How Malik Willis revived his career with the Packers: 'I'd put him up against anybody'
Willis flamed out in Tennessee, but the 26-year-old has earned a shot to start somewhere else next season.
GREEN BAY, Wis. — If you hear a faint beeping sound, that’s probably the noise of a Brinks truck preparing to unload at Malik Willis’ house.
The Green Bay Packers backup quarterback is going to get paid in free agency this offseason, and deservedly so.
If you claim to have seen this coming, you’re probably lying, unless of course you’ve been watching Willis work his magic for as long as Xavier McKinney has.
“I’ve been seeing him do that since high school,” the Packers’ All-Pro safety and Willis’ teammate at Roswell (Georgia) High School said. “I’m never surprised. It never catches me off guard.”
There was buzz before the 2022 NFL Draft that Willis would go in the top 10. He fell to the third round and flamed out after two years in Tennessee. The Packers shipped a measly seventh-round pick to the Titans on the eve of last season for Willis, their new backup after underwhelming training camp performances by Sean Clifford and Michael Pratt.
Since Green Bay’s mundane maneuver, Willis has blossomed into one of the league’s best backups, if not the top one. Willis has looked like a starter almost every time he’s filled in for Jordan Love, reviving his career under the tutelage of head coach Matt LaFleur and his staff in a place where quarterbacks thrive. As a result, a quarterback-needy team will likely pay Willis to at least compete for their starting job in a couple of months.
“It’s been really cool watching that and I’m really happy for him,” offensive coordinator Adam Stenavich said. “Every time we’ve needed him, he’s come through and done a nice job and given us a chance to win every game that he’s been in. We’ll see what the future holds for him, but I think he’s really helped himself out, for sure, with what he’s done the last two years here.”
Willis was thrust into the fire last year, just 19 days after arriving in Green Bay. Love sprained his MCL at the end of the season opener in Brazil and Willis started Green Bay’s next two games against the Indianapolis Colts and his former team, the Titans. Even with limited knowledge of the Packers’ offense, Willis excelled in consecutive wins, in part thanks to his own quick learning and on-field skill, but also because of how LaFleur and his staff designed the offense around a quarterback unable to run it all.
Willis only threw 33 times over two games as the Packers leaned on their ground game, but he made throws and created with his own legs when called upon. He did the same again in Week 8 last season after Love injured his groin against the Jacksonville Jaguars, hitting wide receiver Jayden Reed down the left sideline for 51 yards late in the fourth quarter to help set up a game-winning field goal. LaFleur said coaches were “pretty hard” on Willis when he first arrived because of his footwork, but that he’s done an “outstanding” job improving it over the last two seasons. A full offseason and second season in LaFleur’s offense, too, has turned Willis from a flash in the pan to someone who looks like a legitimate NFL starter.
“I just think the consistency, understanding where his eyes need to be in relation to what his feet are telling him, I think he’s put a ton of work in just trying to stay a little bit more balanced when he’s in the pocket,” LaFleur said. “One thing that you see is pretty common amongst many right-handed quarterbacks is they’ll tend to, when they’re throwing left, tend to get a little bit off-balance and that can have some accuracy issues along with that. I think he’s done a really good job in that regard, just staying in better body position, which leads to better balance, which leads to better accuracy.”