"When you have two quarterbacks, you have no quarterbacks."
It's an old cliche that's not often applicable in this day and age of college football, where quarterbacks get injured and coaches are well-schooled at using signal-callers with different skill sets.
For LSU in 2014, though, it was a 100 percent accurate description of the state of the quarterback position.
Anthony Jennings completed just 48.9 percent of his passes on the season, lost his job to Brandon Harris and was forced back into action after Harris completed just three of 14 passes in just over two quarters in his only career start—a road matchup vs.