The Manning name is about to show up in another football huddle, but this time the spotlight starts on the sideline.
Marshall Manning, Peyton Manning’s son, is set to begin his freshman year at the Baylor School in Tennessee, and according to Baylor head coach Erik Kimrey, he’ll open the season as the backup quarterback.
“Marshall Manning is our backup quarterback this year. He’ll be a freshman, so we’re excited about him,” Kimrey told Rivals’ Andy Villamarzo on the “Voice of High School Football Podcast.”
That means Marshall won’t be following the same path as Arch Manning, who stepped in as the starter from day one at Isidore Newman in New Orleans. Instead, the youngest Manning quarterback will spend his first high school season learning behind a more experienced arm.
That arm belongs to Keegan Croucher, a 2027 four-star recruit and Ole Miss commit. Croucher is ranked No. 122 nationally and No. 10 among quarterbacks, and his recruiting trail included offers from Miami, Penn State, Michigan and Oregon.
Croucher’s high school journey has already taken plenty of turns. He played at Fonda-Fultonville in New York as a freshman, then moved to Cheshire Academy in Connecticut for his sophomore and junior years. After that, he transferred to Brentwood Academy in Tennessee, and now appears set to finish his high school career at Baylor.
He also steps into a big role. Baylor is replacing Louisville signee and four-star freshman Briggs Cherry, who went 24-1 in two seasons as the starter and led the school to a Tennessee Division II Class AAA championship. Cherry, like Manning, did not walk in and immediately claim the job at Baylor.
For now, the Manning buzz can wait. Marshall’s name will carry plenty of attention whenever he gets on the field, but the start of his career will be about patience, development and time behind a starter already proven at the position.
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Chris Jans Is Owning Mississippi States Disappointment Now Comes The Response
Mississippi States offseason reset has taken on a familiar shape for Chris Jans, who spent a recent press conference revisiting the disappointment of last season and the questions that came with it. The Bulldogs 13-19 finish, including a rough SEC slate, marked the first losing record of Jans head coaching career and left the program with plenty to sort through before turning the page.
Jans said the year was a humbling one and made clear the lessons were less about one bad stretch than how the team handled adversity from start to finish. Mississippi State now moves forward with Josh Hubbard as a centerpiece, plus a roster and staff that have been reshaped by seven transfers and three new assistants, and the real test is whether that mix can answer the frustration that lingered from a season the Bulldogs would rather leave behind. [Read more 🡒]
