But I'd be more concerned if our savior transfer from the lower league can't dominate the backup.
Then again, Dave's inability to scout and manage roster is a known issue.
Here's hoping this is just offseason talk.
Try SicEm365 Premium 1 week for $1.00!
For the first time since 2021, head coach Dave Aranda and Baylor football have yet to announce a starting quarterback going into the fall.
The two players competing for the QB1 job are returning redshirt junior Sawyer Robertson and Toledo transfer and sixth-year senior DeQuan Finn.
“It’ll be a fall camp decision,” Aranda confirmed to 365Sports on Wednesday at Big 12 Media Days.
“I don’t know who it is right now. With both of those guys, there are things they have to work on, but it got to the end of the spring, and I’m like, ‘Man, I wish we had two more weeks.’ I’m hopeful that’s how it plays out here in fall camp.”
Finn, the reigning MAC Player of the Year, has started 32 games in his career and has thrown for over 7,000 yards and 63 touchdowns. The Toledo transfer is known for his electric scrambling ability, rushing for 1,840 yards and 25 touchdowns across his four seasons with the Rockets. In recent weeks, Finn was named one of the top standouts at the Manning Passing Academy.
“Everything before [at Toledo] was left, and when Dequan came over here, now everything is right,” Aranda said.
“Dequan took all online courses at his previous school, for example. Now he’s going to class, and we’re checking class. It’s how you embrace that, how you accept that and how you move into that. That also affects football and everything else; he was great with it, and the later we got in spring, the more he embraced it and his play improved.”
Meanwhile, Robertson played in six games, with four starts, for the Bears last season, filling in for an injured Blake Shapen, who has since transferred to Mississippi State. In those six contests, Robertson threw for 864 yards and two touchdowns while rushing for 69 yards on 35 attempts.
“With Sawyer, it’s his competitiveness; here’s an offense that fits him,” Aranda said. “Here’s an offense where he can play and not have to think as much.”