback duties from the senior Myers and guided Utah State to a 3-2 finish before losing to New Mexico State. 26-20, in the Arizona Bowl.
What Rodgers might look for in his understudy this season, Myers saw in a similar situation four years ago.
“It didn’t feel like he was trying to push me out or anything like that … when he was behind me, he just asked a lot of questions. When I was in there watching film, he always wanted to join me,” Myers said. “ … Now that I look back at it, it’s the same situation. Aaron Rodgers is in there, he’s the leading guy, and it’s the same thing when I was at Utah State. Jordan learned as much as he could, and when he was given the opportunity, he came in and seized the moment. I think he’ll do the same thing with the Packers.”
What Myers remembers even more than how Love acted as a backup was how he acted as the starter.
“When he came and started over me, just how we both did it, it was very professional,” Myers said. “We were still friends. A lot of people that try to break us up are like, ‘Oh, Jordan, you’re the guy.’ He never saw it like that. Me and him never had those conversations, like ‘Oh, I’m starting over you and I’m younger.’ I think that shows a lot about him. … He did it with class and that’s why, to this day, we’re still good friends.”
During his redshirt sophomore season, Love dominated the Mountain West Conference by throwing for 3,567 passing yards, 39 total touchdowns and a 64 percent completion rate. The Aggies finished 11-2 and crushed North Texas, 52-13, in the New Mexico Bowl.
Even as NFL buzz permeated throughout Logan, Love remained the same.
Love and a small group of teammates played basketball, cooked on the grill, played video games and visited a nearby dam to observe nature.
Ron’quavion Tarver, Love’s No. 1 wide receiver on the 2018 team, recalls how Love and his mom treated him to dinner after a game and how, when Tarver needed a ride to a workout, Love provided one.
“If I was to say I had a best friend in Utah, it would be Jordan,” Tarver said. “And you could ask the other players, too. They would say the same thing. … I felt like I got drafted in the first round when Jordan got drafted.”
Said Utah State left tackle Alfred Edwards: “The thing about Jordan is he never put himself above any of us. He was just one of the guys, even with the NFL hype, really since 2018. He’s always been the same dude. … I feel like what makes the job easier is he’s a genuinely good guy. He’s a good teammate, too. You wanna block your butt off for him.”
Added former Utah State running back Gerold Bright: “He has a gravitational force that seems to attract everyone from white, black, purple, orange, different backgrounds. He can just attract anybody because of the way he carries himself. He’s always a guy that’s always smiling, his personality is full of energy, he’s a goofball, he’ll make you laugh, he’s approachable.”
When Packers head coach Matt LaFleur called Yost less than a week before the NFL Draft to chat about Love, he asked nothing about football.
LaFleur knew about Love’s erratic redshirt junior season in 2019, during which he threw 12 fewer touchdowns and 11 more interceptions than in 2018. He knew Love’s decline occurred, in part, because nine offensive starters and the entire coaching staff left after the 2018 season, save for the graduate assistant who only signaled plays from the sideline. He knew about Love’s bazooka of an arm and mobility that, despite that rocky 2019 season, enabled him to be a first-round prospect.
So in the 45 minutes the two coaches spoke, because Love couldn’t visit Green Bay in person because of COVID-19-imposed travel restrictions, LaFleur only wanted to know about Love the person, not the player.
“It’s not the throwing part, it’s not getting on the board and talking football, it’s more of when he walks down the hall, who says hi to him?” Yost said. “What did the secretary say about him? What did the trainers say about him? What did the strength staff say? When he walked by his teammates, how did those guys react? He missed that stuff, so we had a really good talk about that because I think he checks all those boxes as an individual, as a leader and as a person that you want in your program.”
In addition to speaking with Yost and others, LaFleur, offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett and passing game coordinator Luke Getsy connected with Love through FaceTime before the draft.
“The one thing I took away from that is, this guy is a humble guy,” LaFleur said. “We showed some of his really good clips, which he is extremely talented, as well as some clips that weren’t the best. What I love about him is just the accountability he took for everything, whether it was a good play, bad play. I think that gives you a chance any time you have that kind of mindset.”
Who knows how Love will pan out as a quarterback? His on-field abilities may not truly matter for the Packers for another two years, maybe four years, maybe ever. You can debate the Patrick Mahomes comparisons and align his attributes as a 21-year-old next to Rodgers’ as a 36-year-old, but none of that matters right now.
What does, since Rodgers isn’t going anywhere for the time being, is how this year’s controversial Round 1 NFL Draft selection blends in to avoid the friction that arose 15 years ago, the last time the Packers boldly picked a quarterback in the first round.
“What the Packers are getting is a quarterback that wants to learn, is willing to learn and he’s very capable of coming in and progressing in an NFL system,” Utah State head coach Matt Wells said. “ … But he’s a guy that’s a great teammate. He’ll walk in the facility and he’ll work. He’ll gain respect from those around him by how he treats them as well as his work ethic.”
By all accounts, from former teammates and coaches, this time around shouldn’t be a problem.
“I’m behind one of the great quarterbacks in the league,” Love said. “So just being able to sit behind him and learn, what’s better than that?”