Class of 2029 - QB Marcus Washington Jr (CA) Offered | Syracusefan.com

Class of 2029 QB Marcus Washington Jr (CA) Offered

OFFERED>MARCUS WASHINGTON 2029 CAJON HS, SAN BERNADINO, CA
#0 QB 6' 3" 170 14 YRS OLD/ 1900 YDS PASS-21TDS/600YDS RUSH- 6TDS/ NATIONAL PLAYER HONOR FROM THE SPORTING NEWS//> 4.51 40<
ASSETS FROM HUDL FR SEASON: PLEASE WATCH THE FILM TO SEE WHAT HE HAS!
DEFINITELY THE BEST QB I HAVE EVER EVALUATED.

VERY FAST
VERY ELUSIVE
GREAT JUKES
SET UP AND THROWS ARE EXCELLENT
THROWS A TIGHT SPIRAL ACCURATELY
HIS RUNS ARE DESIGNED PLAYS WHICH IN HE SHOWS OUT
QUICK RELEASE
THROWS A GREAT BALL ON THE RUN
DOES IT ALL WELL
EXCELLENT ATHLETE

EXCELLENT ATHLETE FOOTBALL PLAYER AND FUTURE ELITE QB

THE FOLLOWING IS FROM THE RECRUITRUMOR.COM IT IS FROM AN EXPERIENCED UNNAMED COACH WHO TAKES EVERYTHING MARCUS HAS INTO ACCOUNT FOR A FUTURE ELITE QB AND COMPARES HIM TO OTHER QB'S IN THE PROS IF YOU SCROLL DOWN FAR ENOUGH. VERY INTERESTING AND INFORMATIVE SO I THOUGHT I'D INCLUDE IT SINCE IT TAKES INTO ACCOUNT WHAT AND HOW FRAN AND OUR COACHES LOOK AT YOUNG RECRUITS AND WHAT THEY CONSIDER. LONG READ, BUT IT'S ALL GOOD! IT IS QUITE COMPREHENSIVE. TAKING ALL THE TALENT AND SKILL HE HAS, PLUS HIS PHYSICAL SIZE AND HOW THEY BOTH WILL DEVELOP INTO THE FUTURE.


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November 12, 2025

The Recruit Rumor

SCOUT REPORT: Marcus Washington Jr. – The Freshman Phenom Rewriting the California QB Blueprint

GAME PLAN: Why a 14-Year-Old Has College Coaches Already Taking Notes

In 28 years of coaching football, I can count on one hand the number of true freshmen I’ve seen command a varsity offense at a championship level.

Marcus Washington Jr. just became one of them.

At 6’3″, 170 lbs, the Cajon High School (San Bernardino, CA) freshman quarterback isn’t just playing varsity—he’s dominating it. Over 1,900 passing yards. Twenty-one passing touchdowns. Six hundred rushing yards. Five rushing scores. A league championship. And a midseason national player honor from Sporting News where he outpolled every other candidate in his category.

Oh, and he’s maintaining a 3.7 GPA while doing it.

Today, we’re breaking down what makes this Class of 2029 prospect the most intriguing quarterback development story in California—and why college programs across the country are already circling this email address: marcuswashjr09@gmail.com.



FILM ROOM: Dissecting a Freshman Season That Shouldn’t Be Possible

THE STATISTICAL REALITY CHECK

Let me give you coaching context on these numbers:

PASSING: 1,900+ yards, 21 TDs


  • That’s roughly 210 yards per game over a 9-game season
  • 21 TDs means he’s averaging 2+ touchdown passes per game
  • As a freshman going against 17-18 year old defenders
RUSHING: 600+ yards, 5 TDs

  • Averaging 65+ rushing yards per game
  • Not “scramble” yards—these are designed runs and read-option production
  • Shows he’s a true dual-threat, not just a running QB or pocket passer
For Perspective:
Most freshman quarterbacks are running scout team. Washington Jr. is running a championship offense.



PHYSICAL TOOLS: THE PROJECTION GAME

CURRENT BUILD: 6’3″, 170 lbs

Here’s where coaching experience matters. Some will look at 170 lbs and worry about durability. I look at 170 lbs on a 6’3″ freshman frame and see pure projection gold.

