Many teams would love to have that type of talent at qb. That talent is hard to find, and maybe even harder to develop.
Development is key and our current and previous qb's were and are being coached by a grad assistant.
So, you're a blue chup qb with these attributes and plenty of schools want you--one touts a qb coach who has sent x-number of guys into the nfl. The other touts a feel-good Rudy story qb grad assistant coach.
There's why.
For a guy with less than 200 total posts, this guy gets it.
I think people need to reel back the Stanton hype a bit. I think most of it came from the Elite 11 camp he did so well in. But there's only so much you can learn from no-pad drills. I only watched one of his high school games and he threw 3 INTs. He looked very, very raw as a passer. There's probably a good reason he sits at #3 behind a walk-on.
So in terms of developing a qb, we're supposed to have TA developed fully already, regardless that he's a sophomore.
These two illustrate the point that secretasian already pointed out above. What we're doing with our QBs (and what we've been doing for a while... since Bo got here) is recruiting sufficiently talented guys and then stubbornly refusing to develop them. It's akin to buying paying for HD through your cable provider and then refusing to upgrade to a TV that is actually HD capable.
I do not think that Tommy is a bad quarterback. He is an unpolished thrower, but I believe farther ahead than TMart was at this point in his career. He's definitely a runner first- the offense Beck wants to run absolutely demands a QB with some level of mobility. Even Fyfe has a bit of wiggle. The QB run game is a HUGE part of opening up opportunities for the RBs and through the air-- don't underrate that.
That is why plugging a stud pocket passing QB like Cook would be an awkward fit for Tim Beck's system. It would be very similar to 2009 when ZLee was the QB. He didn't have the wheels for Beck's offense so those zone read keepers looked extremely awkward and slow. He eventually adapted and learned he couldn't call as many of those as he'd like.
With Cook, I think zone read goes out the window and I'm not sure that our running game doesn't actually regress if our OL is really as overrated as it appeared to be Saturday. The read gets us a lot of yards because it demands a lot of discipline from the defense and we can exploit their choices as to who to cover.
But I digress-- TMart made a big jump in 2009 when he finally started working with Calhoun to overhaul his mechanics-- which sadly, he had to seek out ON HIS OWN-- and it showed on the field. He was a MUCH more proficient passer those last two years.
Why can't we see that type of improvement with TA?? He's already a more naturally gifted passer and needs less improvement.
Because of our offense, Nebraska does net get good pro-style QBs. We look at athletic QBs who can run & throw in HS. Many of these players get recruited to play other positions. If we do get a pro-style QB, they are raw.
Eric Crouch was drafted in the NFL in 2001-2002, but as a safety. It is the style of offense that dictates what we recruit.
I'm not sure trying to land a heisman candidate-type QB (a Manziel, Young, Wilson, Newton, etc.,.) is a very practical strategy around which to base an offense. If the Nebraska offense is going to require that caliber of player at QB then we need to recalibrate our expectations, because getting one is going to be very unlikely.
There's a reason all teams aren't trying to be "multiple." It's not because the coaches aren't smart enough to draw up plays and schemes; it's because you need players to execute those plays. I'm all for rushing and passing for 300 each per game. It's just not ever going to happen consistently.
Nebraska needs to pick an offense that they can recruit players to execute, and then perfect it.
I don't put any stock in producing NFL qbs. That has never been NU's offense, and it's still not NU's offense.
I believe Beck is trying to do this. He's recruiting QBs that are a good fit for his offense. They have to be a dual-threat to give us a threat both on the ground and through the air. Sure, we haven't had a super proficient passer since Ganz, but it's clear Beck prefers a QB who is DEFINITELY gifted with his legs and GOOD ENOUGH through the air.
Spano. TMart. Cody Green. Carnes. Turner. TA. Stanton. Bush. Darlington. Dillman.
Those are the guys we've recruited at QB since Beck has had the reigns. It's clear what he values-- all very gifted with their legs, with POTENTIAL as a passer. Most of them have experience running a spread offense in high school. Some have better ability at passing than others, some are quite raw. In my opinion, a handful of those players had or have the raw tools to develop into a serviceable if not proficient passer. Some did not and the benefit to recruiting dual threats is you can shift them to other positions if QB doesn't work out.
But it absolutely boggles the mind why we have not brought a full-time QB coach in yet. None of those players seemed to have reached their ceiling as a passer while at NU.
I don't know if it's arrogance on the staff's part or aversion to breaking up the old boys club-- but one thing is very clear: If Tim Beck is going to continue to be this teams OC, a QB coach is an absolute necessity.
So, to answer Hammerhead, I believe it's the case that Beck does not want to recruit very gifted pocket passing QBs because a huge part of his offense is the QB run game.
I think we have QBs now that are great fits for this system. For whatever reason, we're not refining them.