When Cody Green was recruited in 2008, expectations were high. He was compared to Vince Young because of the physical similarities and to Tommie Frazier since he was a true freshman capable of stepping in and starting midway through his first season. Those expectations are too much to lay on anyone, but particularly when Green stepped into tougher circumstances than either Young or Frazier. Young had the benefit of a full redshirt season and a team surrounding him that was loaded with blue chip offensive talent. Frazier joined a team that was the defending champion of the Big 8 at a time when a number of conference teams were not very competitive.
Like Young, Green struggled as a passer as a freshman. Young ran wild, racking up nearly 1,000 yards and 11 touchdowns despite sharing quarterback duties with Chance Mock (yes, that was his real name). Green was second only to Roy Helu in yards per carry, though at 5.1 it was much more modest than Young's gaudy 7.4. Still it was better than Frazier's freshman average of 4.6. Another NU quarterback to consider for comparison's sake might be Steve Taylor, who also played as a true freshman and shares the ten-yard dash record for quarterbacks at Nebraska with Cody Green. Taylor walked away with most of the NU quarterback rushing records, a Big 8 title and All-America honors. Taylor appeared in just five games as a freshman though, rushing for over 7 yards per carry with a pair of touchdowns, but completing just 3 of 6 passes with an interception.
As a sophomore, Young finally managed more touchdowns than interceptions, over 1,000 yards rushing and most importantly an 11-1 record and a Rose Bowl victory. Frazier boosted his yards per carry by a full yard and took his team to an 11-1 record and a near miss at a national championship in his second season. Taylor similarly grabbed the reins at quarterback as a sophomore and led Nebraska to a 10-2 record and Sugar Bowl victory over LSU to put NU in the top 5 nationally. None of these players put up gaudy passing numbers, but all were still able to use their dual-threat skills to help make their team a dominant one.
Is it fair to compare Green to such an accomplished set of quarterbacks? Maybe, maybe not. But the point is that none of them had it all figured out as freshmen or even really as sophomores. Still, the gains they and their teams made in one year took them from outside the top ten, to a top five ranking. It's certainly conceivable that the same could happen with Green. He likely won't become as good as he'll ever be. But he could become effective enough to help make Nebraska a top team nationally, and his somewhat underwhelming freshman year certainly doesn't take him out of the running to be the kind of prospect he looked to be coming out of high school.
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