NFL undrafted free agents 2015: Quarterbacks

Oct 25, 2014; Seattle, WA, USA; Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Taylor Kelly (10) is tackled shy of the goal line by Washington Huskies defensive lineman Andrew Hudson (93) during the third quarter of a 24-10 Arizona State victory at Husky Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports
Oct 25, 2014; Seattle, WA, USA; Arizona State Sun Devils quarterback Taylor Kelly (10) is tackled shy of the goal line by Washington Huskies defensive lineman Andrew Hudson (93) during the third quarter of a 24-10 Arizona State victory at Husky Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-USA TODAY Sports /
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Now that the NFL Draft is over, who are the available undrafted free agent quarterbacks that teams can now sign?

Next: Every NFL Team's Best Draft Pick of All-Time

The 2015 NFL Draft saw multiple quarterbacks taken, including having the No. 1 and No. 2 overall picks be quarterbacks.

With signal caller in the NFL being one of the hardest positions to find, teams will also pick up quarterbacks in the later rounds or as undrafted free agents in an attempt to develop them into a capable quarterback of the future for their team.

It’s not an easy task, and like most draft picks and free agent signings, most don’t pan out. However there is a wide range of quarterbacks to choose from.

With multiple teams in need of a quarterback and a lottery ticket at a successful future in the NFL, teams snatch up undrafted free agent quarterbacks quickly.

Some of these quarterbacks have the intangibles to be a quarterback in the league, but their skill set is very raw.

With the draft officially over, here are the available quarterbacks for teams to sign.

Quarterbacks:

Cody Fajardo, Nevada
Brandon Bridge, South Alabama
Shane Carden, East Carolina
Bryan Bennett, Southeastern Louisiana
Jerry Lovelocke, Prairie View
Blake Sims, Alabama
Connor Halliday, Washington State
Tyler Heinicke, Old Dominion
Taylor Kelly, Arizona State
Hutson Mason, Georgia
Ryan Willliams, Miami (Fla.)
Anthony Boone, Duke
Terrance Broadway, Louisiana-Lafayette
Gary Nova, Rutgers
Chris Bonner, Colorado State-Pueblo
Tyler Murphy, Boston College
Austin Sumner, South Dakota St.
Brett Nottingham, Columbia
Justin Worley, Tennessee
Bo Wallace, Ole Miss
Jake Waters, Kansas State
Mark Myers, John Carroll
Cole Stoudt, Clemson
Kevin Rodgers, Henderson State
Dylan Thompson, South Carolina

Three names immediately pop off that list: Blake Sims, Connor Halliday and Bo Wallace.

Sims helped lead the Alabama Crimson Tide to the No. 1 seed in the first ever College Football Playoff this year. Halliday may have not gotten a lot of recognition for a struggling Washington State team, but his arm was on display every week in Mike Leach’s system until an injury ended his season.

Wallace, of course, had the Ole Miss Rebels in contention until the bitter end and was one of the better stories in college football last year.

All these names have some sort of skill set, whether they have enough that can translate to the NFL is another story. That’s where a coach will have to do his best to develop them.

Next: NFL: 15 Biggest Draft Busts Of All-Time

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