All-time high school QB rankings: Western region

To begin, we will rank the five best QBs to come out of the Western region.

Capping off USA TODAY High School Sports’ look at some of the greatest quarterbacks in high school football history, we’re ranking the five best QBs to come out of the Western region of the United States.

These QBs played for schools from the following states: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. All high school stats are courtesy of Max Preps.

An arguable note: seven-time Super Bowl champion and the sport’s all-time greatest competitor Tom Brady played for Junipero Serra (Calif.) but is excluded because he didn’t truly become Tom Brady until he was already in the NFL – and these rankings are all about how the players performed in high school.

More All-time HS QB rankings:

East region

Southeast region

Midwest region

Southwest region

Nevada 2025 offensive tackle is offered by Ohio State

The Buckeyes go to a familiar high school for their latest offer #GoBucks

[autotag]Ohio State[/autotag] has recruited Bishop Gorman High School previously — Does [autotag]Tate Martell[/autotag] ring a bell?

They are now after another prospect from the Nevada powerhouse high school program in offensive tackle [autotag]Douglas Utu[/autotag]. The 6-foot, 5-inch, 270-pound lineman is one of the best in the country, the No. 6 tackle and 57th overall player according to the 247Sports Composite Rankings.

Utu brings plenty of versatility to his game, not only does he have the ability to play either tackle, he could slide inside to guard if needed. The Buckeyes have recently had a lot of success with a player like that with Paris Johnson Jr., and Utu could be next as he was offered a scholarship after a conversation with offensive line coach [autotag]Justin Frye[/autotag].

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It’s never easy for schools in the Midwest to go out west and successfully recruit a player, but if there is one school that can do it, it’s Ohio State. The Buckeyes hopefully can get Utu to visit in the near future.

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Former Ohio State quarterback Tate Martell retires from football

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The Tate Martell saga appears to be over. The former Ohio State quarterback famous for transferring out of the program when Justin Fields got spit out of the transfer portal in 2019 is retiring according to a report from Joe Arrigo of FranchiseSportsMedia.

Martell’s college football career arc was a controversial and winding road that we’re sure you are aware of.  Nonetheless, we’ll go through it for those that aren’t. The country’s No. 2 rated dual-threat quarterback committed to Ohio State in 2017. He redshirted that year, then saw limited action in 2018 behind starter Dwayne Haskins. He still holds the record for highest completion percentage in a game after completing 10-of-10 passes against Rutgers.

After leaving Ohio State, he tried to catch on at Miami but was never able to break through as a starter, and left the program after two seasons, transferring to his home school UNLV prior to the 2021 season. Martell only saw action in two games last season, completing just 2-of-6 passes for 27 yards.

It appears as though Martell is now set to embark upon something “business wise,” and that it has a chance to “blow up.” We’ll all just have to wait to see what comes of that, and when something does happen, we’ll be all over it.

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Former Ohio State quarterback Tate Martell reportedly set to transfer to third program

Martell’s college career just took another twist and turn.

QB1 is on his third team.

According to a report from Josh Poloha of WFNY in Cleveland, former Ohio State quarterback Tate Martell, will be transferring to UNLV for this upcoming season.

You know the story well most likely. Martell committed to Ohio State out of high school to much fanfare and was expected to eventually be the quarterback of the future in Columbus. However, Dwayne Haskins won the starting job in 2018, then Justin Fields transferred from Georgia the following offseason, prompting Martell to enter the transfer portal.

Martell saw the writing on the wall and quickly thereafter announced his decision to transfer to Miami but never really found his way on the field consistently in South Florida either, even trying things at wide receiver at one point. He opted out of the 2020 season.

For Martell, it’s a chance to maybe go home and make something finally of a college career that hasn’t gone nearly like he’s wanted. Martell is a graduate of Bishop Gorman High School in Las Vegas and was the 2016-2017 Gatorade High School Player of the Year.

