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Mountain West Football: Post-Spring Practice Quarterback Rankings
Which Mountain West football teams are in the best shape under center after spring practice season?
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The game’s most important position is in flux across the conference.
12. New Mexico
Projected depth: CJ Montes, Isaiah Chavez, Myles Kendrick
It got ugly for the Lobos once Terry Wilson was knocked out by injury midseason, but Chavez has shown a capacity to surprise over the past two years while Montes was thrust into a nigh unwinnable situation against Colorado State’s lethal pass rush and should be at least a little better than he showed that day with more experience under his belt. They’ll get a chance to grow with the rest of the rest of the offense after last year’s trials by fire, but it may be a while before we know whether anyone has separated themselves from the pack.
11. Nevada
Projected depth: Nate Cox, Jake Barlage, Drew Scolari
Shane Illingworth should compete for the starting job when he joins the Wolf Pack later this year, so the job for now will probably fall to Cox, who stepped in for Carson Strong at the Quick Lane Bowl last December. That game probably wasn’t emblematic of how capable Cox is, but with the program turning over a new leaf or three under new head coach Ken Wilson, the competition to replace Strong permanently could be opened up to options like Barlage and Scolari who haven’t yet seen the field.
Note: Drew Scolari retired shortly before this article was posted, according to Nevada Sports Net’s Chris Murray.
10. Hawaii
Projected depth: Brayden Schager, Cammon Cooper, Jake Farrell, Armani Edden
New head coach Timmy Chang has given the Warriors program a much-needed shot in the arm and enters his first spring with an intriguing quarterback competition on his hands. On the one hand, Schager had some early struggles as a starter when Chevan Cordeiro missed time with injury but improved week after week. Cammon Cooper, on the other hand, learned about the run-and-shoot under Nick Rolovich at Washington State, transferred to Hawaii when Todd Graham was still the head coach, and stuck around for the chance to be QB1.
At the team’s spring game, though, Schager seemed to put a little distance between he and Cooper in the competition. It’s far from over, of course, but whoever wins the job will have plenty to prove.
9. Wyoming
Projected depth: Andrew Peasley, Evan Svoboda, Jayden Clemons
With Levi Williams and Sean Chambers out the door, Craig Bohl’s “help wanted” initiative means that the quarterback room this spring will look a little different. The question: Will any of the new arrivals be an improvement for a passing attack that has completed 56% of its throws just once in the last six years?
Gavin Beerup, who had been the lone holdover from last year’s depth chart, is now playing wide receiver. Peasley is the option with the most previous in-game experience, but he currently owns a 53.8% career completion rate (though his yards per attempt did improve from 5.7 in 2020 to 8.1 in 2021). Svoboda, while possessing the prototype size and arm that Bohl values, is unproven for the moment at the FBS level. This group has the capacity to surprise, but then Cowboys fans have probably heard that before and are now simply waiting to see it.
8. Colorado State
Projected depth: Clay Millen, Giles Pooler, Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi
Jay Norvell got to inherit a quarterback who’d seen the field a fair amount, Ty Gangi, when he took over for Brian Polian at Nevada back in 2017, but his situation in Fort Collins this spring is different. Millen was recruited by the Wolf Pack as one of the program’s highest-rated high school prospects ever, and while he has familiarity with what Norvell and offensive coordinator Matt Mumme want to do on offense, the coaching staff made it clear that the presumed inside track doesn’t guarantee anything.
The good news for Rams fans? Millen received rave reviews throughout the spring, which takes the sting out of losing Evans Olaes, who played in three games for the Rams in 2021, to the transfer portal. His continued progress throughout the fall as the leader of an extremely young group will be one of the more fascinating narrative threads to follow across the conference.
7. San Diego State
Projected depth: Braxton Burmeister, Will Haskell, Marshall Eucker
Just when it seemed that the Aztecs had hit upon something to solve their long-standing passing game woes — they threw for over 300 yards in the Frisco Bowl win over UTSA, after all — both Lucas Johnson and Jordon Brookshire hit the transfer portal.
The good news is that San Diego State also dabbled in the quarterback pool, landing former Virginia Tech starter Burmeister to compete with the redshirt freshman Haskell while moving Jalen Mayden, who saw the field late in the championship game loss to Utah State, to the defensive backfield. The former seems to have solidified his hold on the starting job, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune, so if he can play efficiently as Johnson and Brookshire were down the stretch in 2021, the concerns about this offense going backwards could quickly prove overblown.
6. Air Force
Projected depth: Haaziq Daniels, Zac Larrier, Ben Brittain, Jake Smith
Daniels probably doesn’t get enough credit as one of the more dangerous quarterbacks in the Mountain West, so hopefully it’s clear that the Falcons’ standing here has more to do with those competing to be his backup in Warren Bryan’s stead, as none of them have much live game experience. Considering the toll that a Falcons quarterback can take every week, earning the QB2 spot is a potentially significant role for the winner.
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