Nico Iamaleava To UCLA – Could Jake Merklinger Start for Tennessee

Tennessee quarterback Jake Merklinger (12) catches the ball after a snap during a NCAA game between Tennessee and Kent State in Neyland Stadium in Knoxville on Saturday, Sept. 14, 2024. / Angelina Alcantar/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

As the dust from the Nico Iamaleave departure settles, we take a look at what could be Tennessee’s best answer in the form of Jake Merklinger.

The Tennessee Volunteers are sett to enter the 2025 summer portion of the offseason with two scholarship quarterbacks on the roster following the dramatic transfer of former five-star QB, Nico Iamaleava, neither of which have started a game in college football. 

Iamaleava leaves the Vols pretty high and dry, particularly from a depth perspective. The industry standard at quarterback is typically to carry at least three, most likely four, scholarship QBs. Now, the Vols are searching high and low for potential portal additions, attempting to turn over ever leaf in that category. 

However, the most immediate answer appears to already be on roster. Sophomore QB, Jake Merklinger. So, today, we take a look at what Tennessee has in Merklinger. 

As a prep player, Merklinger attended Calvary Day in Savannah, Georgia. A smaller school, playing 2A high-school football, Merklinger played with several division one athletes from South Carolina TE, Michael Smith, to Georgia WR, Thomas Blackshear. A four-star recruit, Merklinger compiled almost 10,000 passing yards in four years as a starter. After throwing (12) interceptions as a freshman in high school, Merklinger saw a drastic decrease, dropping to just four total over his final two years of high school ball, while 72.1% of his passes as senior. 

You don’t complete 72.1% of your passes on air without relatively decent mechanics and a repetitive throwing motion. You dang sure don’t do it against defenses unless you’re mechanically clean and a natural thrower of the football. This wasn’t you’re typical screen and go high school offense at Calvary Day either. He was driving the ball down the field regularly. 

As an athlete, he’s serviceable and winnable from an “extend the play” standpoint. Since his senior year in high school, it’s clear over the last 18 months that he’s put on 10 to 15 pounds and continued to develop even more arm strength. 

This isn’t a world’s strongest arm award winner by any stretch of the means, but his accuracy is off the charts and he can put the football where he wants, while also having played (51) high school games as a starter. That savvy football knowledge and comfort were on display in his collegiate debut in 2024 when he entered the game against UT Chattanooga and completed four straight passes for 31 yards.

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Published 21 Minutes Ago|Modified 10:15 AM EDT

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