So much of the conversation around Arch Manning coming into the season was about greatness before he ever took meaningful snaps.
On Game Runs Deep, the reaction to his Week 1 performance was less about panic and more about perspective.
Yes, it was rough. For much of the game, Manning struggled to find rhythm and looked like exactly what he is, a first-year starter playing on the road against one of the best defenses in college football in Ohio State Buckeyes. There were flashes late, but overall it was not the debut many expected. But that is kind of the point.
The expectations were never realistic to begin with. Manning was being labeled everything from a Heisman frontrunner to the next generational quarterback before proving anything at the college level. That kind of hype created a standard that was nearly impossible to meet, regardless of how he played. It also ignores the reality of development. Even with elite pedigree and talent, every quarterback goes through a learning curve. Manning is no different. When you compare his situation to other young quarterbacks like Austin Simmons, the path is similar. The difference is the spotlight.
There were also factors beyond Manning. Questions can be asked about Steve Sarkisian and the offensive game plan, which did not do a first-time starter many favors in a hostile environment. On the other side, Ohio State’s defense looked much improved, with experienced coaching and NFL-level scheming making life difficult from the start.
The bigger takeaway is this. This was always going to be a process. One game, especially one in a tough environment, does not define a player. Manning showed enough late to suggest growth is coming, and there is still strong belief that he will develop into the quarterback many expect him to be.
But the conversation needs to adjust. Instead of asking whether Arch Manning lived up to the hype, it might be more accurate to ask whether the hype ever gave him a fair chance in the first place. Week 1 did not answer everything. It just reminded everyone that development still matters.