LINCOLN — Nebraska football fans sure do like their quarterback chatter. How much will it hurt returning starter Zac Lee to miss spring ball while recovering from surgery? Does that mean Cody Green can win the job now?
Will Kody Spano get to show his skills after two ACL tears in the same knee? Is Taylor Martinez a real threat considering the high praise he got last week from coach Bo Pelini?
In the future, will walk-on Ron Kellogg III — son of former Kansas basketball star Ron Kellogg Jr. — get a chance? And how soon can 2010 recruit Brion Carnes get into the mix?
That's everybody, right?
Not quite. Ol' No. 15 — Latravis Washington — is still in the house, and he's taking Pelini at his word that the depth chart is in flux entering the 2010 season.
“I'm well in the mix,'' said the senior from Bradenton, Fla. “I talk on the field, I don't talk in the press. I let my play do the talking.
“Coach Pelini told us the first day he's going to play the best 11 on each side. So you've got to compete.''
A year ago, Washington converted from linebacker to quarterback. His big arm and some big plays in the 2009 spring game piqued interest. As the No. 3 quarterback last fall, the 6-foot-3, 230-pounder saw mop-up duty in four games with three rushing attempts and no passes.
Washington said his drive to get more playing time has centered on smoothing out some mechanics.
“I've really focused on my release,'' he said. “I've started watching film to check my release points, and I'm focusing on that through these practices so far. That's a big deal to my game I need to improve.''
Though just in his second season at quarterback, Washington said he feels comfortable having absorbed coordinator Shawn Watson's offensive system.
“There's really not that much learning now,'' Washington said. “Coach Watson gives you a sheet and you tell him what you know, and he'll call those plays.
“I think I've accomplished a lot in a year.''
So has the entire quarterback group, he said.
“We're a close group,'' Washington said. “We're all friends. We stick together. We give each other feedback and try to critique each other. That's how we improve.''
The internal competition and feedback in some organizations can become petty and counterproductive. But that's not the case in Nebraska football under Pelini, Washington said.
“Guys respect each other,'' he said. “It's to the point where you don't want to let a teammate down. Competition is everything, and coach Pelini holds us to a high standard. So we hold everybody else to a high standard.
“Playing for coach Pelini, if you're not a guy who is going to bust your butt every day, he doesn't want you.''
As Washington enters his final spring drills at Nebraska, he admits to spending a few moments reminiscing.
“I've had a great college career here, and I would tell anybody that,'' he said. “It's been a fun ride, and I'm enjoying it.''
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