2026 Notre Dame QB Prospect Noah Grubbs Shows Steady Development.
Grubbs eagerly shared highlights from four recent spring exhibitions in which Lake Mary High School participated.
2024 SPRING ✔️
3 Teams, 4 Games (2 Qs each), 4 Ws 🐏
6 Passing TDsSee yall in August ✌🏼@LMRamsFootball @Adamdon3 @baylintrujillo #BTruQBTraining @tpponton pic.twitter.com/F3VAFWl2cb
— Noah Grubbs ✞ (@NoahGrubbsQB) May 20, 2024
The clips showcase Noah Grubbs as a physically gifted quarterback, which explains why the 6-foot-5, 195-pound player received dozens of scholarship offers before narrowing them down to a Top 10 list last month, including Notre Dame, Ohio State, Miami, Auburn, Michigan, Florida, Texas A&M, North Carolina, Nebraska, and UCF.
However, Grubbs’ trainer, Baylin Trujillo of BTruQBTraining, sees beyond his physical abilities, noting significant improvements in his overall game.
“More than anything, it’s his command of everything and the offense,” Trujillo explains. “He’s getting the ball out on time and being very accurate, whether it’s intermediate or down the field.”
Trujillo has worked with Grubbs for years, focusing on both physical and mental aspects of the game to ensure Grubbs thoroughly understands what’s being thrown at him. Trujillo believes Grubbs has essentially mastered the high school level.
“Yeah, dude, this game is so easy for him,” Trujillo says. “He prepares that way.”
Trujillo’s goal with all his quarterbacks is to make training sessions tougher than any defense they’ll face on Friday nights.
“If you understand football from an IQ standpoint and know where you’re throwing the ball before the snap, it’s like knowing the answers to a test beforehand. The game becomes easy,” Trujillo explains.
According to Trujillo, the game has “completely slowed down” for Grubbs over the past couple of years, and he’s been granted the authority by his coaches to make decisions at the line based on his observations.
“He can check into protections, change plays if he sees something he likes, and he has the green light from his coaches to do anything,” Trujillo says. “He’s so far advanced. It’s crazy.”