drunkoski;498002 said:
to my eyes he absolutely did. did you watch the emerald bowl?
The truth is that in 2008 we were flip-flopping between two mediocre QBs. Tedford was hoping one of them would step up and be great, but it didn't happen. Let's look at the actual sequence of events:
-QB competition in preseason, eventually Tedford announces that Riley will start the opener against Michigan St. (to many people's surprise), but that Longshore will also play.
-Both QBs play against MSU, Riley having one of his best games and significantly outplaying Longshore.
-Riley starts the next three games, while Longshore only sees garbage time. However, Riley isn't exactly lighting the world on fire; his completion percentage stinks in wins over WSU and CSU (teams that should be relatively easy to score on), and he only pads his stats long after the Maryland game is lost.
-Given that Riley isn't looking great, Tedford returns to Longshore against ASU. Nate plays reasonably well in leading Cal to a win.
-Nate starts against Arizona. Looks good early, throws a crucial pick-6 in the second half. Riley enters in the 4th quarter for a futile comeback attempt.
-Riley starts next two games against UCLA and Oregon. Plays well against UCLA and starts well against Oregon before going down with a concussion. Nate finishes the Oregon game and plays well, given the bad weather conditions.
-Nate starts against USC, with Riley in relief. Neither QB looks great.
-Riley starts against Oregon St. Not a good game for him.
-Riley starts the remainder of the regular season. He doesn't need to do much in big wins over Furd and UW, as Jahvid Best dominates the offensive yardage in both games.
-Nate plays the entire Emerald Bowl (agreed, this was surprising). He's mediocre, but good enough to win.
Given all of that, I don't see a clear preference for Nate Longshore over Kevin Riley. Riley got the start in the first game and in the majority of games. When Nate started, it was because Riley wasn't playing well or because he had been hurt. The only exception is the Emerald Bowl, that's it. I don't think we can extrapolate from that to show that Tedford clearly prioritizes experience in his decision-making. He was flip-flopping because he had two inconsistent options.