The Baby Quarterback Becomes A Baby Wide Receiver

SILLS.WR

So much is going on this season at USC, I just saw the Baby Quarterback (David Sills), who committed to USC in eighth grade, has played wide receiver for West Virginia since Oct. 17. It is supposed to just be for this season only but he led the team in receiving tonight against TCU with three receptions for 42 yards and caught a 35-yard TD against Baylor.

Here’s a good story on Sills’ move to wide receiver, where his private coach, Steve Clarkson, naturally thought he was a great athlete all along.

14 thoughts on “The Baby Quarterback Becomes A Baby Wide Receiver

  1. If this, along with his appearance on the Trojan War documentary, doesn’t prove once and for all that Clarkson is completely full of crap then nothing will.

  2. Wolf, your obsession with this kid has moved past the weird stage. You’re now in full blown creeper mode.

  3. Good, I’m happy for Sills that’s he’s enjoying a college football career. I hope he never knew how his every move was tracked by an obsessed columnist. Kiffin can handle it; a teenager shouldn’t have to.

  4. So when does he become a baby husband with a baby wife and have baby babies, Baby?

  5. Just another example of Scott being right. He is now both predicting the future and teaching history.

  6. Over the past six years you have dedicated almost one hundred posts to David Sills and his non-attendance at SC, mostly, it seems, in an attempt to cram a truly stupid nickname down readers’ throats. This absurd amount of coverage is nearly double that given to Jalen Greene, who has actually played QB for SC and then transitioned to WR.

    I would love to see a sit down between you and the Sills family. I’m sure his mom appreciates your helicopter journalism, but I guess if a 13 year-old makes a non-binding verbal agreement it qualifies them as a “public figure”.

    Your ability to beat a dead horse is uncanny and leads me to imagine that you regularly do Borat and Wayne’s World bits and scratch your head wondering why they didn’t kill.

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