Justin Herbert Has Self-Aware Confession About Why He Won’t Be on ‘Quarterback’ Series

The newly minted highest-paid player in the league had a brutal self-assessment.
Justin Herbert Has Self-Aware Confession About Why He Won’t Be on ‘Quarterback’ Series
Justin Herbert Has Self-Aware Confession About Why He Won’t Be on ‘Quarterback’ Series /
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As the newly-minted highest-paid player in the NFLChargers quarterback Justin Herbert is one of the game’s brightest young stars and would seemingly be a prime candidate to be featured in Netflix’s new docuseries, Quarterback. But not only has the 25-year-old not been asked to be a part of the show, he says he’d be a terrible subject for around-the-clock camera surveillance.

Speaking as a guest on The Herd with Colin Cowherd on Wednesday, Herbert gave a less-than-flattering self-assessment of his TV appeal.

“I have not been approached by it, but I think I’d be pretty boring on the show,” Herbert said. “I don’t do a whole lot outside of football, so most of the footage would probably be just from football practice, meetings and things like that. We’ve kind of done that with Hard Knocks, so I don’t have too much going on outside of football. I might not be the best candidate for that.”

Herbert was referencing his first NFL preseason back in 2020, when the Chargers were the featured team on the popular HBO docuseries. Much of the focus on Herbert was how the then-rookie quarterback was fighting for a starting spot and learning to be a more vocal leader.

While Herbert has certainly accomplished plenty since then—he won Rookie of the Year in 2020, made the Pro Bowl in ’21 and finished ninth in MVP voting last year—it seems, at least according to him, that he hasn’t blossomed into a TV star just yet.


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Nick Selbe
NICK SELBE

Nick Selbe is a programming editor at Sports Illustrated who frequently writes about baseball and college sports. Before joining SI in March 2020 as a breaking/trending news writer, he worked for MLB Advanced Media, Yahoo Sports and Bleacher Report. Selbe received a bachelor's in communication from the University of Southern California.