What This Frame Tells Me:


Ideal QB Height: At 6’3″, he can see throwing lanes and has ideal release height
Projectable Weight: He’s 14-15 years old with a frame built to carry 210-220 lbs by senior year
Athletic Build: 170 lbs with 600 rushing yards means he’s got functional speed and elusiveness
Injury Prevention Timeline: He has 3+ years of strength training before college contact

The Development Curve:


  • Freshman: 6’3″, 170 (current)
  • Sophomore: Projected 6’3″-6’4″, 185-190
  • Junior: Projected 6’4″, 195-200
  • Senior: Projected 6’4″, 205-215
  • College Ready: 6’4″, 220-225
That’s a Power 5 quarterback body waiting to happen.


DUAL-THREAT BREAKDOWN: NOT JUST A BUZZWORD

The term “dual-threat” gets overused. Let’s define what Washington Jr. actually does:

AS A PASSER:


  • 1,900 yards suggests he can work through progressions
  • 21 TDs indicates red zone efficiency and downfield accuracy
  • Leading a championship team means he’s making game-management decisions
AS A RUNNER:

  • 600 yards isn’t “scrambling”—it’s designed offense
  • 5 rushing TDs shows goal-line QB power or speed edge capability
  • Ability to extend plays keeps defenses honest
What Separates Him:
True dual-threats can throw from the pocket and hurt you with their legs. Washington Jr. isn’t running because he can’t pass—he’s running because defenses can’t defend both.

That’s modern quarterback play at its finest.



COACHING POINTS: THE INTANGIBLES THAT MATTER MORE THAN STATS

1.

Let’s talk about what it takes to start varsity as a freshman quarterback:

PHYSICAL: You have to survive contact from seniors who are 40-50 lbs heavier
MENTAL: You have to process defensive schemes in real-time against experienced coordinators
EMOTIONAL: You have to handle pressure with teammates 3-4 years older than you
SOCIAL: You have to command a huddle and locker room respect

Washington Jr. didn’t just survive this—he thrived. That tells me everything about his football IQ, maturity, and leadership.


2.

Here’s what non-coaches miss: maintaining a 3.7 GPA while starting varsity football as a freshman is harder than the football itself.

This shows:


  • Elite time management
  • Discipline and routine
  • Academic IQ (which correlates to processing speed)
  • Family structure and support system
College coaches recruiting quarterbacks want high-character scholar-athletes. Washington Jr. checks that box emphatically.

3.

Winning a midseason national player honor—and outpolling all other candidates—as a freshman isn’t luck. That’s national media recognizing legitimate production.

This suggests:


  • His film is passing the eye test with evaluators
  • Stats are backed by quality play, not stat-padding
  • He’s performing against legitimate California competition

GEOGRAPHIC CONTEXT: SAN BERNARDINO FOOTBALL

CAJON HIGH SCHOOL (San Bernardino, CA)

The Inland Empire isn’t just producing football talent—it’s producing NFL talent. Recent QB products from the region include:


  • Travis Wilson (Utah)
  • Multiple D1 quarterbacks annually
  • Strong coaching culture emphasizing fundamentals
League Championship Context:
Winning a league title with a freshman QB speaks to:


  • Quality coaching staff developing his talents
  • Strong supporting cast (OL, skill players)
  • Competitive conference preparing him for higher levels

SCOUT REPORT GRADES (FRESHMAN BASELINE)

CURRENT EVALUATION:

  • Arm Talent: A- (21 TDs, 1,900 yards as a freshman)
  • Mobility/Athleticism: A (600 rush yards proves legitimate dual-threat)
  • Decision Making: B+ (Championship QB with TD-heavy production)
  • Physical Projection: A+ (6’3″, 170 with 3+ years to develop)
  • Football IQ: A (Varsity starter as freshman)
  • Character/Academics: A (3.7 GPA, leadership recognition)
DEVELOPMENTAL PROJECTION: Power 5 Starter Potential (Class of 2029)


THE RECRUITING TIMELINE: CLASS OF 2029

HERE’S THE REALITY:

Washington Jr. is four years away from signing a letter of intent. But college programs are already taking notes because:


  1. Early Identification = Relationship Building
    Programs that offer early build 4-year relationships
  2. Scholarship Economics
    Getting commitments from rising sophomores/juniors helps roster planning
  3. Transfer Portal Era
    Elite QBs may only spend 2-3 years at a school—recruiting earlier matters
PROJECTED RECRUITMENT LEVEL:

  • High Major Interest: Pac-12, Big Ten, Big 12 schools
  • Group of 5 Offers: Mountain West, AAC likely to offer early
  • Blue Blood Interest: USC, Oregon, UCLA already monitoring
Contact Information:
Recruiting coordinators can reach Washington Jr. at: marcuswashjr09@gmail.com



