A former Kentucky quarterback could start Saturday for New Mexico State

Former Wildcats quarterback Deuce Hogan could win the starting job for New Mexico State.

Former Kentucky Wildcats three-star quarterback Deuce Hogan could win the starting job at his new school as he battles for the position at New Mexico State.

Hogan spent 2020 and 2021 with Iowa, then 2022 and 2023 with Kentucky. With one appearance at Iowa and three at Kentucky, Hogan has a career total of eight pass attempts, completing seven of them for 21 yards.

Hogan threw for 8,192 yards with 100 touchdowns and 30 interceptions at the prep level. He was rated by 247Sports as the 15th-best pro-style quarterback in the nation in the Class of 2020.

Related: Kentucky’s record predicted by USA Today Sports

Head coach Tony Sanchez and the New Mexico State Aggies aren’t ruling out playing multiple quarterbacks in their season opener against Southeast Missouri State.

The Aggies were stable at the position in 2023 with former starter Diego Pavia, who threw for 2,973 yards, 26 touchdowns, nine interceptions and a 62.9 QBR en route to a 10-5 season. But Pavia transferred to Vanderbilt after the season, leaving a void that coach Tony Sanchez must fill.

Hogan and Awad are currently the frontrunners with Marucci and McNamara trailing behind, according to Sanchez. He hopes to name a starter before NM State’s season opener against Southeast Missouri State on Aug. 31.

 

Iowa was the least active Big Ten team in the transfer portal for good reason

The Iowa Hawkeyes were the least active Big Ten team in the transfer portal. And for good reason. They develop their own internally.

The transfer portal is the talk of NCAA football every offseason it seems. Coaches move and players follow them. Players don’t feel things are a fit at their current school and leave. Or, you get programs that retain, develop, and go with their guys they know and have bought into. That is what Iowa does.

The Iowa Hawkeyes were the least active Big Ten team in the transfer portal this offseason, as reported by The Gazette’s John Steppe. There was one player that joined the Hawkeyes through the transfer portal this offseason and that was Steven Stilianos, a tight end coming from FCS school Lafayette.

Stilianos makes up one player, or 0.97% of transfers in the Big Ten. Iowa doesn’t use the portal. They develop their guys and they do so very, very well. Iowa has a strong culture, a rich history of turning unheralded recruits into college stars and NFL talents.

Iowa’s defensive line coach provided a great quote to their strategy surrounding their philosophy to filling gaps that arise.

“Is there somebody here? He may be in another position room,” Bell said in a June episode of The Gazette’s Hawk Off the Press podcast. “I’m going to check that before I check the portal because if he’s in the building, that kid understands the culture. If he’s in the building, that transition would be seamless.”

With their success and development, another reason for the lack of transfers joining the Iowa program is simply due to the experience already on the roster. With many upperclassmen starting, contributing, and helping win, the Hawkeyes don’t need to go away from what is clearly working.

Since the NCAA Transfer Portal originated in October of 2018, Iowa has won 73% of their games over the last four seasons with two 10-win seasons in there.

As Steppe discussed, the transfer portal can be a case of the grass not always being greener. Of those entering the portal, 42% of them are stuck without a new home, didn’t return to their original school, and many have given up scholarships.

Former quarterback Deuce Hogan gave up his Iowa scholarship when entering the transfer portal and is one of those individuals who was lucky enough to find a new home. Yet, he is now a walk-on, a steep price to pay in the transfer portal.

Luckily, the Iowa Hawkeyes have found success internally, moving guys around, growing them, and developing them into Big Ten football players. With their track record speaking for itself, don’t expect or think the Hawkeyes need to get their hands in the mess that the transfer portal is.

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