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Former Ohio State quarterback Tate Martell is in the transfer portal again

According to multiple reports, former Ohio State quarterback Tate Martell has entered the transfer portal again. Yes, it’s true.

Former Ohio State quarterback Tate Martell has found his way into the NCAA’s transfer portal once again, this time as a graduate transfer.

We kind of lost track of Tathan because he opted out of the 2020 season with Miami after it was announced that he’d serve a one-game suspension. Still, the thought was that he’d continue to take classes at “The U” and come back for another season.

Wrong.

The transfer portal has struck again and it appears as though Martell is shopping his services in hopes of finally getting a football career that came with a lot of pre-hype off the ground.

He first entered the mesmerizing and infamous transfer portal (don’t stare at it too long or it’ll hurt your eyes), early in 2019 after Haskins left for the NFL and rumors circulated about a guy named Justin Fields thinking about backing the U-Haul up to the banks of the Olentangy. He eventually landed at Miami but still has never been able to grab onto the playing time he’s in search of.

We’ll keep some eyeballs on this, but we hear there’s a school up in Michigan that might need a QB (wouldn’t that be fun). In all seriousness though, we’ve always wished Martell well and hope he gets what he’s looking for.

The ‘transfer toilet’ is how one ACC coach views the portal

Wake Forest head coach Dave Clawson had some interesting words when asked about the NCAA transfer portal.

Since the inception of the NCAA’s transfer portal in October of 2018, many players have enter their name in. Over 1,000 student-athletes did so in it’s first year of existence, with many more following the path the past two years.

In an interview with the Winston-Salem Journal, Wake Forest head coach Dave Clawson was overtly critical of the “transfer toilet” as he so eloquently called it. The topic was breached when John Dell asked about his former running back Kenneth Walker, entering the portal and subsequently committing to Michigan State.

“The joke in the ACC room is that sometimes we call it almost like the transfer toilet. There are players that go in there, and you never see or hear from them again. This whole idea there’s a portal and a one-time transfer (rule) and isn’t this freedom great? But you are still only allowed to have 85 scholarships, and you can still sign only 25 players a year. So you have all these players going in there thinking they can go anywhere and play. There are still scholarship limits,” explained Clawson.

He went ever further saying “a lot of those players go into the portal not being informed of the national dynamics of that portal, that there are 65 Power Five programs,” going back into his comments about scholarship limits.

Clawson does have some solid points, but transfers have worked for many players including Notre Dame’s Ben Skowronek (although a different case as a graduate transfer) and former Irish now Boston College quarterback Phil Jurkovec. It hasn’t worked for many also, citing Miami’s Tate Martell.

The argument here is that if coaches are allowed to leave freely, so should players and it’s a solid point, but to a degree. Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh thinks players should be allowed to have one free transfer, where they wouldn’t have to wait for the NCAA to make a ruling on being eligible immediately.

Cases like Martell’s don’t always makes sense, as he claimed due to Urban Meyer leaving after his second season that he should be eligible right away at Miami, FL. They granted it to him but said no to Luke Ford. The Illinois native played his first year at Georgia, but he wanted his sick grandfather to see him play. The NCAA denied his request, his grandfather passing away during his season where he had to sit out a year.

The “transfer toilet” needs more rules, the NCAA must have better criteria as to what grants a player immediate eligibility and what doesn’t. This year has obviously been different, with most transfers being granted eligibility right away.

Either way, Clawson got our attention comparing the transfer portal to a toilet bowl.

Tate Martell opts out of Miami Hurricanes’ 2020 season

Former Ohio State quarterback Tate Martell has decided to opt-out of the 2020 college football season at Miami.

Former Ohio State quarterback Tate Martell will be opting out of the 2020 college football season for the Miami Hurricanes. The story was first reported by the Miami Herald and comes amid a roller coaster of a college football career thus far.

