The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

QB competitio­n is for backup

- By Ken Sugiura ksugiura@ajc.com

Georgia Tech quarterbac­k TaQuon Marshall goes into spring practice with as firm a grip on his starting job as any of the returning starters. After starting all 11 games last season, Marshall was elected one of two captains in January to lead the team through the offseason, linebacker Brant

Mitchell being the other. That said, Marshall has room to develop and there also will be a competitio­n for the No. 2 job, a spot that would increase its winner’s

chance at playing time this fall and a head start on the starting job in 2019, as Marshall is a senior.

With Matthew Jordan’s decision to end his playing career because of a foot injury and Jay Jones’ transfer at the end of last semester (to Independen­ce Community College in Kansas), Tech has only three scholarshi­p quarterbac­ks on the roster:

Marshall, sophomore Lucas Johnson and redshirt freshman Tobias Oliver. (They’ll be joined by signee James Graham.) That means plenty of practice repetition­s for each.

“It’d be great if one of those guys could take a little bit

off of him where you could get (Marshall) out a series a game or something like that,”

coach Paul Johnson said in February.

Marshall can use his time to develop as a passer — he

completed 37.1 percent of his passes, the lowest rate for a Tech starting quarter-

back dating at least to 1950 ( Joshua Nesbitt was fractional­ly more accurate in 2010) — and continue to develop his comprehens­ion of the offense.

Jordan offered his thoughts on his three former position mates.

Jordan said if Johnson, who appeared minimally at quarterbac­k last season, can keep learning and developing, “I think this’ll be a good spring for him.”

Jordan said Johnson has a “really fluid motion” and has good speed.

“Once he gets those first few steps going, he’s really hard to catch,” Jordan said.

Oliver played in an offense similar to Tech’s in high

school at Northside High in Warner Robins. Jordan said that gave Oliver a grounding in the footwork of the scheme, which helps a lot in

learning the offense.

“He’s a lot quicker, a lot shiftier than people realize or know that he is,” Jordan said. “He really hasn’t had a chance to show it.”

Jordan expects to see Marshall take another step as a team leader. It was the same steps Jordan took last spring as he was on track to succeed Justin Thomas before his foot injury.

“Now he’s the experience­d

old guy,” Jordan said.

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