The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Relax, freshman QB’s struggles should have been expected

Eason should be better in 2017 after 13-game seasoning.

- Jeff Schultz

MEMPHIS, TENN. — Jacob Eason will be better next season. He will be better because he will have played 13 games, his offensive line and offensive coordinato­r can’t possibly be worse than they were this season and, for as many misfires as he had in Friday’s Liberty Bowl, he looked composed and under control down the stretch of a close game.

“My first year, I had a lot of ups and downs,” Georgia’s freshman quarterbac­k said after a 31-23 win over TCU. “I definitely had some things I’d like to take back. But I learned a lotthrough it. So the biggest thing for me is to learn from the mistakes I made this season and the good plays I made and come back better.”

Eason did not have a brilliant final performanc­e. He sailed several passes, including one when he had Terry Godwin open on the right sideline for a potential touchdown. He completed only 12 of 21 attempts and his 164 passing yards mostly were attributed to great yards after the catch by Isaiah McKenzie (77-yarder) and Sony Michel (33-yard touchdown on a check-down).

But what Eason didn’t do was force the ball into coverage when protection broke down or the running game wasn’t there, which was often.

He didn’t throw an intercepti­on (his two touchdowns left him with a TD-intercepti­on ratio of 16-8, or 2-1).

He also moved around frequently in the pocket to buy time and had a 15-yard scramble.

He also eluded TCU’s pass rush to get into position to complete the pass to McKenzie that turned into the 77-yarder (which set up a touchdown).

I’ve written several times that expectatio­ns for Eason were far too high this season.

Blame that on the obsession with recruiting. Blame it on the general I-want-it-now mentality of fans.

This isn’t a sport where freshman quarterbac­ks often perform well, particular­ly in the SEC.

Eason believes he has made “tremendous improvemen­t” from the opening game against North Carolina to the 13th against TCU. Referencin­g his running, he said. “At the beginning of the year, moving around wasn’t my biggest thing. But I’m more comfortabl­e doing that now, even though running is definitely not one of my strengths.”

On his accuracy issues: “I definitely missed a touchdown throw. That’s the frustratin­g part of this experience. Would I like to have it back? Sure. I need to be able to hit those throws. But all in all, I’m thankful for the job everybody around me did.”

The grading curve will be tougher next season.

Of course, that won’t stop many from calling for incoming freshman Jake Fromm to start.

Please, don’t.

 ?? MARK WEBER / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Georgia’s freshman quarterbac­k Jacob Eason makes a throw against TCU during the first quarter of the Bulldogs’ 31-23 Liberty Bowl victory Friday over TCU in Memphis, Tenn.
MARK WEBER / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Georgia’s freshman quarterbac­k Jacob Eason makes a throw against TCU during the first quarter of the Bulldogs’ 31-23 Liberty Bowl victory Friday over TCU in Memphis, Tenn.
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