• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

QB Prentiss "Air" Noland (Official Thread)

Air Noland “Keeping the Main Thing the Main Thing” in Developmental Freshman Year at Ohio State​

148213_h.jpg


Even though he was the No. 4 quarterback in the 2024 recruiting class, Air Noland currently appears likely to be the No. 5 quarterback on Ohio State’s 2024 depth chart.

The true freshman took the fewest reps among Ohio State’s five scholarship quarterbacks during the four practices that were open to the media and paying fans to start preseason camp. While fellow freshman Julian Sayin has thrust himself into the competition to climb the depth chart right away, Noland has been stuck at the back of the quarterback line since spring.

The initial plan wasn’t for Noland, the No. 56 overall prospect in his cycle, to be part of a two-quarterback recruiting class. That only became a reality when Sayin entered the transfer portal in January after briefly enrolling at Alabama, opening up an opportunity to get the class’ top-ranked quarterback that Ohio State couldn’t pass up. Ever since then, Noland’s name has frequently been attached to transfer speculation, especially with Sayin turning heads in his first offseason as a Buckeye.

But Noland, like the rest of Ohio State’s quarterbacks, stayed with the Buckeyes after spring concluded rather than throwing his name in the transfer portal. He understands that climbing the depth chart at Ohio State is a process, and he says he’s keeping his focus on his long-term development rather than worrying about his spot in the pecking order right now.

“It can be challenging, but you have to keep the main thing the main thing and stay focused with the plan, with the process, with everything that's going on,” Noland said Tuesday in his first group interview session as a Buckeye. “It's a process out here. Development is a big thing with us, so I have to learn and take my time and the process, everything will equal out.”
.
.
.
continued
 
Upvote 0
Hope this kid keeps grinding, life for a frosh is always tough but especially in a crowded QB room. He'll need time to develop, but he seems to understand he wasn't going to start out of the gate. His upside is enormous though, so if he focuses on development and learning the playbook this year, he can position himself for next year.
 
Upvote 0
Agreed. It will be interesting to see how the next two years play out. If Sayin wins the spot next year over Brown and Lincoln, I don't see him giving it up. I could see Noland taking a redshirt and then starting as a junior and either lighting it up and moving on or returning as a senior. Of course, he'll have to fight off TSC to do all that or maybe it's Sayin that has to, if Noland takes a big development jump and winds up with the reins. All great problems to have, especially with the ever distant memory of starting a safety at QB still haunting my psyche.
 
Upvote 0
Agreed. It will be interesting to see how the next two years play out. If Sayin wins the spot next year over Brown and Lincoln, I don't see him giving it up. I could see Noland taking a redshirt and then starting as a junior and either lighting it up and moving on or returning as a senior. Of course, he'll have to fight off TSC to do all that or maybe it's Sayin that has to, if Noland takes a big development jump and winds up with the reins. All great problems to have, especially with the ever distant memory of starting a safety at QB still haunting my psyche.
2011 was the worst year of QB play in my lifetime
 
Upvote 0
Do kids even do that anymore? Seems to me, the majority either start early or just transfer to where they can.

Yes a lot do. Most kids stay at least one year at the place that signed them and rarely get enough time as Freshman to burn a redshirt
Are we talking college football or Ohio state football?

Just QBs or are we including other skill positions or linemen too?

Seems there are a few criteria that greatly affect the probability of taking a RS that haven’t been mentioned
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top