Brian Luke is the guy. If you have any sort of hunch it’s someone else, it’s time to stop trusting it.
After weeks of speculation, substitution and general confusion surrounding the quarterback position, KU coach Mark Mangino made sure this week that the answer was definite.
It’s Luke. Discussion done.
“It’s nice to know, of course,” Luke said. “But it’s not going to change my approach.”
Such confidence from his coach might settle Luke’s nerves, but those who know the senior claim nerves don’t play much of a factor in his life. The letdowns he has had, rather, stem from thinking too much.
“He’s an intelligent guy,” Mangino said. “We told him to trust what he sees and to quit analyzing everything.”
Luke will be asked to stretch the field, something he does better than any other KU quarterback. Speaking to reporters Thursday, he seemed more relaxed and more poised than he has been all season.
“I go into every game as confident as possible,” Luke said. “I’m more concerned with the offense’s confidence than I am my own.”
“I came in as a corner, so I just have to get back into the swing of things,” Talib said. “It’s not going to be difficult. I just have to get my foot movement down and then I’ll be all right.”
Meier, who’s ticketed for a red-shirt season, appeared to boot kicks close to 50 yards. It’s not too shocking — he was an All-State punter at Pittsburg High his senior year.
At quarterback this week, Meier worked on the scout-team offense, acting as Oklahoma quarterback Rhett Bomar against the KU defense.
“I hope Rhett Bomar doesn’t play that well,” Mangino quipped.