DEVELOPMENTAL ROADMAP: FRESHMAN TO D1 STARTER

YEAR 1 (CURRENT) – FRESHMAN: Varsity starter – COMPLETE
Statistical production – COMPLETE
Championship experience – COMPLETE
National recognition – COMPLETE

YEAR 2 – SOPHOMORE:


  • Add 15-20 lbs of functional muscle
  • Refine footwork and throwing mechanics
  • Expand route tree and progression reads
  • Handle increased media/recruiting attention
YEAR 3 – JUNIOR:

  • Physically mature (195-200 lbs)
  • Elevated competition (7v7, camps, elite opponents)
  • Unofficial visits to top programs
  • Film study and QB-specific training
YEAR 4 – SENIOR:

  • College-ready body (205-215 lbs)
  • Elite 11 Finals/National QB competitions
  • Commitment/Signing Day decision
  • Prepare for early enrollment opportunity

TIMEOUT: THE BIGGER PICTURE

Freshman starting quarterbacks who produce at this level typically follow one of two paths:

PATH 1: STEADY DEVELOPMENT
Continue growth, become elite recruit, start at Power 5 program

PATH 2: TRANSFERRING UP
Dominate high school, transfer to national powerhouse for exposure

Washington Jr. is already at a program producing results. The question becomes: How high can he climb?



COMPARISON MATRIX: FRESHMAN QB PHENOMS

SIMILAR PROFILES (FRESHMAN STARTERS WHO BECAME D1 QBs):

  • Trevor Lawrence: Started as freshman at Cartersville (GA), 6’6″ frame
  • Bryce Young: Early starter, smaller frame, elite accuracy
  • Caleb Williams: DC area phenom, dual-threat with projection
  • DJ Uiagalelei: Physical specimen as freshman, early P5 commit
Washington Jr. combines Lawrence’s height projection, Young’s maturity, Williams’ dual-threat ability, and Uiagalelei’s early production.


WHAT WOULD YOU DO?

RECRUITING DECISION SCENARIO:

You’re a Pac-12 QB coach. It’s December 2024. Marcus Washington Jr. is a freshman with the stats listed above.

OPTION A: Offer now and try to lock him up before he blows up
OPTION B: Wait 1-2 more years to see development trajectory
OPTION C: Build relationship now, offer after sophomore year

Drop your answer below: Are you offering a 14-year-old quarterback? Or playing the long game?



AREAS FOR CONTINUED GROWTH

PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT:

  • Add 30-40 lbs of functional strength
  • Maintain mobility while adding mass
  • Durability against bigger, faster defenders
TECHNICAL REFINEMENT:

  • Pocket presence under pressure
  • Deep ball accuracy and touch
  • Pre-snap recognition vs. complex defenses
MENTAL MATURATION:

  • Handling recruiting hype and attention
  • Leadership development (from freshman to senior captain)
  • Film study discipline and defensive scheme recognition
ACADEMIC TRAJECTORY:

  • Maintaining 3.7+ GPA through recruiting process
  • SAT/ACT prep for eligibility requirements
  • Time management with increased football demands

THE COACHING STAFF PERSPECTIVE

WHAT CAJON HIGH’S COACHES ARE DOING RIGHT:

  1. Trusting a freshman with the offense shows belief in his maturity
  2. Designing run game around his mobility maximizes tools
  3. Championship pedigree proves they’re developing, not just showcasing him
  4. Academic emphasis (3.7 GPA maintained) shows holistic development
This isn’t a staff putting up empty stats—they’re building a complete quarterback.


SOCIAL MEDIA & RECRUITING PRESENCE

Washington Jr. is already gaining traction on:

  • Quarterback-specific recruiting sites
  • Local sports media coverage (“hot start” narratives)
  • National platforms (Sporting News recognition)
  • Social media highlights and film breakdowns
Smart Recruiting Strategy:
Early visibility + sustained production = maximum leverage in recruitment



FILM STUDY INDICATORS

Based on reported performance characteristics:

Keeps eyes downfield while scrambling (advanced trait)
Extends plays without forcing throws (decision-making)
Composure under pressure (mental toughness)
Adapts to defensive looks (processing speed)

These aren’t just “athletic” traits—these are refined quarterback traits most seniors don’t possess.



THE BOTTOM LINE: A ONCE-IN-A-CYCLE TALENT

In nearly three decades of coaching, I’ve learned one thing about freshman quarterbacks: they’re usually not ready.

