Development is supposed to be seen in the second year, not seventh, and certainly not from someone who has already logged three seasons of SEC football with Auburn and Texas A&M . That’s why there’s growing frustration in Lexington with starter Zach Calzada , whose fundamental struggles have become the centerpiece of Kentucky ’s early-season narrative. The optics are brutal. Fans have gone so far as to question whether he “runs backwards like a juco transfer… we sure he played at A&M?!” And when the alternative is a local blue-chip in Cutter Boley , a Kentucky native with upside and years of eligibility left, it makes the decision to roll with Calzada feel even heavier on Mark Stoops’ shoulders.

Now, the second-guessing is louder than ever. Rivals’ Justin Rowland pointed o

See Full Page