http://www.takingbadschotz.com/?p=10714Rakeem Cato: The Next Lengendary Marshall Quarterback
Posted by: Schotz Posted date: December 17, 2012 In: Featured, NCAAF | comment : 0
First there was Chad Pennington, then there was Byron Leftwich, and now there’s Rakeem Cato.
Photo Credit: Mark Webb/The Herald-Dispatch
Marshall fans have been waiting for the third coming and he has finally come. This season with the help of their slinger, a great receiving core, and former Marshall slinger and Assistant Head Coach Tony Peterson Marshall’s offense ranked 6th overall; first in passing with 365.1 yards per game and 55th in rushing with 169.3 yards per game. Unfortunately Marshall’s defense is quite the opposite ranking 102nd overall contributing to a 5-7 record (4-4 conf).
Cato, a sophomore out of Miami, FL led the country in passing yards with 4,201 beating out Colby Cameron, Nick Florence, Geno Smith, and Landry Jones. Granted he also led the nation in passing attempts, but held a 69.5 completion percentage to justify Marshall’s consistent passing attack. Cato also finished third in passing touchdowns with 37 only trailing Geno Smith and Seth Doege. Considering Cato threw the ball 584 times his 11 interceptions seems more than acceptable.
His unbelievable stats earned him Conference USA’s MVP as he sealed his name in Marshall’s record book. Cato set the record for most completions in a season (375) and most completions in a game (45). He now ranks 2nd in completion percentage in a season (69.5%), and 3rd in touchdowns thrown in a season (37), passing yards gained in a season (4,201), and passing attempts in a season (584).
via wowktv.com
Now there are two things we need to address. The first thing is his competition. Of course he’s at an advantage playing in the C-USA compared to a BCS conference, but let’s look at what he did against bowl teams. In the opener against West Virginia, Cato went 38-54 for 413 yards two touchdowns and an interception. We know WVU has no defense, but there still a Big 12 school. Against Ohio (51st against the pass) who was once ranked this season, he went 44-65 with 432 yards three touchdowns and a pick. Against Rice on the road he went 28-39 with two touchdowns (zero interceptions). On the road again vs. Purdue (48th against the pass) he struggled with a season-high three interceptions, but still managed to go 45-68 with 439 yards and five touchdowns. Against Tulsa (54th against the pass) he went 31-44 with 391 yards and three touchdowns and an interception. Against UCF who has the best pass defense on their schedule (39th), he was inconsistent going 35-62, but still totaled 298 yards and two touchdowns. And finally against Eastern Carolina who struggles with the pass to begin with, Cato went 31-40 with 318 yards and five touchdowns. Overall against bowl teams Cato averaged 364.3 yards (his average on the total season was 365.1) with 22 touchdowns and seven interceptions. Now Chad Pennington and Byron Leftwich may have lit up, but they also won games, and unfortunately Cato went 1-6 against bowl teams this year. But we have to remember Cato is only a sophomore and can’t control his own defense.
The second thing we need to address is Cato’s height. It’s about time I tell you he’s only six feet tall. This little detail is most likely what’s barring him from being drafted early or at all after his junior or senior seasons. However, it makes these stats that much more impressive considering it’s a lot harder to see over the offensive and defensive lines.
Now we can have a huge debate on if Cato is better or will be better than both ex-NFL starters, but I don’t think we can until it’s all said and done. But just for kicks, let’s compare sophomore years.
As a sophomore Leftwich wasn’t too special yet with 3,358 passing yards with 21 touchdowns along with nine interceptions and a 61.1CMP%. It was his next two years that Leftwich caught NFL attention throwing back-to-back 4,000/30 seasons with less than 500 passing attempts. We can definitely argree that Cato was statistically the much better sophomore. On the other hand, Pennington killed it as a sophomore throwing for 3,480 yards with 39 touchdowns (Marshall record) with 12 interceptions and a low 59.1 CMP%. It seems that as a sophomore Pennington was more effective considering he had 39 touchdowns and only needed 428 attempts to do so compared to Cato’s 584. However Cato was by far the more accurate passer as he had less interceptions and a much better completion percentage in far more attempts.
I’m not sure who will end up being the best, but I’m pretty comfortable stating that Cato will break nearly every Marshall record except for most passing yards in a season (4,902) held by one of his very own coaches, Tony Peterson.
By the time Cato’s college career is over he will one of the most legen…wait for it….dary quarterbacks to represent Marshall.
-Schotz