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Monday, October 11, 2010

Monday Morning Quarterback: Oregon State QB Ryan Katz growing in Riley's system

As I woke up this morning to a heavy fog in Orange County I could not help but be reminded of all those cold, brisk 8 a.m. walks to campus on Monday morning in Corvallis. With game day in the books and solid weekend of studying for anatomy exams, partying and shooting the breeze with friends, my sophomore year at Oregon State was without a doubt something special. Flash forward to my second year of graduate school and while I may not be hitting the books as often as I used to, another tried and true, but far most publicized sophomore, is quietly working his way into the hearts and minds of Beaver Nation and the Pac-10. Ryan Katz, the redshirt sophomore quarterback for the #24 Oregon State Beavers turned in yet another noteworthy performance this weekend in Tucson. The Santa Monica, CA native completed 30 of 42 passes for 393 yards and two touchdowns in Saturdays 29-27 Pac-10 road opener against the #9 Arizona Wildcats. Having lost his first two non conference road games to AP Top 10 opponents TCU and Boise State, the young Katz turned in an outstanding performance that left many of us wondering if the conference may have just gotten a little deeper at the quarterback position. Having played in only a handful of games last year, Katz came into OSU highly touted as the next signal caller to replace veteran Sean Canfield. Having had two years to work under Head Coach Mike Riley, arguably the most underrated coach in the country, as well as 7th round draft pick in Canfield, Katz has displayed an unbelievable amount of poise this season in the face of one of the nations toughest schedules. Having started his first game at Cowboys Stadium against then #6 TCU, one could only imagine the swing of emotions the redshirt sophomore could have been feeling as he left pass after pass sailing over or rocketing past his intended receivers for most of the game. With a week to recover from the disappointing 31-20 loss, Katz and the offense rebounded significantly with a huge 35-28 victory over Louisville at home. Having established the running game against the Cardinals, Jacquizz Rodgers 132 yards on the ground and two touchdowns were a welcome sign for an offense that was uncharacteristically pass heavy in its debut in Texas just a week earlier. Katz was impressive however at 15/26 for 142 yards and two touchdowns, having left briefly in the third quarter after taking a shot to the ribs that left him noticeably shaken on the sidelines. Flash forward to Boise State and the Pac-10 conference opener one week later against ASU. Having turned in a rather average performance once again on the road in Boise against the nations 3rd ranked defense, Katz and the Beavers looked to bonce back at home having come off its ninth straight home opening win just three weeks earlier. With the Pac-10 in a state of limbo and with the notion of Arizona State narrowly pulling off an upset bid the weekend before versus #3 Oregon, Katz again stepped up to the plate and delivered a strong 19/29 for 260 yards and two touchdown performance. Having not thrown an interception in his first four games, Katz had the Beavers sitting at 2-2 and just out of the AP Top 25 heading into last Saturdays contest against the Wildcats. With a win over the Arizona, Katz took a step in the right direction and supplanted himself into the mix among the quarterback elite in the Pac-10. But if there's one the Pac-10 and Beaver Nation know about Mike Riley's team, its that they usually start slow but always hit there stride come conference play. Katz's introduction coming against a schedule rated the toughest in the nation so far having already faced TCU, No. 12 nationally in total defense, Boise State (No. 3), Louisville (No. 52), Arizona State (No. 49) and now having toppled Arizona (No. 4) last weekend. It would be easy for one to assume Katz has seen everything in terms of schematics, coaching and overall defensive talent after last weekend, but the Pac-10 is always a crap shoot and he will have to continue to improve if the Beavers are going to remain in bowl contention this season. From the looks of things the schedule doesn't get any easier for the Beavers as they head to Seattle to take a hungry Washington Husky team that is looking to establish their identity in the conference as well. Having beat USC on the road two weeks ago and with the Dawgs coming off another tough loss the ASU, all eyes with be on Washington Quarterback Jake Locker on Saturday in a game that is sure to generate some buzz airing on ESPN at 7:15PM PT. With another shaky September in the books and this their seventh straight year without a winning record in during the seasons opening month, look for OSU to turn another tough start into a fabulous finish having boasted eight wins or more since 2006. While Riley's pro-style system takes time to learn, Katz has developed quickly having been through three spring practices and being Canfield's backup last season. With an arm that rivals former OSU quarterback and NFL draft pick Derek Anderson, the future looks bright for Katz heading into his first season under center for the Beavers. Sitting at the end of week 6 having gone 85/148 for 1,113 and eight touchdowns with only one interception, and with a quarterback rating of 130.07, look for Katz to improve his completion percentage (57.4%), covert key third downs and continue to spread the ball around in the absence of star wide receiver James Rodgers. Having already played and won in their conference opener without James two weeks ago, look for TE Joe Halahuni, RB Jacquizz Rodgers and WR's Markus Wheaton, Jordan Bishop and veteran Darrell Catchings to all set up in the coming weeks for Katz and the OSU offense. With the Oregon State starting quarterback lineage extending nearly a decade into OSU history, look for Ryan Katz to make his mark in Oregon State lore and keep the Beavers running strong this season.

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