Fresno State Football: Ranking 2022’s Opposing Quarterbacks

Which of the Bulldogs’ foes look like they’ll be in the best shape under center this season?

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Fresno State Football: Ranking 2022’s Opposing Quarterbacks


Which of the Bulldogs’ foes look like they’ll be in the best shape under center this season?


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There are a few talented signal-callers on the docket.

12. Cal Poly – Spencer Brasch

The Mustangs haven’t yet found their footing under head coach Beau Baldwin, but 2022 might be their first best chance to finally make some headway in the Big Sky. That’ll depend on a big step forward from Brasch, though, after he made seven starts last season with mixed results. He completed 54.3% of his throws for 1,725 yards and ten touchdowns, but he also had a 3.4% interception rate.

11. UConn – Ta’Quan Roberson or Tyler Phommachanh

The Huskies’ quarterback situation in 2021 got messy — three different players threw at least 50 passes — but the race for the QB1 role in Jim Mora’s first year at the helm is a little more clear cut. Phommachanh is the lone incumbent left to compete for the job, but he underwhelmed with a completion rate under 50%, an average of 4.5 yards per attempt, and just one touchdown in three games.

Roberson, on the other hand, transferred from Penn State and could provide a shot in the arm with his running ability if he wins the competition.

10. New Mexico – Miles Kendrick or Isaiah Chavez or CJ Montes

In 2021, the Lobos finished dead last among FBS teams in offensive SP+ because a rash of injuries plagued the quarterback room and, once Terry Wilson was knocked out for the year, no one could step up and answer the bell. There isn’t a whole lot of clarity this time around, either: Chavez shocked the Bulldogs in the 2020 season finale, but with only seven career games he’s still something of an enigma.

That goes double for Montes, who was clearly overmatched in his lone start last season against Colorado State, and Kendrick, who was adequate in a pair of 2020 starts for Kansas but otherwise rarely saw the field in three years with the Jayhawks.

9. Wyoming – Andrew Peasley

Peasley seems to have the inside track to the starting job in Laramie, but it’s not a guarantee he’ll be an improvement on Sean Chambers and Levi Williams. For his career, his completion rate is still just 53.8% and his interception rate is 3.8%, both of which he’ll need to improve upon if the Cowboys are going to make noise in 2022.

8. Hawaii – Brayden Schager or Cammon Cooper

Schager rallied the Warriors to a shocking victory over the Bulldogs at home last year, but it’s not a given that he’ll lock up the starting job with Cooper in the mix. Both bring something a little different to the table — Schager has a little more mobility while Cooper has the stronger arm and the physique to withstand hits in the pocket — but either should make a wide-open Hawaii offense look interesting.

7. Nevada – Nate Cox or Shane Illingworth

Cox did about as well as he could in last year’s Quick Lane Bowl, given that nearly all of the Wolf Pack’s major passing game contributors elected to skip the game, but a recent DUI arrest may not endear him to Ken Wilson and the rest of the new coaching staff in Reno.

When Illingworth gets into the fold for fall camp, then, the door could be wide open for him to seize the starting job. He was decent across two years of play with Oklahoma State, winning all three starts he made while completing 69-of-120 passes for 939 yards and seven touchdowns against just two interceptions.

6. San Diego State – Braxton Burmeister

Which Burmeister will the Aztecs get in 2022? Over the course of his career, the former Virginia Tech starter has been a strong quarterback when he’s on his game, but he also sank the Hokies more than once when he struggled. It might seem like being a starter for the Aztecs means clearing a pretty low bar, but the tandem of Lucas Johnson and Jordon Brookshire was better than you think down the stretch last season, so it’s not a lock that Burmeister will be an improvement.