Meet North Dakota State quarterback Trey Lance

Could North Dakota State have another first round quarterback on their hands? Why Trey Lance could live up to the hype.

Summertime allows the football world to do some prep work for the upcoming season ahead. While we still are left to wonder how both the NFL and the college games will look in the fall, given the continued spread of COVID-19, we can certainly hope that we see players on the field, and soon.

You probably are familiar with some of the quarterbacks at the collegiate level that fans are hoping to see this fall, such as Trevor Lawrence, Justin Fields, Jamie Newman, Tanner Morgan and K.J. Costello, among others. But as the NFL worlds started thinking about the 2021 NFL Draft, another name was in the mix, and near the top.

Rising redshirt sophomore Trey Lance, from North Dakota State.

Could the Bison have another first round quarterback on their hands, as was the case with Carson Wentz? They just might. Lance, in his first year as the starter for NDSU, put up almost perfect numbers last season. He completed 66.9% of his passes for 2,798 yards and 28 touchdowns, without throwing a single interception. He ran for 1,100 yards and another 14 touchdowns. And he led the Bison to yet another National Championship.

Lance had huge shoes to fill last fall, stepping into a spot vacated by current Los Angeles Charger Easton Stick, who led the Bison to a championship in his final season in Fargo. The redshirt freshman made his first start against Butler, in a neutral site game in his home state of Minnesota.

It did not take long for Lance to settle in.

On just his second passing attempt of the 2019 season, the young signal-caller flashed traits evaluators hope to see from more veteran passers. On this 1st and 10 passing attempt, Lance begins the play from under center, showing some activity in the pre-snap phase. He then executes a play-action fake – turning his back to the defense – before coming up firing:

A number of traits stand out on this play. The scheme (the quarterback lining up under center, carrying out a play-action fake with a deep drop, and throwing downfield) will catch the eye of old school NFL decision-makers. But while that is good to see – specially Lance showing quick processing after turning his back to the defense – the timing of the throw, coupled with the shoulder reduction he displays in response to edge pressure, is even more impressive.

Watch this play from the end zone angle:

That little shoulder turn to protect the football, coupled with the footwork to climb vertically in the pocket, is the hallmark of a quarterback who is comfortable facing pressure. Remember, this was his first start, and his second passing attempt. Sometimes people, myself included, argue that yardage after the catch is a quarterback statistic. This play is a prime example. By getting this football out on time and in rhythm, even when forced to slide and climb in the pocket, Lance puts his receiver in position to make the first defender miss.

Later in the game, the Bison return to this kind of design. Having set up the vertical shot play on the previous example, now Lance looks to go over the top of the defense:

Full credit where it is due, this is a tremendous job by wide receiver Phoenix Sproles tracking this throw over his shoulder. On the part of the quarterback, Lance reads the coverage perfectly and drops in a bucket shot, putting incredible arc on this throw to place it over the trailing defensive back. Very Russell Wilson-esque.

Later in the game, Lance got the Bison back in the endzone with this touchdown strike on a post route. What stands out on this throw is the job the quarterback does before the play. Butler shows him a two safety look prior to the snap, before rotating as the play begins to a single-high coverage with the free safety shaded to the three-receiver side of the offensive formation. Lance, if he is going to throw the backside post route to the tight end, needs to ensure that the safety does not jump that route, after of course diagnosing the safety rotation.

He does that perfectly before freezing him with his eyes:

Lance holds that safety over the number three receiver, before flashing his eyes backside to the tight end on his post route. From the end zone angle, you can see just how long Lance trains his eyes on the left side, before coming to his TE. Just watch the tell-tale helmet stripe:

Midway through the season, Lance and the Bison took on the University of Northern Iowa. The redshirt freshman enjoyed another strong afternoon, completing 10 of 18 passes for 145 yards and three touchdowns, while adding another 83 yards on 11 carries on the ground. Early in the game Lance hit on a post route, which provides an opportunity to highlight both his processing speed, and an area for growth:

Let’s break this play down a bit. The Bison use motion twice on this design, first presnap from right to left, to give Lance a coverage indicator, then right before the snap from left to right, showing the Panthers movement as the play begins. When his receiver first crosses the formation, Lance sees minimal movement from the defense, an indication the Panthers are in zone coverage. With both safeties deep, and the fact that Northern Iowa often plays with two high safeties, Lance is thinking Cover 2.

