11-28-2023, 02:19 PM
(11-28-2023, 11:44 AM)Housh Wrote: Dude was horrible
Should’ve had 3-4 picks
Didn’t hit Yoshi wide open for the bomb
Holds the ball too long instead of giving a guy like Chase a shot at a 50/50.
Dude is just not consistent enough to be considered a good QB.
Yeah that dot to Chase deep was amazing but i didn’t really notice another great throw
Lots of folks just want to write Browning off as if he never played QB. He was a Heisman candidate his sophomore year, coming in 6th in voting. So he held the ball too long trying to make things happen... so does Burrow. He's not consistent enough for you.... in his 1st NFL game. Gimme a break. Maybe let the guy play more than one game before writing him off. That game was ugly on both sides, but without the Thanksgiving gift of 7 points the referees gave Shitsburgh when they picked up the holding flag against Pratt, we would have won that game.
Quote:Browning HS career...I'd make it larger, but do not see how to change the font size....
At Folsom, Browning had a 4.0 GPA and set national and state high school records. In 46 games, he completed 1,191 of 1,708 attempts for 16,775 yards and 229 touchdowns, all California records. The 229 touchdowns also broke the national record held by Maty Mauk.[1] As a senior, he threw for a national-record 91 touchdown passes. He also passed for a California record of 5,790 yards, which broke his record from his junior year. Browning was the Gatorade Football Player of the Year during his junior and senior years.[2][3]
College career[[/url]edit]
Freshman[[url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jake_Browning&action=edit§ion=3&editintro=Template:BLP_editintro]edit]
In his first year at Washington, Browning became the second ever (in any game) true freshman to start at the quarterback position at UW (the other was Marques Tuiasosopo[6] vs. Oregon in 1997)[7] and the first true freshman to start a season opener for the Huskies. In his first career start, he completed 20 of 34 passes for 150 yards and one interception.[8][9]
Sophomore[edit]
In his sophomore year, Browning performed on a much higher level, guiding UW to a 12–2 record, and the Huskies' first conference championship since 2000.[10] He set a new record for touchdowns per attempt at 12.2%. On November 29, he was named Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Year and first-team all-Pac-12. Browning came in sixth in the 2016 Heisman Trophy voting, narrowly missing an invitation to attend the award ceremony in New York City.[11] His sixth-place finish is the second-best Heisman voting finish in school history, behind only Steve Emtman who finished fourth.
Browning underwent shoulder surgery on his throwing arm a couple of weeks after facing Alabama in the College Football Playoff. His injury was kept secret for nearly two months, and some commentators have speculated as to a connection between the injury and Browning's reduced performance in the later portion of the season.[12]
Junior[edit]
Browning started all 13 games of the 2017 season at quarterback, was named to the Academic All-Pac-12 second-team, was an honorable mention All-Pac-12, and broke the UW career touchdown passes record this year. Browning completed 230 of his attempted 336 throws, which was his highest throwing percentage. He threw for 19 touchdowns and had only 5 interceptions throughout the season. He threw for 2,719 yards as well.[13]
Senior[edit]
On September 29, Browning became the school's all-time passing leader in the team's game against BYU,[14] With the Pac-12 North Division title on the line, Browning led Washington against in-state rival and seventh-ranked Washington State on the road in the 111th Apple Cup. The Huskies won their second Pac-12 title in three years by defeating Utah in the 2018 Pac-12 Football Championship Game. The team was invited to the Rose Bowl, where they were defeated by Ohio State to end the year at 10–4, 7–2 in conference play. Browning finished the season 3,192 passing yards and a 16 touchdown passes.