
The second act ofJayden Daniels' NFL career will come with high expectations – for himself and theWashington Commanders. In 2024, theCommandersmade the NFC championship game, with their rookie quarterback as the main reason. For a franchise devoid of success for more than two decades and a carousel at quarterback, Daniels was more than a revelation. Hetook on a mystic presence. He was a savior. Now the Commanders will enterthe 2025 seasonconsidered Super Bowl contenders (fair or not) and Daniels will be on MVP shortlists. An ESPN poll that took the temperature of NFL executives and coaches left Daniels as theNo. 5-ranked quarterback in the league. Ahead of him were the powerful AFC quartet of quarterback: Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen, Lamar Jackson and Joe Burrow. "I gotta go out there and prove myself each and every day, no matter if it was last season, this season, 10, 20 years down the road," Daniels said in May, "you have to prove yourself each and every season. "Outside noise doesn't matter," he continued, "have to go there and keep proving yourself." MORE:Ravens QB Lamar Jackson and the Super Bowl: 'It's on his heart. It's on his mind.' Taken second overall in the new Commanders regime by general manager Adam Peters and head coach Dan Quinn, Daniels carried over his production from Louisiana State to the pros. Herushed for the most yardsever by a rookie quarterback (891). The 2023 Heisman Trophy winner completed 69% of his passes and threw 25 touchdowns – five of which came in the final 30 seconds of regulation or overtime – to nine interceptions. Heeasily won Associated Press Offensive Rookie of the Yearhonors. Off the field, Daniels was instrumental in catalyzing the culture change Quinn instilled from the top of the organization down. "He's an amazing teammate. The amount of work that he puts in that goes unseen here to get ready to play, to learn it, to teach others to, you know, connect the guys … there is no flinch in Jayden Daniels," Quinn said in May. "He's as focused and relentless as you could about getting better. And so that's why I said for us around here, like, man, we appreciate that and there's a lot of things that, he and the rest of us are really digging in hard on to say, 'All right, can we get this better?'" Throughout Daniels' first full offseason as a pro, the coaching staff and the quarterback concentrated on taking aspects of his game from "really good" to "elite" with the goal of being "the best at this concept," Quinn said. The freedom an offseason provides was new to Daniels. Some of that was difficult to navigate, Daniels said, but he leaned on his support system. "It was fun just to sit back and reflect and figure out how I'm going to move throughout this offseason and move forward," Daniels said. For offensive coordinator Kliff Kingsbury, that meant receiving plenty of texts and calls from Daniels, who is a football junkie. Kingsbury didn't have to give him any homework. "His mind is never very far away from the game, so if he sees something or has a thought, he likes to reach out and talk through it," Kingsbury said in May. "And so that relationship has really grown, I think kind of figuring out where we want to continue to get better at. "That's all he kind of thinks about is how he can get better and watches a ton of film, watches a ton of football overall. And so, that organically really takes care of itself in a way when you have a guy who wants to be that great." A potential head-coach candidate once again, Kingsbury, quarterbacks coach Tavita Pritchard and assistant quarterbacks coach David Blough were all retained by the Commanders this offseason with the goal of providing a stable "ecosystem," in the words of Peters, for Daniels. MORE:Washington Commanders reveal alternate uniforms that nod to their Super Bowl glory "It's huge," Kingsbury said of the continuity at Daniels' disposal. "I think you look traditionally through the NFL, the guys who've had a ton of success have been able to stay in those long-term, all-time greats and just the comfort level and then you being able to take the ownership of it and understand it inside and out, where now you're correcting people, you don't even need the coaches. And he's kind of getting to that point." Going into Year 2, Kingsbury said, Daniels shifted from learning to mastery of the scheme. Daniels said "transparency" between he and Kingsbury has improved; he relays what he likes, Kingsbury offers his viewpoints and they agree on the middle ground. "Just watching him move around, he's not thinking as much, he's playing fast and letting his natural gifts kind of take over and that's what we want to see," Kingsbury said. "So, I expect him to take a big jump." Thespotlight will only increase. The Commanders are scheduled to play in 10 standalone windows this season, startingWeek 2against theGreen Bay Packerson"Thursday Night Football." Throughout last season, Daniels faced questions regarding his durability. The 6-foot-4 passer is listed at a generous 210 pounds. Big hits he took in the first month of the season didn't assuage those concerns. Daniels suffered a rib injury against theCarolina Pantherson Oct. 20 following a long run that affected him for the better part of a month. Neither the Commanders nor Daniels had any specific weight goals or bulking desires for the offseason. Quinn said he's where he expects Daniels to be on the scale, but that working out more has naturally made him leaner. "He knows what he has to do to protect himself and where he feels comfortable playing," Kingsbury said. "But the arm strength, it looks better and you can tell he's stronger, there's no doubt." While Daniels improved himself, Peters improved the roster. He brought back key veterans who bonded with Daniels in tight end Zach Ertz, linebacker Bobby Wagner and backup quarterback Marcus Mariota. He traded for wideout Deebo Samuel, formerly with theSan Francisco 49ers, and left tackle Laremy Tunsil. The Commanders used their first-round draft pick on offensive lineman Josh Conerly. "We have a massive opportunity, and you know, none of us are taking that lightly," Commanders owner Josh Harris said regarding Daniels' rookie contract in February after the team's loss to thePhiladelphia Eaglesinthe NFC title game. But Daniels' favorite target, wide receiver Terry McLaurin, and the front office are locked into a contract standoff that has devolved from standard to bitter. In Quinn's mind, whoever Daniels is working with on the field has the benefit of working with a leader who understands the larger goal. "I know he's worked hard through the offseason, but he's just in command of the things that he wanted to work," Quinn said. "He and his teammates, they've really put in a lot of work together. "You can sense when people are going for it and you know, he's certainly one that is." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Washington QB Jayden Daniels has tough act to follow. His own