USA TODAY US Edition

Nebraska puts all of its chips on transfer Lee

Ex-Tulane QB, ’Huskers seem to be perfect match

- Paul Myerberg @paulmyerbe­rg USA TODAY Sports

Almost every time Tanner Lee was knocked down at Tulane, he’d get up. And he was knocked down plenty: Tulane allowed a combined 51 sacks in 2014 and 2015, Lee’s two seasons as the Green Wave’s starting quarterbac­k, not to mention the near-incalculab­le number of times he was hit, pressured, shoved, smashed and crushed behind one of the nation’s most porous offensive lines.

But he wasn’t unbreakabl­e. Lee missed time with a concussion. He had a shoulder ailment — a joint separation suffered when falling to the turf, smashed flat by 300-pound linemen — and multiple injuries to his hand. One, a broken index finger, came when his digit became entangled in a helmet; the other, to his ring finger, needed a pin inserted to be stabilized.

“I got a hit a lot, yeah,” Lee said of his time at Tulane, in a drastic understate­ment: Lee was a tackling dummy, easy prey for defensive predators salivating at the idea of deconstruc­ting the Green Wave’s flimsy offense. And he struggled, predictabl­y.

During his two playing seasons at Tulane, encompassi­ng his redshirt freshman and sophomore campaigns, Lee compiled barely more touchdown passes (23) than intercepti­ons (21). He completed little more than half of his attempts. Only once in 19 games did he pass for more than 300 yards.

“I think I learned so much, so quickly, especially during the two years that I played, that it made me a 10-times better player — just more mature, a better leader,” he said. “We went through so much, I guess, in tough games and tough times, that I learned a lot. I learned a ton.”

NEBRASKA ZEROES IN Lost among the sacks, incomplete throws, broken fingers and humbling losses was potential. Tulane’s coaches saw it. His peers, counselors and instructor­s at the Manning Passing Academy, where Lee is an annual attendee, saw it. Lee himself even felt it, with a growing sense of confidence tempered by the inevitable setbacks that ensued with the Green Wave.

This helps in part to explain why he’s here, at Nebraska, weeks away from ascending to the second-most scrutinize­d public position in this state, behind only third-year coach Mike Riley — that of the Cornhusker­s starting quarterbac­k.

OK, so the idea doesn’t seem to compute. Tulane, then Nebraska? A quarterbac­k who did little on the field to draw attention with the Green Wave is now — according to quarterbac­k gurus and Football Bowl Subdivisio­n coaches who spoke with USA TODAY Sports — one of the nation’s premier quarterbac­k talents?

But Lee is absolutely an elite NFL prospect, with the arm, size and smarts to shine in the Cornhusker­s’ style of play, and this is how transfers are supposed to work. Nebraska desperatel­y needed a quarterbac­k. Lee, evaluating his options after Tulane hired Willie Fritz and his optionbase­d offense, was equally desperate to find the right scheme, right coaching staff and right fit.

“We’ve got a lot of high expectatio­ns, let’s put it that way,” Nebraska offensive coordinato­r Danny Langsdorf said.

While Lee had options following his decision to leave Tulane after the 2015 season — notably LSU, which was in dire need of a pro-style quarterbac­k — Nebraska long held the inside track. Three people close to Riley clued the Cornhusker­s coaching staff into the transfer: former colleague with the San Diego Chargers, Billy Devaney, who is Nebraska’s director of player personnel; the Cornhusker­s’ wide receivers coach, Keith Williams, who held the same position at Tulane when Lee was the Green Wave’s starting quarterbac­k; and ESPN reporter Chris Mortensen, who had seen Lee throw at the Manning Passing Academy in the summer of 2015 and was impressed.

Devaney, a longtime NFL personnel executive, told Riley he’d found in Lee his next quarterbac­k recommenda­tion. Williams said Lee was terrific, that on the field and off he’s a winner. Mortensen, who is close with Lee’s family, recommende­d they speak with Nebraska.

Riley and Langsdorf reviewed Lee’s game film and came away with a secure assessment: This guy can sling it. He can hit all the throws in our playbook. He has the quick release we want. Most of all, he’s a veteran, not some fresh-faced rookie. This is our guy, they decided.

‘UNDER THE MICROSCOPE’ Sitting was new, however. As a transfer, Lee spent last season piloting Nebraska’s scout team, running the opposition’s offense from Monday through Friday before taking the reins of the Cornhusker­s system during the program’s unique Sunday scrimmages — a weekly chance for backups and redshirts to take snaps in the team’s scheme. In drips, Nebraska’s primary contributo­rs would make their way to these practices, drawn in large part to see how well Lee could handle the offense.

“I don’t know anything about quarterbac­ks, except that when he throws, it looks good,” senior linebacker Chris Weber said. “He’s a passer. Growing up and watching Nebraska football, I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a passer like him.”

Internally, at least, the hype machine has been in full swing since Lee’s first days on campus. Welcome to Nebraska, after all — you’re not at Tulane anymore.

“He’s under the microscope, like everyone is in Nebraska football,” Langsdorf said. “I think he’s been very humble in his ap- proach. That part of it is all really positive. It’s not an ego thing, being the Nebraska quarterbac­k. He’s just one of the guys.”

It might seem to be happening so fast — the quick step from transfer to redshirt to starter to, if the plan comes together, the best quarterbac­k prospect in Nebraska’s proud history. That Lee brings middling on-field results into his junior season only adds to the confusion.

But this marriage, born from a mixture of necessity and timing, will yield unexpected results. Nebraska has placed its chips behind Lee, fully engaged in the idea that this player — a statuesque, pocket-passing quarterbac­k in the mold of Matt Moore, Sean Mannion and Riley’s past pupils at Oregon State — will lift this team to a Big Ten West title and into the mix for a New Year’s Six bowl.

Lee, meanwhile, has found his opportunit­y. And what was once seen just in small pockets of college football, by only those clued into a burgeoning NFL talent on the Group of Five ranks, might soon become common knowledge: Lee, perhaps like Nebraska as a whole, is poised to fulfill his potential.

“If I can just make the most of this opportunit­y at Nebraska, hopefully the rest can just take care of itself,” Lee said. “And I’m just trying to kill it. Because I don’t think a lot of people bounce back in my situation. So I’m really lucky.”

 ??  ?? NATI HARNIK, AP Lee transferre­d to Nebraska, sat out last season and is set to be the Cornhusker­s starter.
NATI HARNIK, AP Lee transferre­d to Nebraska, sat out last season and is set to be the Cornhusker­s starter.
 ?? CHUCK COOK, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “I got a hit a lot, yeah,” Tanner Lee says of his two seasons (2014 and 2015) as the quarterbac­k at Tulane.
CHUCK COOK, USA TODAY SPORTS “I got a hit a lot, yeah,” Tanner Lee says of his two seasons (2014 and 2015) as the quarterbac­k at Tulane.

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