Vols-Ohio State Features Young QB Phenom Against Savvy Veteran QB

Nico Iamaleava has been learning on the job with each snap, and Saturday night will be his 14th start this year for the seventh-ranked Tennessee Volunteers. Will Howard’s next start for No. 6 Ohio State could be his last in college.

The quarterbacks in Saturday night’s first-round College Football Playoff game in Columbus, Ohio, couldn’t be more different in terms of experience. The pressure is the same: Find a way to advance to the Rose Bowl against top-seeded Oregon on Jan. 1.

“I’ve been playing college football for five years now, and this is all I have left,” Howard said. “I have four games max left in my college career, so there’s no other option than to just empty the tank and leave it all out here. Because this is all we have left as college athletes. This is it.”

Iamaleava has faced big expectations since signing with Tennessee as one of the top prospects in the country.

He spent his first season learning behind Joe Milton III, now with the New England Patriots. Iamaleava made his starting debut on Jan. 1 in a rout of Iowa at the Citrus Bowl. He then went 10-2, becoming the Vols’ first quarterback to win 10 games in the regular season since Casey Clausen in 2003.

The California native downplayed the pressure of playing quarterback at Tennessee, which won its last national title in 1998 — a year after Peyton Manning wrapped up his career.

“Shoot, I don’t really think it was too much of a challenge, man,” Iamaleava said. “I knew what I signed up for when I came here. And yeah, being quarterback is a hard thing to do. But that’s what I came to do.”

When it comes to experience, Howard has the edge.

The 6-foot-4, 235-pounder arrived at Ohio State as a graduate transfer with 34 career starts at Kansas State. He made clear his job was getting the ball to the Buckeyes’ elite offensive playmakers, letting the rest take care of itself.

Categories: Sports – Local Sports News, Sports – UT Vols