Kyler Murray came to the line against the Titans last week, saw the defense in a Cover Zero all-out blitz-to-come, and changed the play.
A few moments later, he put the perfect pass over the head of Christian Kirk for a 26-yard touchdown. And coach Kliff Kingsbury had another example of his quarterback's growth.
"A couple of those touchdown throws where he got us into different plays against a coverage that he liked, that was a big step," Kingsbury said. "When he can see the field like that and take the matchups we had that are favorable in those situations, that's moving in the right direction."
Experience matters in that regard. Murray knows that two full seasons of working within Kingsbury's offense and seeing hundreds of different looks changes a quarterback's confidence level.
"Seeing a lot of looks, knowing what to call at the line, what to check to, instead of in my rookie season, knowing maybe I should get out of this play but not knowing what I should check to," Murray said. "Now, it's just natural and it's easy."
It isn't just Murray who helps in that regard. On DeAndre Hopkins' catch-and-spin 17-yard touchdown, Murray said veteran center Rodney Hudson saw the defense – again a cover zero – and alerted Murray to make a change on the play.
Confidence matters, and Murray said he only makes a chance when "I know it's going to work."
"The touchdown to CKirk, we got the look we wanted," Murray said. "On the sideline Kliff might've not been too happy with what I was doing, but it ended up working out. That's how it goes."