The Bison run a “peel,” or post/wheel, concept. The outside receiver cuts to the middle of the field on a post route while the wing tight end bends outside on a wheel. Before the play begins Lance is thinking Cover 2, and therefore the post route, is a likely smart throw, as that receiver will split the safeties.

But the analysis changes due to UNI’s response to the jet motion. As the center snaps the football the safety to that side of the field comes down towards the line of scrimmage in response to the presnap movement. The Panthers rotate to a Cover 3, single-high scheme. Lance reads this and, quickly, still throws the post route yet puts it low, saving his receiver from the now-lurking free safety.

What he does not see, and what I will be watching for in 2020, is that the cornerback stays on the post route a bit too long, leaving the wheel route wide open. So, this is good, but if Lance gives this an extra second, it could be even better.

Later in this contest the Bison return to this design, and this time, Lance gets to his third read in the progression:

On this play, the Panthers stay in a Cover 2 scheme. The cornerback reads the switch concept and stays over the top of the wheel route from the tight end, and the backside slot defender reads the play and works under the post route while the safeties squeeze it from the hashmarks. Seeing all this, Lance checks the ball down. This looks like a simple checkdown that you see thousands of times a week, but it illustrates his ability to scan through his reads, and make the right decision. Especially when the defense seems to have adjusted to what you are doing schematically.

The Bison got out to a fast start a few weeks later on the road against Youngstown State, and coasted to a relatively easy victory. In that quick start Lance completed 7 of 9 passes for 160 yards and three touchdowns, and added another rushing touchdown as well. Before we finish with one of those passing touchdowns, look at the anticipation on this out route from early in the contest:

Maybe it is the camera angle, maybe it is the route thrown, maybe the anticipation shown by both passers, but that play from Lance brought my mind to this throw from Marcus Mariota:

One quarterback is an NFL passer. The other a redshirt freshman at an FCS school. Almost hard to tell the difference on these two clips.

We can end this introduction with what you want to see from an athlete playing at a lower level of competition: Dominance. One of Lance’s touchdown passes against Youngstown State is a prime example:

Lance faces an unblocked defender screaming off the edge, who has a free shot at him. But the quarterback is able to simply shrug him off, while keeping his eyes downfield, and he finds a target in the end zone uncovered for a touchdown.

If the Bison, and Lance, are able to return to the field in 2020, you might see even more defenders like #4 here is after this play: Dejected, head down, wondering just what they have to do to stop this guy.

Lance is going to put two scouting axioms to the test. First, “scout the traits, not the scheme.” Lance is in a somewhat friendly system that relies heavily on play-action, similar to the San Francisco 49ers. Evaluators will need to move beyond the offense and focus on what he does within that system, which is why moments like the first play highlighted are important. Second, “scout the player, not the helmet.” Lance plays for an FCS powerhouse, and some might question the level of competition. Remember, he is facing not only the 11 guys on the other side of the ball each week, but a defensive coordinator who is paid to invent ways to stop him. Focus on what he can do, if and when he is dominant, and enjoy the ride.

Eagles hold a virtual predraft meeting with North Dakota State DE Derrek Tuszka

Eagles hold a virtual predraft meeting with Derrek Tuszka

The Philadelphia Eagles are always looking to add a high-motor edge rusher and Carson Wentz’s former stomping grounds have produced a possible addition.

According to Draft Wire, the Eagles have had a virtual predraft meeting with North Dakota State defensive end Derrek Tuszka.

A three-year starter with a high motor, Tuszka amassed 28.5 sacks and 40.5 tackles for loss, finishing his career with 13.5 sacks and 19 tackles for loss as a senior.

