Chattanooga Times Free Press

Florida State coach in no hurry to pick QB

- BY BOB FERRANTE

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — Quarterbac­k competitio­ns are nothing new for Florida State, which has had four in the last six seasons.

But this competitio­n is quite different from preseasons past. The Seminoles opened their first preseason under new coach Willie Taggart on Monday with two quarterbac­ks with starting experience.

Taggart, whose Florida State coaching debut will be Sept. 3 against Virginia Tech, said he has no timetable to make a decision.

“When they decide to separate themselves and make it a no-brainer is when we’ll make that decision,” said Taggart, who arrived at Florida State after a year at Oregon. “It’s going to be pretty cool to watch them go do their thing.”

Deondre Francois and James Blackman may have the edge in experience, but Taggart also said not to discount redshirt freshman Bailey Hockman.

Taggart feels the quarterbac­ks have similar traits, including arm strength, mobility, toughness and intelligen­ce to run his up-tempo, spread-based Gulf Coast offense.

What the Seminoles are looking for is an important intangible — who is the best leader?

“The job descriptio­n of quarterbac­k is make the other 10 guys better,” offensive coordinato­r Walt Bell said. “Who can do that at a higher rate? That’s going to be the guy that you entrust to be the quarterbac­k. … You’ve got to be a guy that your teammates can trust, and I think you earn that in a multitude of ways, whether it’s how you work or how you speak to people or the relationsh­ips you create.”

Blackman and Francois have a significan­t advantage in terms of experience. Francois started as a redshirt freshman in 2016, passing for 3,350 yards, 20 touchdowns and seven intercepti­ons while completing 58.8 percent of his passes. The 6-foot-1, 215pound junior returned as the starter in 2017 but suffered a season-ending knee injury in the opener against Alabama.

Francois was investigat­ed for a pair of off-field incidents and took part in a diversion program for a misdemeano­r marijuana charge. Taggart said Francois has “been doing everything we asked him to do,” which included him moving back on campus and spending more time with teammates.

He also spent much of the last year rehabilita­ting from knee surgery. His mobility was limited during the spring, but Francois was a full go in practice Monday as he ran with a brace on his left knee.

“I’m in a better place,” Francois said. “It took a toll on me, being hurt, being out for the whole season.”

With Francois sidelined, Blackman stepped in last fall and became the first true freshman to start at quarterbac­k at FSU since 1985. He threw for 2,230 yards, 19 touchdowns and 11 intercepti­ons, with 10 touchdowns coming during Florida State’s four-game winning streak at the end of the season.

The 6-foot-5 sophomore has worked diligently to add weight to his slim frame, adding nearly 20 pounds over the last year to his current weight of 178. Blackman joked on Monday, “I try to eat every second I can.”

All of the quarterbac­ks have had time to adapt to Taggart’s offense, which features a no-huddle, two-minute philosophy.

“I feel a lot more comfortabl­e, knowing the things that we were going over in the spring,” Blackman said. “I know them a lot better by doing them over the summer.”

“They are all going to have an opportunit­y,” Taggart said. “They all understand that. That starts now. We’re in training camp now, and those guys understand they have got to go out and perform each and every day.”

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