Marcus Washington Jr. is the exception.

At 6’3″ with a projectable frame, elite dual-threat production, championship pedigree, and a 3.7 GPA, he represents the complete modern quarterback package—just four years early.

Will he become the next great California quarterback? That depends on:


  • Physical development (adding 40+ lbs)
  • Staying healthy through three more seasons
  • Continued coaching and refinement
  • Handling recruiting pressure and expectations
But here’s what I know today: The talent is real. The production is real. The character is real.

College coaches who wait too long to build relationships might find themselves locked out when he’s the #1 QB recruit in the nation.



FINAL COACH’S GRADE: ELITE FRESHMAN PROSPECT WITH BLUE-CHIP TRAJECTORY

CONTACT: marcuswashjr09@gmail.com

RECOMMENDATION: High-priority relationship building for Power 5 programs. Track development closely through sophomore year. Early offer consideration warranted based on production, character, and physical projection.



COACHING AXIOM:
“You can’t teach 6’3″. You can’t teach a 3.7 GPA. You can’t teach poise in the pocket as a freshman. Marcus Washington Jr. has all three.”



Want more Class of 2029 breakdowns and early-identification scouting reports? Follow for insider analysis on the next generation of quarterbacks before they become household names.

#ClassOf2029 #QBRecruiting #CaliforniaFootball #FreshmanPhenom #DualThreat #HighSchoolFootball #CollegeFootballRecruiting #InlandEmpire #CajonFootball



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1 Comment

  • 25f8855a241cf1f36483d662e3b69845a77d5a3c83ec2d15aa4bb2876932add2

    Marcus Washington Sr November 17, 2025

    Much thanks and appreciation to the writers of thereceuitrumor.com and Cajon Highschool football Head coach Nick Rogers whom much praise is owed. Well noted positive criticism and recognition of gains made through hard work and dedication.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
OFFERED>MARCUS WASHINGTON 2029 CAJON HS, SAN BERNADINO, CA
#0 QB 6' 3" 170 14 YRS OLD/ 1900 YDS PASS-21TDS/600YDS RUSH- 6TDS/ NATIONAL PLAYER HONOR FROM THE SPORTING NEWS//> 4.51 40<
ASSETS FROM HUDL FR SEASON: PLEASE WATCH THE FILM TO SEE WHAT HE HAS!
DEFINITELY THE BEST QB I HAVE EVER EVALUATED.

VERY FAST
VERY ELUSIVE
GREAT JUKES
SET UP AND THROWS ARE EXCELLENT
THROWS A TIGHT SPIRAL ACCURATELY
HIS RUNS ARE DESIGNED PLAYS WHICH IN HE SHOWS OUT
QUICK RELEASE
THROWS A GREAT BALL ON THE RUN
DOES IT ALL WELL
EXCELLENT ATHLETE

EXCELLENT ATHLETE FOOTBALL PLAYER AND FUTURE ELITE QB

THE FOLLOWING IS FROM THE RECRUITRUMOR.COM IT IS FROM AN EXPERIENCED UNNAMED COACH WHO TAKES EVERYTHING MARCUS HAS INTO ACCOUNT FOR A FUTURE ELITE QB AND COMPARES HIM TO OTHER QB'S IN THE PROS IF YOU SCROLL DOWN FAR ENOUGH. VERY INTERESTING AND INFORMATIVE SO I THOUGHT I'D INCLUDE IT SINCE IT TAKES INTO ACCOUNT WHAT AND HOW FRAN AND OUR COACHES LOOK AT YOUNG RECRUITS AND WHAT THEY CONSIDER. LONG READ, BUT IT'S ALL GOOD! IT IS QUITE COMPREHENSIVE. TAKING ALL THE TALENT AND SKILL HE HAS, PLUS HIS PHYSICAL SIZE AND HOW THEY BOTH WILL DEVELOP INTO THE FUTURE.
Bill, I appreciate the research you provide on this board. I’m not going to pretend I know all the legalities of plagiarism and copyright, but I’m fairly positive it is not a good idea to copy and paste an entire article from another website.

I think it’s a better, or at least, safer idea to just provide a link to what you find. In this case,

 
Bill, I appreciate the research you provide on this board. I’m not going to pretend I know all the legalities of plagiarism and copyright, but I’m fairly positive it is not a good idea to copy and paste an entire article from another website.

I think it’s a better, or at least, safer idea to just provide a link to what you find. In this case,

Fixed. Link is now in the post.

I know that Bill is very impressed with this young prospect.
 

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