Chattanooga Times Free Press

Public can get peek at QB competitio­n

- BY DAVID COBB STAFF WRITER

KNOXVILLE — Tennessee football coach Jeremy Pruitt said it may be three days into the preseason or six weeks into the season when the team’s top quarterbac­k “asserts himself” and separates from a pack of challenger­s for the starting job.

“We have to figure out who gives us the best opportunit­y, and they will control that, not us,” Pruitt said.

If that assertion comes at the early end of Pruitt’s wide time frame, a few thousand Tennessee fans will be there to witness it.

Tennessee’s open practice at Neyland Stadium today — the third day of the preseason — will provide the biggest stage yet in the early going of a quarterbac­k battle that will look dramatical­ly different than it did the last time fans were inside the stadium.

During Tennessee’s spring game on April 21, redshirt sophomore Jarrett Guarantano led the firstteam offense while sophomore Will McBride directed the second-team offense. Now, with the arrival of freshman J.T. Shrout and graduate transfer Keller Chryst, fans will have four quarterbac­ks to keep an eye on.

The top criteria for judging their performanc­e, offensive coordinato­r Tyson Helton said, is who can “manage the offense” best.

“You have to understand the game, you have to be able to manage the game, take care of the football,” Helton said. “At some point in time, you have to make a big play. We don’t care how you do it. I’ve had quarterbac­ks that they might have thrown ducks out there, but for some reason guys caught it and made plays with it. They just had a factor that when they were in the game, good things happened. So you have to attest for that, too.”

During portions of Tennessee’s first two practices open to media, Guarantano was the first quarterbac­k up during drills with Chryst next in line, a sign that Guarantano is the early leader after his strong spring-game performanc­e and a summer spent organizing player-led 7-on-7 drills.

“I see a guy that has a live arm,” Helton said of Guarantano. “He’s a guy that is very athletic. He’s a guy that really wants to be the starting quarterbac­k here. He’s passionate about wanting to be the guy for the University of Tennessee. I think he’s grown as player from the time we’ve gotten here to today.”

With Chryst, Helton sees maturity. The son of Denver Broncos assistant coach Geep Chryst and nephew of University of Wisconsin coach Paul Chryst is one of 11 redshirt seniors on Tennessee’s roster.

“He walked in from day one and he didn’t say, ‘Hey, I’m trying to be the guy here,’” Helton said. “He just wanted to be a good teammate, and that’s what he’s done all summer. Trying to learn the system, be a good teammate, work hard and now you’ve got to take that out onto the field and compete.”

Helton was quick to reiterate after answering questions about Chryst and Guarantano that it is a four-person battle at quarterbac­k. Recent history shows the importance of depth at the position for Tennessee. McBride enrolled last January as the fourth quarterbac­k on the depth chart but started a game 11 months later, showing poise in a loss against Missouri after stepping in for an injured Guarantano in a win against Southern Mississipp­i.

In 2013, eventual star Joshua Dobbs began his freshman season fourth on the depth chart and was not on the travel roster. He was on track to redshirt before injuries and attrition forced him into a starting role late in the season.

“You look at Will McBride and what he brings to the table or J.T. Shrout and what he brings to the table,” Helton said. “A lot of people want to talk about maybe one or two guys — it’s a four-man competitio­n, and let the best man win.”

When it comes time to make a decision, Pruitt will have the final say, according to Helton. The two have not worked together before, and as a longtime defensive assistant and defensive coordinato­r, Pruitt never has selected a starting quarterbac­k.

Helton expects Pruitt to solicit feedback from the staff on the quarterbac­k decision before the decision is made.

“He and I at some point in time will sit down and he’ll say, ‘Hey, what do you think?’” Helton said. “At the end of the day he’ll make that decision, we’ll all be on board with it and we’ll go from there.”

Contact David Cobb at dcobb@timesfreep­ress.com. Follow him on Twitter @DavidWCobb and on Facebook at facebook.com/volsupdate.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DAVID COBB ?? Tennessee quarterbac­ks Will McBride (17) and Jarrett Guarantano (2) work through a drill before Tennessee’s scrimmage in April at Neyland Stadium .
STAFF PHOTO BY DAVID COBB Tennessee quarterbac­ks Will McBride (17) and Jarrett Guarantano (2) work through a drill before Tennessee’s scrimmage in April at Neyland Stadium .

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