The news comes just one week after Martell was suspended (subscription required) for one game by Miami head coach Manny Diaz. A reason was not given for the suspension, but Diaz indicated he would be back with the team. Now, however, it appears as though Martell is done for the year and you have to wonder what his future holds.

Martell was the national Gatorade Player of the Year back in 2016-17 and was one of the most sought after dual-threat quarterbacks in the 2017 class before eventually choosing Ohio State. His popularity went beyond the football field as he was featured in a 60 minutes story and star of the Netfix documentary “QB1: Beyond the Lights” when he played high school football at Bishop Gorman in Las Vegas.

His time in college has never quite panned out however. At Ohio State, he was behind incumbent captain and starter J.T. Barrett, then lost a three-man battle for the 2018 starting spot with Dwayne Haskins and Joe Burrow.

He was expected to take over as the presumptive starter in 2019 before Justin Fields transferred to the program. Seeing the writing on the wall, he then transferred to Miami where he again fell behind on the depth chart, eventually switching to wide receiver.

 

Did Justin Fields take a shot at former Ohio State QB Tate Martell?

Justin Fields may have taken his chance to throw shade at former Ohio State QB Tate Martell on Twitter. Did he mean to? Decide for yourself.

The Ohio State football team got one whale of a quarterback transfer at the beginning of the 2019 season, Justin Fields left the University of Georgia, the prestige program in his home state of Georgia.

However, there was controversy around if Fields would be able to come in and instantly be the team’s starting quarterback, taking over from Dwayne Haskins, a first-round pick in the 2019 NFL Draft.

A top-10 all-time prospect, Fields’ transfer was a huge deal for the Buckeyes. But, Ohio State already had cemented itself as a quarterback powerhouse far before Fields’ commitment.

It was supposed to be Tate Martell who took over from Haskins, or at the very least was projected to. Martell threw for 269 yards and one touchdown during the 2018 season, but when the pendulum swang towards Fields, Martell dipped.

He transferred to the University of Miami, and he may still have some bitterness after missing out on the shot of a lifetime.

Did the former Ohio State quarterback look to get at the program’s current one on Twitter telling him to not “swing and miss”?

Well, if it was aimed at Fields, the young stud wasn’t backing down.

Let’s be honest though — Fields may just be talking about his golf game.

To be fair though, you’d imagine a player with a swing like that doesn’t actually swing and miss often, showing how the caption could’ve been aimed at Martell.

Either way, Fields is primed for another huge season as the Big Ten’s best quarterback. Meanwhile the jury is still out on Martell down in Miami.

 

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REPORT: Former Alabama QB coach Dan Enos relieved of OC duties at Miami

Less than 24 hours after the Miami Hurricanes were shutout by Louisiana Tech in the Pinstripe Bowl, it has been reported by Tim Reynolds of the Associated Press that the University of Miami has relieved Dan Enos of his duties as their offensive …

Less than 24 hours after the Miami Hurricanes were shutout by Louisiana Tech in the Pinstripe Bowl, it has been reported by Tim Reynolds of the Associated Press that the University of Miami has relieved Dan Enos of his duties as their offensive coordinator.

Enos had just completed his first season as the team’s offensive coordinator. He had accepted the position after being the quarterbacks coach under Nick Saban.

It became clear that the Hurricanes’ offense was going to be a bit shaky entering the 2019 season when Tate Martell transferred to Miami from Ohio State.

Throughout the season, Enos was unable to find the right man for the job. Fans has seen a combination of Martell, Jarren Williams and N’Kosi Perry across all 13 of their games.

Finding the right offensive coordinator for this Miami team is crucial, as their head coach, Manny Diaz, was the teams defensive coordinator under Mark Richt.

Times have been hard for Miami recently, only having one season with double-digit wins in the last ten years. Their last game of this decade was a loss to an underdog Louisiana Tech team where the Hurricanes put up zero points.

Miami will be able to find a new offensive coordinator, but Enos’ future as a coach in the collegiate level is questionable.

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