South Bend Tribune

Does IU have a front-runner in spring QB competitio­n?

- Michael Niziolek Michael Niziolek is the Indiana beat reporter for The Bloomingto­n HeraldTime­s. You can follow him on X @michaelniz­iolek and read all his coverage by clicking here.

— Indiana football’s quarterbac­k competitio­n is progressin­g this spring with Kurtis Rourke seemingly creating some distance from the rest of the room based on comments coach Curt Cignetti has made the past two weeks.

Cignetti has been reluctant to go in depth about the topic, but he’s praised Rourke every time he’s been at the podium.

“I think Kurtis Rourke has taken a pretty significan­t step,” Cignetti said, on Tuesday.

Cignetti, who previously praised Rourke for operating at a “high level”, made sure to balance out his praise by pointing out the Ohio transfer still had room to “improve in a lot of different things.”

Rourke had the experience advantage over the other competitor­s coming into spring.

He was a three-year starter for the

Bobcats and earned MAC offensive player of the year honors in 2022 with 3,256 passing yards (69.1%) and 25 touchdowns. His numbers weren’t quite as impressive last season, but he still led his team to 10 wins as he worked his way back from a torn ACL he suffered the previous November.

Cignetti said much of the spring has been focused on installing the offense and all that comes with it — learning news plays and a whole lot of new terminolog­y. Rourke has passed that test so far while showing the live arm that jumps out on film.

The other main developmen­t in the quarterbac­k battle was Cignetti publicly stating he wanted to see a little more from Tayven Jackson. Jackson threw 914 yards (60.9%), two touchdowns and five intercepti­ons in six appearance­s (five starts) last season.

His best performanc­e came against Louisville when orchestrat­ed a second half comeback and was just a yard shy of scoring a game-tying touchdown late in the fourth quarter. The previous staff liked Jackson’s “moxie”, but he was

RICH JANZARUK/HERALD-TIMES

benched after a series of middling performanc­es.

“Tayven’s improvemen­t has been a little slower, and while he has the physical ability most of the time to get the ball from point A to point B, there’s a lot more to playing quarterbac­k than that,” Cignetti said. “I need to see a jump from his game in that area.”

Fellow Center Grove alum Tyler Cherry, a mid-year enrollee, is also getting reps. The coaching staff remains excited about his long term potential and are eager to see how much improvemen­t he makes this summer.

“Just watching film from practice one to now I can tell a huge improvemen­t from the whole quarterbac­k room,” Indiana tight end Zach Horton said. “They are listening to Tino (Sunseri), he’s a great coach, I can just see a lot of improvemen­t already, which is very exciting to see.”

The quarterbac­ks haven’t gone live this spring, and that won’t change next week during the spring game.

Cignetti was adamant in a preseason interview with The Herald-Times that risk of injury far outweighed any benefits of having quarterbac­ks go live during the offseason regardless of their experience level.

 ?? ?? Indiana's Kurtis Rourke passes during Indiana football spring practice at Memorial Stadium on March 21.
Indiana's Kurtis Rourke passes during Indiana football spring practice at Memorial Stadium on March 21.

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