The Evening Leader

Big Ten teams face QB debates

- By MICHAEL MAROT AP Sports Writer

Illinois coach Bret Bielema needed one word to answer whether he considered changing quarterbac­ks last weekend.

No.

The most oft-repeated question in football has made a resounding resurgence around the Big Ten after another weekend filled with less than stellar quarterbac­k play.

“We will internally name a starting quarterbac­k Tuesday when we talk to our guys,” Purdue coach Jeff Brohm said Monday, two days after Aidan O’Connell replaced Jack Plummer and led the Boilermake­rs to the game’s only touchdown in a 13-9 victory over the Fighting Illini.

Everybody should stay tuned.

As league play begins in earnest, quarterbac­k quandaries, as usual, are starting to emerge as the make-or-break point for underperfo­rming teams.

Bielema appears to be leaning to keeping Brandon Peters as the starter despite a second straight poor performanc­e since returning from a left shoulder injury and amid pleas from fans to give Artur Sitkowski, the Rutgers transfer, another shot. Illinois (14, 1-2 Big Ten) has lost four straight as it prepares to face Charlotte this weekend.

Minnesota coach P.J. Fleck also faced the question after Tanner Morgan went 5 of 13 for 59 yards with four sacks and two intercepti­ons in a stunning 14-10 home loss to Bowling Green. The Golden Gophers (2-2, 0-1) will try to rebound at Purdue (3-1, 1-0) this weekend.

“I have to play way better,” Morgan said.

So does Wisconsin quarterbac­k Graham Mertz, who threw a career-worst four intercepti­ons and had two returned for scores in a blowout loss to Notre Dame. The worst game of Mertz’s career also came against his predecesso­r, Jack Coan.

Since opening last season with seven TD passes and no intercepti­ons in two wins, Mertz has gone 3-5 with three TDs and 11 intercepti­ons. Yet coach Paul Chryst will stay the course and Mertz said he is confident he can turn things around this weekend when the unranked Badgers (1-2, 0-1) host No. 14 Michigan.

“I will never lack trust in myself,” Mertz said. “As soon as that goes, you lose everything.”

Sometimes, a switch works out.

No. 11 Ohio State (31, 1-0) held out injured quarterbac­k C.J. Stroud against Akron and Kyle McCord responded by throwing for 319 yards and two scores in a 59-7 rout. McCord was named Big Ten freshman of the week. Coach Ryan Day said Tuesday that Stroud, if healthy, will start Saturday against Rutgers (3-1, 0-1).

Northweste­rn coach Pat Fitzgerald benched Hunter Johnson against Duke and the Wildcats still lost. Ryan Hilinski started the next game and led Northweste­rn past Ohio.

Nebraska coach Scott Frost believes Adrian Martinez seems to have learned from last season’s struggles, though his quarterbac­k has been sacked 18 times and sputtered in the red zone this season. The Cornhusker­s (2-3, 0-2) host Northweste­rn (2-2, 0-1) next.

“I benched Adrian last year when he was not playing well enough and he is playing at an elite level right now with some of the things he is doing,” Frost said.

There are myriad reasons for what’s gone wrong this season.

While nobody has blamed Peters’ struggles

 ?? Staff photo/Mike Frank ?? Kyle McCord of Ohio State drops back to throw during last Saturday’s game against Akron. McCord got his first career start for the Buckeyes and was named Big Ten freshman of the week.
Staff photo/Mike Frank Kyle McCord of Ohio State drops back to throw during last Saturday’s game against Akron. McCord got his first career start for the Buckeyes and was named Big Ten freshman of the week.

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