Other Campuses: Patterson uses basketball skills to keep starting quarterback position

(CSTV U-WIRE) SYRACUSE, N.Y. – Syracuse head coach Greg Robinson repeatedly told quarterbacks Perry Patterson and Joe Fields they serve as point guards for the football team, responsible for being playmakers by pinpointing passes to receivers, tight ends and the backfield to move the chains.

With the starting quarterback position now his, Patterson will assume the point guard role Sunday when SU opens its season against West Virginia.

Patterson considers himself more of a basketball player, anyway. Between his rigorous summer schedule of 3-mile runs, weightlifting, 7-on-7 drills and individual reps, the junior still found time to hit the hardwood.

Sometimes Patterson found pickup games with the SU basketball team. Other times he played to break from his football routine, using the sport he professes as his first love to enhance his athletic ability.

“People said in high school that I was a good passer in basketball because of football,” Patterson said. “But it was the other way around. I was a good passer with basketball, so it made my peripheral vision a lot better with football.

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“Basketball was my main thing,” he added. “People knew me for basketball.”

Back in his days at J.P. McCaskey High School in Lancaster, Pa.., Patterson dazzled crowds with his laser-beam tosses and playmaking ability as both a point guard and a quarterback. Patterson excelled in both sports as an all-state player, but enjoyed basketball more.

Eventually the roads met and Patterson needed to decide which turn to take. The summer after his junior year, Patterson stopped and looked at his situation. Division II schools took interest in his ability to handle the basketball, but his 6-foot-3 frame lessened his chances of receiving serious attention from Division I programs.

On the gridiron, it was a different story. The likes of Penn State, Virginia, Virginia Tech and Syracuse showed interest in Patterson. His footwork, arm strength and keen eye in being able to pinpoint receivers impressed them the most. He relished the role of being the talk of the town in Lancaster and wanted that to continue in college. Football was Patterson’s way to experience it.

“He wants to be in the big time,” said Pete Susie, Patterson’s quarterback coach at McCaskey. “He wants to play in front of bigger crowds. Once he saw the writing on the wall, he realized football was his ticket.”

But once Patterson arrived at SU, he didn’t glow in the spotlight he enjoyed in high school. He redshirted his freshman year, tore his left anterior cruciate ligament in spring practice that spring, then played backup to then-senior R.J. Anderson the next fall.

Once Anderson graduated, the starting quarterback slot opened. Former Orange head coach Paul Pasqualoni set up a quarterback competition between Patterson, Fields and Xzavier Gaines in the preseason to determine the starting spot in 2004.

Gaines quickly dropped out of the race, leaving Patterson and Fields competing for the spot. Although neither had completed a collegiate pass, Patterson still had more experience with the coaching personnel and SU’s playbook than the freshman Fields.

Many suspected Pasqualoni would name Patterson the starter, but he opted for Fields, a move that stunned Patterson and his supporters alike.

Patterson admits he thinks he should have been named the starter last season. McCaskey head coach Scott Feldman told The Daily Orange last year that Patterson told him he beat Fields out in every statistical category and attribute except speed. This year, Feldman said Patterson felt last season the coaching staff granted the starting job to Fields without any thought being put into it.

“The way Perry described it to me, they didn’t have a solid answer for him on why he wasn’t starting [either],” Susie said. “Coach [Pasqualoni] couldn’t even look him in the face and tell him that he wasn’t going to start. Perry was flabbergasted. He couldn’t believe he wasn’t starting.”

Fields started the first three games against Purdue, Buffalo and Cincinnati. In all three, the freshman quarterback showed flashes of potential but did not amount to much. Fields looked noticeably uncomfortable assuming the starting role and Pasqualoni shuffled the two players in the first two games.

But Fields still started. So while the freshman attempted to lead a team he only started working with the previous spring, Patterson stood on the sidelines conflicted and frustrated. He spent the offseason losing weight and solidifying his familiarity with the offense, only to lose it to a player who stepped on the Syracuse campus two years after Patterson.

Patterson insisted, though, that he never thought about transferring.

“At times it was cool, but when I look back on it, it was a long three years for me,” Patterson said. “It was just school for me. I wasn’t really happy. “