49ers hold pre-draft video meeting with North Dakota State DE

The 49ers could add to their deep defensive line with a high-motor defensive end in the NFL draft.

While much of the pre-draft focus has been on the positions the 49ers need to get better at, the club may also opt to bolster a strength at some point during the 2020 selection process. San Francisco has very good depth at defensive end, but that didn’t stop them from having a video meeting with North Dakota State defensive end Derrek Tuszka. He told Justin Melo of the Draft Wire that the 49ers were among a group of teams he talked to over FaceTime.

Tuszka started for three seasons on a dominant North Dakota State club that’s turned winning Football Championship Subdivision titles into a yearly tradition. He started 34 of 45 games across his last three years, and racked up 28.5 sacks and 40.5 tackles for loss. Tuszka capped his career with 13.5 sacks and 19 tackles for loss as a senior.

There’s nothing athletically that jumps out about him. He’s 6-4, 251 pounds and doesn’t have the pass rush arsenal to become a dominant edge rusher. What does stand out on tape is how often he makes his way to the football. Even when he gets stuck on a block he doesn’t quit the play.

His intensity on a snap-by-snap basis, combined with his consistent effort will make him worth a late-round pick to a team like San Francisco just looking to add depth their defensive front. If Tuszka can show an ability to set the edge in the run game against NFL tight ends and tackles, that added versatility would get him more snaps.

A high-energy player with a nose for the football would be a perfect rotational piece that the 49ers can use to maximum effectiveness late in games against tired tackles, and throughout a contest to give their defensive ends plays off. Fresh legs late in games helped the 49ers’ pass rush dominate last season, and adding players like Tuszka will give them the best chance to replicate that.

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Chargers had pre-draft meeting with North Dakota State EDGE Derrek Tuszka

The Los Angeles Chargers are looking to add more pass rushers.

The Chargers appear to be looking to add more pass-rushers in the upcoming draft.

According to Draft Wire’s Justin Melo, Los Angeles had a virtual pre-draft meeting with former North Dakota State defensive end Derrek Tuszka.

In 34 games, Tuszka was quite productive for the Bison, recording 133 tackles, 42 tackles for loss, 29.5 sacks, six passes defensed and three forced fumbles.

The 6-foot-4 and 251 pounder is a high-motored player who possesses the quickness to threaten blocker’s outside shoulder and heavy hands to wreak havoc against the pass and the run, but he’s lacking functional strength.

Joey Bosa and Melvin Ingram are still a lethal duo, but they’re both on the final year of their contracts. There’s a possibility that one of them may not be back in 2021. Because of that, they need to start preparing for life after Bosa or Ingram.

Tuszka is capable of carving out a productive rotational pass-rusher role at the next level.

Tuszka projects as a Day 3 selection or undrafted free agent.

Why unheralded EDGE Derrek Tuszka could be fit for Seahawks

The Seattle Seahawks need more help rushing the passer, and a potential late round gem awaits them in North Dakota State’s Derrek Tuszka.

The Seattle Seahawks, perhaps more than most teams, are good at mining the late rounds and the undrafted free agent pool for legitimate NFL talent.

Players like Doug Baldwin, Poona Ford and Jermaine Kearse all went undrafted, while Chris Carson, Byron Maxwell, David Moore and Malcolm Smith were all sixth or seventh round picks.

One area Seattle hasn’t dabbled in too much, outside of Moore, is small school studs.

The obvious knock on many of them is that the competition level they faced in college doesn’t even come close to the level they would face in the NFL, and the jump is predicted to be too much for them to handle.

In some cases that is true, but there are plenty of counter examples of guys who adjusted just fine to elite competition – and Seattle would be wise to take a closer look at some of those players.

One name to have on the radar is North Dakota State edge rusher Derrek Tuszka.

Tuszka put on an incredible performance for the Bison, racking up 29.5 sacks in his three years at North Dakota State, including a whopping 13.5 his final season. He earned a ridiculous 91.8 pass rush grade from Pro Football Focus last year, and generated pressure on 22% of his snaps – which would have been third among edge defenders in the FBS.

