I'd sign to have one competent QB on the roster right now. To say we have 3 capable, well, I admire your optimism.
I am hoping we have 3 capable quarterbacks, Sherriffs, Boyle and Anderson with Tyler Davis and Brandon Bisak in development mode. My assessment is based on the following info.
Below is the best written material in chronological order that I think we have on QB situation to date. Sherriffs appears to be the leader in the clubhouse according to Diaco. He also states that Boyle is pushing hard (which is what I eluded to, for the #1 spot. It appears that Garrett Anderson is highly regarded but unproven accept for his JC record.
New Haven Register 4/10/2015
The No. 1 question heading into spring camp was who was going to be the starting quarterback. If Diaco knows the answer to that, he’s keeping it to himself. Bryant Shirreffs, who sat out last season after transferring from North Carolina State, has been working with the first team during the 7-on-7 and 11-on-11 drills the media was allowed to watch. Tim Boyle, who started the last three games of 2014, is the only quarterback on the roster to have taken a snap for the Huskies. According to Diaco,
Boyle is pushing hard for the starting spot. True freshman Tyler Davis has also been seeing time during spring drills.
“
All the quarterbacks look great,” senior tight end Sean McQuillan said earlier in spring camp. “Bryant is working really hard, Tim is working hard; Tyler, it’s a little foreign to him coming out of high school but he’s doing great. The big thing from them is taking control and making it theirs. When they step into the huddle it has to be their huddle and all of those guys are doing a great job of that and establishing themselves.”
SNY 3/4/2015
What that pecking order will be remains an even battle right now. Boyle, a junior, has had several opportunities to grab the starting job over the previous two years and has been unable to do so. Boyle pass for 355 yards, completing 52.4 percent of passes, with one touchdown and three interceptions.
The talented thrower from Middletown has never got going at UConn in two years that didn’t go according to play. Boyle’s goal each of the his previous two seasons was to gain a redshirt year. He was always pushed into action and has looked overwhelmed. He has completed 47.4 percent of passes for 956 yards and 1 TD to go against 11 interceptions. This is Boyle’s second spring practice at UConn and while he is the most veteran of QBs, remains a young player in snaps and age.
Shirreffs comes as a transfer from N.C. State and
Diaco described him as a linebacker playing quarterback.
His speed and agility are superior to Boyle and he has a good enough arm to play the position. He’s stronger, faster, but doesn’t have quite the throwing ability of Boyle.
“Physically, they are different, they move different,” Diaco said of Shirreffs and Boyle. “Bryant is a quicker and faster player. He’s overall core strength and body strength. He’s a stronger overall player body-wise than the other twp. He’s a faster player in term of leg and running speed…
“Tim has a stronger arm in terms of velocity, rotation, down the field length. There’s a strength right there in Tim’s corner. Tim’s taller from a vision standpoint. I am excited to see what decisions they both make moving forward.”
UCONN Blog 4/12/2015
UConn Football: Quarterback battle has a leader, competition will continue...
Bob Diaco has declared a leader in the quarterback race. But two new players will join the roster in June and the competition will continue into fall camp.
Diaco maintained Shirreff's hold on the lead after the game, ahead of Tim Boyle, with freshmanTyler Davis in third.
Shirreffs has a decent arm, but has gained separation from the pack thanks to his ability to extend plays with his legs. The NC State transfer looked rusty at the start of yesterday's action, and understandably so, but ultimately Diaco was pleased with his performance, "(early on) you could see he hadn't played on an actual football field in a stadium for a few years. After maybe five minutes, six minutes in he seemed to settle into some form."
Even though Shirreffs missed on a couple of his throws and had a few passes batted down at the line, he remains the leading candidate for the starting quarterback job. Diaco seems to favor a quarterback who can run and it shows with the players he has brought in thus far, including Shirreffs, freshman Tyler Davis, and two new faces who will join the team in June.
Both newcomers, one a junior college transfer (Anderson) and the other a preferred walk-on, (Bisak) will be in the fold according to Diaco, who repeatedly insists these two are not just "camp arms" brought in to take practice reps.
Garrett Anderson, a quarterback from Laney Junior College in Oakland, California is the most likely of the two new guys to be a factor in this competition. Standing at 6-foot-2, 225 pounds, Anderson will be eligible to play right away. He also had an offer from Houston, and was scheduled to visit Colorado State, but cancelled the trip and committed to UConn after visiting the first spring practice.
Anderson, who runs a 4.6 40-yard dash according to Hudl, can make plays with his feet. At the beginning of his highlight reel, you see him evade the rush, roll to his left, and whip the ball 35 yards downfield to an open receiver. You see more of the same across the rest of tape. He earned the starting job as a freshman at Laney, but actually lost it in his sophomore year to UNLV-bound Kurt Palendech.
While Garrett Anderson could make a splash in the competition,
I believe Tim Boyle has the best chance of supplanting Shirreffs from the top spot. Diaco mentioned that Boyle had nagging issues in two key areas which affected his lower-body mechanics last year but is now fully healthy.
It really showed in Boyle's performance yesterday, with Diaco describing his improvement as "profound."
"[Boyle] played well, he's getting better," Diaco said after the spring game, "If you go back and watch a few tapes of it, you'll see a little bit more bend in his ankles and knees and waist because he feels better. So he's finally healthy for the first time. His drops are so much cleaner.
His balance and weight distribution when he throws is so much better."
Even though Boyle doesn't fully fit the mold for the type of quarterback Diaco prefers, the junior still has room to grow and the opportunity to capitalize on the potential of his strong arm and ideal frame. This is his first chance to experience continuity in the coaching staff and he also still needs time to wash off the post-traumatic stress of being thrown into the fire as a freshman behind a wet paper bag o-line.