From Deseret News archives:

BYU football: Coaches like what they see from Jake Heaps

Published: Wednesday, March 24, 2010 12:00 a.m. MDT
PRINT | FONT + - 

PROVO — In the history of BYU football, only two true freshmen quarterbacks have taken snaps as starters, and both of their stints in that role were brief.

Neither began their respective careers as the starter, and their debuts were out of dire need, not necessarily because they were ready to shoulder that kind of burden.

Drew Miller became the first true freshman QB to start a game for the Cougars, in 1997, taking over for an injured Kevin Feterik. That resulted in a humbling 14-3 loss at lowly UTEP. After his sophomore year, Miller, frustrated with his lack of playing time, transferred to Montana, where he was the starter in 1999 and 2000.

In 2003, as a true freshman, John Beck started for an injured Matt Berry at home against Stanford and the Cougars suffered an 18-14 defeat. Beck dealt with plenty of setbacks that season, going 1-3 as a starter. But by the time his career was over, he established himself as a three-year starter, guided BYU to a conference championship as a senior, and he went on to become an NFL draft pick.

While Miller was just months removed from high school when he started his first collegiate game, Beck had served a mission and participated in spring drills before his first season in Provo.

Then there's the true freshman who didn't start, or play, at BYU — Ben Olson, the consensus No. 1 quarterback coming out of high school in 2002. He signed with the Cougars, but then-coach Gary Crowton opted to redshirt the young phenom. Olson served a mission after his first year, then transferred to UCLA.

This spring, BYU coaches are evaluating three quarterbacks, including true freshman Jake Heaps, who finished high school early in order to enroll in January. He's battling junior Riley Nelson and sophomore James Lark while redshirt freshman Jason Munns, who is currently on a mission, joins the fray in August.

Coaches say they likely won't name a starter until fall camp.

During his prep career at Skyline High in Issaquah, Wash., Heaps was 40-2 as a starter and was ranked the No. 1 prep QB in the country by Scout.com. He threw for 9,196 yards, 114 touchdowns and 18 interceptions in leading Skyline to three consecutive state championships.

Could Heaps become the next true freshman to start at BYU?

While quarterbacks coach Brandon Doman says it's too early to say, he added that Heaps isn't your average freshman.

"Jake is far beyond his years. For an 18-year-old young man, he should be 18 right now, but he's not. He's acting like a 23-year-old veteran," said Doman. "That's very unique. That's his No. 1 strength right now — his maturity and confidence for how young he is. It allows him to succeed out there. He's also been trained well. Credit his coaches who have trained him through the years.

About this ad

View Comments

DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.

– About Comments

rss icon

Recommended in Sports

Story

The Utah Jazz will not be represented at the All-Star Game later this month in Orlando.

Story

The Aggies are finding out that being at home cures all ills.

Story

It's not a surprise when most BYU players decide to leave for LDS missions. For other players, it comes as a shock

In Sports Across Site

Check out Jazzland for the latest Utah Jazz insights from Jody Genessy.