Sounds like he's stepping up this year.
Hopefully Miles' stays away this year. ray:
http://sportspressnw.com/2202148/2015/t ... ed-colored
Hopefully Miles' stays away this year. ray:
Jeff Lindquist is returning from the margins of Huskies football, flashing some accuracy and smart decisions Saturday to take the lead in the 3-way contest for the starting QB job.
What can be fairly deduced from a single afternoon at Husky Stadium of deeds and not words – as with all coaches, Chris Petersen won’t call a winner at the quarter pole – is that Lindquist, a bit of a lunk as a sophomore, has his smooth on as a junior.
Pedigree is with his two younger rivals from California, true freshman Jake Browning and redshirt freshman K.J. Carta-Samuels, but but experience and command is with Lindquist, which he seems to relish.
“I took the Papa Bear role with the young guys,” he said, grinning. He even called Browning, who graduated early from his high school in Sacramento to enroll at UW in January, “Mr. Protégé.”
If we can take from that inference that Lindquist thinks he’s grooming his eventual successor, we can also take from his 13-for-16, 237-yard, two-TD performance in the controlled scrimmage that succession is unlikely to begin this September.
Petersen at least acknowledged the obvious.
“Jeff has done a nice job — he really has taken a step forward,” Petersen said. “He’s making better decisions. He’s throwing more accurately.”
Lindquist, meanwhile, fell into a limited role as a sort of a gadget guy, a Wildcat-formation operative whose cameos produced 10 completions in 30 attempts for 162 yards. He also ran 16 times for 63 yards, a skill that seemed his forte as QB.
But on a sun-spattered afternoon, Lindquist’s improved delivery and decisions constituted the day’s bright spot. Everyone always knew he had a cannon, which he demonstrated during a break in practice when students are invited to the field to do simple drills and win prizes. In the long toss, he showed up as the ringer and threw for about 61 yards, nearly doubling the student weenie-arms.
But this spring he showed something other than a fastball.
“Sometimes I felt like he didn’t have to anticipate because he could throw it late,” said offensive coordinator Jonathan Smith. “I think he’s throwing the ball with some anticipation and some touch.”
Noteworthy was one beauty, a roll-out scramble to his right from 37 yards out. He floated the ball to the near corner of the end zone where WR Jaydon Mickens leaped between two defenders for the over-the-shoulder catch while getting one foot down in play.
Asked if it was a 50-50 ball, Lindquist said, “I think I threw it a little better than that but he made a great catch. Props to that guy.”
Lindquist also hooked up with Dante Pettis for the day’s longest play, a 71-yard TD pass that was mostly biceps, not feet.
Browning completed 11 of 18 passes for 59 yards and had two picks, and Carta-Samuels was 11 of 12 for 123 yards and a pick. The numbers were relatively meaningless because of play against second- and third-unit defenses, as well as the thinness of the O-line, which has several starters out with injuries. But it was plain that Lindquist not only knew more about what he was doing, he did it much better than a year ago.
“The big thing for me was accuracy – I’ve done a lot better this spring,” Lindquist said. “Understanding the offense is part of growing as a quarterback. That piece has been a lot better for me. Getting comfortable with the guys you’re throwing to is a big piece, too.
“Where I am now, I’m pretty happy.”
Lindquist is unlikely to make any Huskies fan forget Marques Tuiasosopo, But it would appear he’s doing enough at the moment to make some forget sophomore Lindquist.
http://sportspressnw.com/2202148/2015/t ... ed-colored