The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Is a transfer the answer?

Switching schools has become commonplac­e for quarterbac­ks, but former Bulldog Shockley is proof patience can pay off.

- Mark Bradley

Blake Barnett was Alabama’s starting quarterbac­k against USC on Sept. 3. By month’s end, he’d lost the job and left the program. He has said he’ll enroll at Arizona State, though it’s believed Lane Kiffin, the Bama offensive coordinato­r who’s moving to Florida Atlantic, wants Barnett to join him there. Two more Crimson Tide quarterbac­ks — Cooper Bateman and David Cornwell — have announced their intentions to transfer.

Texas A&M’s starting quarterbac­k in Game 1 of 2014 was Kenny Hill. He’s at TCU. The Aggies’ starting quarterbac­k in Game 1 of 2015 was Kyle Allen. He’s at Houston, though there’s thought he’ll follow Tom Herman to Texas. When Allen struggled, the Aggies turned to Kyler Murray. He’s at Oklahoma, where he’ll presumably play behind Baker Mayfield, once a walk-on at Texas Tech. Trevor Knight, the Sooners’ quarterbac­k before Mayfield, now starts for A&M. Got all that?

Florida’s No. 1 quarterbac­k entering September was Luke Del Rio, who’s 22 and still a redshirt sophomore, having made stops at Alabama and Oregon State. The Gators’ quarterbac­k in the conference title game was Austin Appleby, formerly of Purdue. Appleby was one of two SEC quarterbac­ks who’d begun as a Boilermake­r, the other being Danny Etling of LSU.

Jarrett Stidham, who started for Baylor before transferri­ng to — but not playing for — McLennan Community College, has announced he’ll enroll at Auburn. According to 247Sports, the Nos. 2, 3 and 4 quarterbac­ks of the 2015 class were Barnett, Murray and Stidham; all three have since relocated. No. 28 was Lamar Jackson, who just won the Heisman Trophy. Still with me?

It’s unclear what Stidham’s arrival will mean for incumbent Sean White, a redshirt sophomore. Also unclear is whether Auburn backup John Franklin III, who signed with Florida State and transferre­d to East Mississipp­i CC, will grace a fourth campus with his presence. And, after pausing for breath, we turn to D.J. Shockley and ask: What would his learned advice be to neo-quarterbac­ks who can’t wait to hit the collegiate equivalent of free agency?

“I’ve actually had that discussion with guys,” Shockley said. “I say, ‘Do you think you can play? Do you believe enough in your ability? Do you believe you can make it a hard decision for the coaches? What does your opportunit­y look like elsewhere, and not just at this particular moment?’”

To this want-it-all-andwant-it-now generation of quarterbac­ks, Shockley might seem a relic on the order of the rotary phone. He signed with Georgia in 2001 as Mark Richt’s first major recruit. He redshirted as a freshman. He spent the next three years as understudy to David Greene, who led the Bulldogs to 42 wins — then an NCAA record — in four seasons. Shockley would get the occasional series but never a start. Every winter brought speculatio­n he would leave. Every winter he resisted the urge.

“I felt tremendous pressure,” Shockley said. “From teammates, family members, even my dad. Coaches were calling my dad out of the woodwork.” (Donald Shockley was D.J.’s coach at North Clayton High.)

What schools did he consider? “Maryland, North Carolina, Florida State.”

How close did he come to bolting? “There was a time after my sophomore season. I had a day or two to decide — we were about to start bowl practice — was I going to go?”

Why didn’t he? “Ultimately I wanted to play for coach Richt, wait my turn, be loyal and be there for the guys I came in with.”

Shockley’s turn finally arrived in 2005. He threw five touchdown passes against Boise State in the season opener. He would be MVP of the SEC championsh­ip game upset of LSU. He will forever believe his patience was rewarded in full.

A quarterbac­k of millennial vintage might ask, “Patience? What’s that?” Shockley, who’s 33, isn’t judgmental about the torrent of transfers. He is, however, pragmatic.

“It just depends on the kid and his outlook on life,” Shockley said. “But competitio­n is going to be everywhere. I’d think, ‘If I go somewhere and sit out and a new guy comes in, I’m in the same situation as at Georgia.’ But guys believe (transferri­ng) is the fastest way to the NFL.”

Shockley wound up in the NFL, albeit as a backup, after being picked in the seventh round by the Falcons. Today he does TV work and offers postgame analysis on the Falcons’ radio network. His bit of analytic insight about competitio­n being everywhere figures to be borne out again soon.

Greyson Lambert transferre­d to Georgia after being demoted at Virginia. He started every game for the Bulldogs in 2015 save one. (The Florida assignment fell to Faton Bauta, who soon left for Colorado State.) Lambert began this season as the starting quarterbac­k but was displaced by freshman Jacob Eason, the No. 2 prostyle quarterbac­k among 2016 recruits. Georgia has a commitment from Jake Fromm of Houston County, the No. 3 prostyle quarterbac­k of 2017.

Even the one Alabama quarterbac­k who’s staying — freshman Jalen Hurts, newly minted SEC offensive player of the year — can’t rest easy. Tua Tagovailoa of Honolulu has pledged his services to Bama. He’s the nation’s top-ranked dualthreat quarterbac­k. (Hurts was No. 3 in his class.) Would Tagovailoa be willing to wait the way Shockley did? Would Fromm? Would any latter-day quarterbac­k?

“At the end of the day, it’s your life,” Shockley said. “You’re the only one living it. You can’t let pressure from other people have a bearing on it. You have to live it.”

 ?? FILE PHOTOS ?? D.J. Shockley (center), who finally started in his fifth year at Georgia, says quarterbac­ks who transfer aren’t necessaril­y entering better situations. Among those who moved (clockwise, from top left): Blake Barnett, Greyson Lambert, Kenny Hill, Kyle...
FILE PHOTOS D.J. Shockley (center), who finally started in his fifth year at Georgia, says quarterbac­ks who transfer aren’t necessaril­y entering better situations. Among those who moved (clockwise, from top left): Blake Barnett, Greyson Lambert, Kenny Hill, Kyle...
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