As the Gophers move through their practices toward the April 11 Spring Game who is their No. 2 quarterback?
“If it was tomorrow it would be Chris (Streveler) because of the experience factor, but I think Chris would be the first one to tell you he’s gotta continue to perform,” offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover said last week. “It’s no secret that…Jacques Perra from Roseville really opened some eyes with some things he did—just being around the program and now in the spring. There’s a pretty good competition that’s developing there. I think Chris is still the No. 2 but I think Jacques is getting bigger and bigger in his rearview mirror.”
Mitch Leidner is a lock as the team’s No. 1 quarterback but injury or illness could force him to the sidelines during Minnesota’s 12-game schedule in 2015. Last fall Streveler, then a redshirt freshman, filled in for an injured Leidner. Streveler started the San Jose State game, rushing for 161 yards (third most ever for a Gophers quarterback) while completing one of seven passes.
Perra joined the program as a non-scholarship quarterback last year but didn’t play as a redshirt freshman. He did impress the coaches, and Limegrover described Perra as a more “natural thrower” than Streveler who is a gifted runner.
In spring practices so far Leidner has received more work with the team’s better offensive players. Not playing with a superior supporting group in practice makes it more difficult to fairly evaluate Streveler and Perra, Limegrover said. But Limegrover expects that to change as the Gophers move through their last six spring sessions.
Limegrover will then have a better report card on Streveler and Perra, but he already believes both can be starting Big Ten quarterbacks. Leidner will be a redshirt junior next season so he is one class ahead of Streveler and two in front of Perra. The future Gophers starting quarterback could be one of the two current backups.
Streveler is a scholarship player who was All-State his senior season at Marian Catholic in Woodstock, Illinois. His straight ahead speed is impressive and the best among the Gophers quarterbacks. Streveler, who in 2014 was Academic All-Big Ten, can make explosive gains on designed runs and scrambles from the pocket. While fans saw an unpolished passer last fall, he has made some good throws this spring and is a fierce competitor who will work to improve. Streveler is a leader, too, and last summer he and Leidner got players together for volunteer practices—something that impressed Limegrover.
Perra was All-State and the Minnesota Gatorade Player of the Year at Roseville High School where in his senior season he threw for over 3,100 yards and 35 touchdowns. “The great thing about Jacques is that I don’t know if he has a bad day.” Limegrover said. “There isn’t a whole lot that bothers him. Not a whole lot that phases him.”
If an observer just watched Perra, and didn’t see all the other things happening on a particular play, the person probably wouldn’t know what happened because the 19-year-old quarterback is so under control. “I think that part of his makeup is fantastic,” Limegrover said. “…This kid was put on this earth to play quarterback.”
Limegrover said incoming freshman Demry Croft could figure in the plan to determine the No. 2 quarterback. The Gophers tell all their new players not to assume they will redshirt and Limegrover is enthusiastic about the 6-5 quarterback from Boylan High School in Rockford, Illinois.
“We feel like the sky’s the limit for him,” Limegrover said. “We feel like he’s a kid that at some point might overtake these two (Streveler and Perra). That’s what you try and do every year. You’re trying to recruit to beat out the ones that you already have in the program—and that’s how you go from 3-9, to 6-6 (records). If you get to that point, where you’re doing that every year, that’s when special things happen.”
Why does Limegrover talk about Croft having so much potential?”
“We saw that he had a lot of athletic ability when we saw his film as a junior,” the coach said. “Then being able to see him live at camp and watch him throw the football, and how he approached camp and being coached, and how he went about his business, and his physical tools.
“There’s a maturity there. He’s not your typical dimply faced 17-year-old kid. There was kind of a presence about him, which you really like in your quarterback.”