He only missed on a few targets and shined both when tossing farther down the field and when getting on the move. Rolling to his right and tossing into the end zone across his body, he put beautiful touch on his passes.
The competitors is stiff, though, with several other five-stars in town and the future Clemson (Cade Klubnik) and Alabama (Ty Simpson) quarterbacks attempting to knock him off.
Among Ewers couple of bugaboos, and the one that garnered the biggest reaction, came on his last pass of the day. As part of the rail shot competitors, he missed his receiver by tossing it too far beyond him and got eliminated in the second round..
” It draws being precise throughout the day and after that missing the one in the competition,” Ewers stated. “Ive got to come out here tomorrow and make up for it.”.
MANHATTAN BEACH, Calif.– One down, two to go.
” Obviously it challenges everyone a lot more,” Ewers said. “Honestly, I seem like everybody just came out here and had more enjoyable than they had at these other types of camps. They kind of just rolled with the flow and had a lot of fun out here.”
The three-day Elite 11 Finals opened on Wednesday night with 22 of the top high school quarterbacks in participation, offering Ohio State commit Quinn Ewers a strong field versus which to compete.
As he explained, he was focused on the “freaking snap count” while attempting to be both loud and a bit amusing.