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Sanders vs. Beck: EA Sports College Football 25 quarterback ratings debate

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Sanders vs. Beck: EA Sports College Football 25 quarterback ratings debate

EA Sports College Football 25 is less than a week away from being released, and with the growing anticipation, the top eight quarterbacks list on the game was released. There seem to be some disgruntled folks who feel there shouldn’t have been a tie for the top-rated quarterback spot between Colorado’s Shedeur Sanders and Georgia’s Carson Beck. They’re saying a clear number one should have been declared by EA Sports.

Let go back to the last time this happened. If you purchased a copy of the 2014 version of the game, which was the last year any college football product was released, there were some concerns over Texas A&M’s Johnny Manziel being rated the top quarterback of the game over Alabama University quarterback A.J. McCarron. From a statistical standpoint, there is a case for Manziel to have received the top spot that would shut down the idea that McCarron was overlooked even though his head Coach was Nick Saban.

Player

School

Overall Rank

Comp %

Yards

TD

INT

Rush Yds

Rush TD

QBR

A.J. McCarron

Alabama

1

67.3

3,063

28

7

-22

0

95.6

Johnny Manziel

Texas A&M

2

69.9

4,114

37

13

759

9

90.5

The anticipation is growing to a fever pitch with six days remaining until the game is released. While many just wanted to play for the first time in over a decade, the biggest topic of conversation comes from Colorado with Shedeur Sanders and Coach Prime, who weren’t too pleased with the Buffs “Grown” QB being tied with Beck for a rating of 93. Sanders being a competitor in all walks of life, felt there should have been a winner and loser decided when it came to who was given the number one quarterback rating spot.

Since the good folks at EA Sports are currently getting things together for the launch of the game, let’s look at the top quarterbacks they’ve listed to see if there might have been something overlooked that would coincide with Coach Prime and Shedeur’s logic over the ratings. Not only the Buffs quarterback, but the two-way star Travis Hunter should have been different.

Hunter missed three games due to injury and looked to be a bit hobbled in another gameduring last season. Sanders missed a game and a half after he was pulled from the Washington State game down 14-0 in the first quarter. This was after getting sacked four times, adding to the massive number of 52 sacks he had already suffered for the season.

As for Hunter, he was ranked tenth overall with Sanders being ranked 24th, according to a list released on Forbes this past Wednesday. Looking at the criteria used for these quarterbacks to determine where each should have been rated, Shedeur should have a lower rating.

Player

School

Rank

Rating

Comp %

Yards

TD

INT

Rush Yds

Rush TD

QBR

Shedeur Sanders

Colorado

17

93

69.3

3,230

27

3

-77

4

63.1/ 56th

Carson Beck

Georgia

18

93

72.4

3,941

24

6

116

4

86.0/ 5th

Dillion Gabriel

Oklahoma/Oregon

27

92

69.3

3,660

30

6

373

12

87.0/ 4th

Quinn Ewers

Texas

30

90

69.0

3,479

22

6

75

5

78.3/ 17th

Jalen Milroe

Alabama

71

90

65.8

2,834

23

6

531

12

80.5/13th

Jaxson Dart

Ole Miss

73

90

65.1

3,364

23

5

391

8

78.5/16th

Jalon Daniels

Kansas

79

90

74.7

705

5

1

74

0

82.6/ 7th

Kaidon Slater

Liberty

90

90

61.0

2,876

32

6

1,098

12

83.7/9th

** This is the list of the top eight EA Sports College Football 25 quarterbacks and stats from last season.

The rating scale for athletes has become more about politics and doing favors; instead of letting the numbers show what a player was able to do against their competition. The rating of Sanders was more so a favor for Coach Prime, because there is no way Travis Hunter is on the cover and Shedeur is not being talked about as a top athlete at his position in the game.

This is by no means a dig at either athlete ability of Sanders or Hunter, but looking at the numbers neither one should have been in the top 10 rankings or ratings overall at their position because their respective numbers don’t reflect that. If the criteria for generating who should be rated or ranked goes according to how the number one athlete was chosen for the product from the start.

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