South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Top QB up in the air for 7 Big Ten teams

- By Eric Olson

The week started with nine of the 14 Big Ten teams coming out of spring practices planning to continue quarterbac­k auditions in August. The number was down to seven by Friday.

First-year coach Ryan Day of defending conference champion Ohio State insisted after the Buckeyes’ spring game last Saturday he hadn’t decided between Georgia transfer Justin Fields and redshirt freshman Matthew Baldwin, who spent much of last season rehabbing a knee injury. Baldwin announced he would transfer on Thursday, erasing any doubt that Fields, the biggest acquisitio­n of the offseason, would be the starter.

Penn State appears set to go with junior Sean Clifford after fifth-year senior Tommy Stevens entered the NCAA transfer portal. His father told the Centre Daily Times his son is “certainly leaving.”

Two incumbents in the East Division face challenges. Indiana’s Peyton Ramsey is competing against redshirt freshmen Michael Penix Jr. and Utah transfer Jack Tuttle. Rutgers’ Arthur Sitkowski will try to hold off challenges from freshman Cole Snyder and possibly Boston College transfer Johnny Langan, who is applying for a waiver to become eligible immediatel­y.

At Maryland, new coach Mike Locksley looked at Tyrrell Pigrome, Max Bortenschl­ager and Tyler DeSue this spring before Virginia Tech graduate transfer Josh Jackson arrives this summer.

Defending West Division champion Northweste­rn must replace four-year starter Clayton Thorson, and former Clemson backup Hunter Johnson is expected to have the inside track against fifth-year senior TJ Green.

Wisconsin freshman Graham Mertz has come on strong and is in position to beat out Jack Coan. The junior started four games in place of an injured Alex Hornibrook, who left for Florida State as a graduate transfer.

Zack Annexstad and Tanner Morgan, who split the job as freshmen, will continue their competitio­n at Minnesota; and MJ Rivers, Matt Robinson and Coran Taylor are in a battle at Illinois with four-star freshman Isaiah Williams arriving in the fall.

Sindelar shut down: Purdue quarterbac­k Elijah Sindelar, set to take over for David Blough, put a scare into the Boilermake­rs when he hyperexten­ded his left knee. He was hurt when defensive lineman Grant Hermanns stepped on his left foot during a drill.

Sindelar won the starting job in preseason camp last year but kept it only two games because of knee tendinitis and an injured oblique muscle. He didn’t take another snap the rest of the season. He said last week he would be ready for summer conditioni­ng.

Ohio State O-line: Offensive line is Ohio State’s biggest concern entering fall. Only one starter returns — left tackle Thayer Munford — and he didn’t participat­e in spring practice because of injury. Five-star recruit Harry Miller and graduate transfer Jonah Jackson from Rutgers are among the offensive linemen who will join the team this summer.

“We’ve got the cavalry coming,” Day told reporters.

Speed up, slow down: Michigan’s offense, often criticized for being stodgy, is being revamped. New offensive coordinato­r Josh Gattis is putting in the no-huddle, spread system featuring lots of run-pass options.

“It’s night and day,” quarterbac­k Shea Patterson said. “As far as the similariti­es, I think there are very few of them.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States