So the New England Patriots now have a left-handed quarterback with a scatter arm, a flair for the dramatic and a feel for leadership.
Yep, Tim Tebow.
He might as well be Frankenstein's monster, with Patriots coach Bill Belichick in the role of visionary doctor (or mad scientist).
Tebow certainly isn't going to unseat Tom Brady as the starter, and he probably won't challenge Ryan Mallett as backup. Hey, Tebow couldn't even get his favorite number — 15— for New England's three-day minicamp because it belongs to Mallett.
But if the Patriots see any quarterbacking promise in Tebow — he did, after all, lead the Broncos to a playoff berth in 2011, with a win over Pittsburgh in overtime — they have the luxury of developing it slowly. They will do it within their system, not with any extravagant shifts to the wildcat or any other funky offenses; the Patriots aren't about to take their certain Hall of Fame QB off the field for any significant snaps if Brady is healthy.
Belichick likes the idea that Tebow's skill set could lend itself to using him at a variety of positions: tight end, H-back, fullback, whatever. One thing Belichick can count on is Tebow's work ethic, something the coach already knows because of his close friendship with Tebow's college coach, Urban Meyer. Belichick wouldn't say so, of course, but it's very likely he consulted Meyer, now at Ohio State, before signing the Heisman winner.
Belichick is enough of a football savant to spot strengths in a player that others have missed; some say that was true when he selected Brady 199th overall in the 2000 draft.
Asked if a position switch was a reasonable assumption, Belichick, naturally, was mum. That's the way of the world in Foxborough, as Tebow will learn.