Rutgers’ Quarterback Crisis: Why Homegrown Talent Has Evaded the Scarlet Knights for Years

Rutgers' Quarterback Crisis: Why Homegrown Talent Has Evaded the Scarlet Knights for Years

Rutgers football has been wandering in a quarterback wilderness for what feels like forever — a stretch nearing a decade and a half without cultivating a true homegrown signal-caller from freshman recruit to seasoned veteran under center. Imagine that: since Gary Nova, part of the 2011 recruiting haul, took snaps as a bona fide starter and then moved on, no Scarlet Knight quarterback has been developed fully from the ground up. That’s a drought rivaled only by a handful of Power Four programs like South Carolina and Auburn, painting a stark picture of the challenges Rutgers has faced in nurturing and holding onto talent at the most pivotal position in football. What’s behind this? A cocktail of coaching misfires—hello, Chris Ash era—and just plain bad luck, where promising talents like Chris Laviano and Gavin Whimsatt couldn’t quite find their footing despite opportunities and support. Add in the modern twists of the transfer portal and NIL realities, and it’s no wonder that fostering a homegrown star has been an uphill climb. But there’s a spark of hope flickering now with AJ Surace in the mix, aiming to rewrite this narrative and end the years-long quarterback drought. Will Rutgers break this spell and finally roll with one of their own? Time will tell, but the stakes have never been higher. LEARN MORE

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