That’s all fine and good in the FCS, but what has really helped drive Tuszka’s stock was his performance at the combine. Tuszka posted top-five performances in the 40-yard dash, the vertical, the three-cone drill and the 20-yard shuttle. He also placed in the top 10 in the broad jump, and this three-cone time was actually the best out of all the edge defenders present – by a good margin.

So not only is Tuszka an elite pass rusher who dominated FCS competition, he’s an athletic specimen who compares favorably, at least physically, to the rest of his peers at the position.

So, what’s not to love? Well, for the Seahawks, it will be his length. Seattle always targets length in their edge defenders, and while Tuszka is six-foot-four he only has 31 3/8 inch arms, which could push him off their radar.

He also lacks the necessary burst to attack off the edge, and again, the level of competition could overwhelm him at the next level.

Still – if he goes undrafted Seattle would be wise to give him a shot in training camp. The combination of his performance in college, his testing at the combine and the fact that he played a true 4-3 defensive end could make him an appealing depth option for the Seahawks, and someone they could stash on the practice squad while he adjusts to the competition level in the NFL.

He may never develop into a star, but Tuszka has the athleticism and the tape to take a gamble on, and the Seahawks would be wise to bring him into camp or snatch him in the later rounds if possible.

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Summit Final: North Dakota vs. North Dakota State odds, picks and best bets

Previewing Tuesday’s North Dakota vs North Dakota State college basketball Summit League Tournament championship matchup, with college basketball betting odds, picks and best bets

The North Dakota Fighting Hawks (15-17) square off with the North Dakota State Bison (24-8) in the Summit League title game Tuesday at 9 p.m. ET at the Denny Sanford Premier Center in Sioux Falls, S.D. We analyze the North Dakota-North Dakota State odds and betting lines, while providing college basketball betting tips and advice on this matchup.

North Dakota vs. North Dakota State: Three things you need to know

  1. It’s a battle for state of North Dakota bragging rights — and also a trip to the big dance — while being played in the state of South Dakota.
  2. NoDak State won the first meeting, 83-74 at home Jan. 19 to cover the eight-point spread; UND won the rematch Feb. 22, winning on its home floor 71-68 despite being a 4.5-point ‘dog. The over/under split in both meetings.
  3.  North Dakota State enters this one just 3-4 against the spread across the past seven outings, while UND has covered in four of its past five games overall.

Get some action on this game or others by placing a bet at BetMGM!


North Dakota vs. North Dakota State: Odds, betting lines and picks

Odds via BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. ET.

Prediction

North Dakota State 71, North Dakota 68

Moneyline (ML)

North Dakota State (-250) is favored to win this one, but rival North Dakota (+200) has really given the Bison fits this season. PASS and look to the spread for better value.

New to sports betting? A $10 bet on North Dakota State to win outright would profit $4; a $10 bet on North Dakota to win outright would profit $20.

Against the Spread (ATS)

North Dakota (+6, -110) looks for the miracle 3-for-3 run in the Summit tourney to get into the NCAA Tournament as a sub-.500 team. North Dakota State (-6, -110) will win this game, but look for the Fighting Hawks to cover. They’re playing with a lot of confidence right now.

UND has only been to the NCAA Tournament once, in 2017; NoDak State has four appearances since 2009, including last season when they topped North Carolina Central in the First Four. They also stunned Oklahoma in a 5-12 game back in 2014, winning in overtime.

Take NORTH DAKOTA +6 (-110).

Over/Under (O/U)

The Under is 1-0-1 in two meetings this season. This one (138.5; Over +100 / Under -121) is going to be close — perhaps very close — and the lean is to the Under because nerves might get the better of the teams in the early going.

The best choice is to just AVOID.

Want some action in this one? Place a bet at BetMGM now. For more sports betting picks and tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.

Follow @JoeWilliamsVI and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.

Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

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