Quarterback recruiting from a national perspective always is a “domino” type of situation in terms of who lands where. Obviously there are

Jake Browning is good enough that the college football world could LOL at his ranking as a recruit in a few years...and he's ranked among the best in the country.

Though several major programs (Ohio State, Auburn, etc.) are taking two signal callers in the 2015 cycle, for the most part most programs take one at the all-important position per cycle, so it’s always been a major deal to land a commitment.

But there isn't always an intellectually honest amount of importance measuring that takes place with regards to quarterback recruiting. There isn't always what there should be- a celebration of potential- among the various fan bases that watch the dominoes fall.

â€¨â€¨The Kyler Murray commitment to Texas A&M on Wednesday, Brady White picking Arizona State, the pledges of Josh Rosen (UCLA) and Ricky Town (USC), plus Brandon Wimbush (Penn State) and others certainly were met with an great amount of fanfare on a national level.â€¨â€¨

No problem with that. Those listed above are among the best quarterback prospects in the country during a cycle where there is plenty of elite depth at the position, particularly west of the Mississippi River.

That being said, there are several other quarterback commits that didn’t have the “LeBron announcement” type of hype attached to them that could end up impacting their respective programs, along with college football at large, in just as big of a wayâ€¨â€¨ because they are potentially just as good or better long-term that those ranked or hyped ahead of them.

1- Jake Browning to Washington

â€¨â€¨I don’t think people quite understand how good Browning is. He’s got good size at 6-foot-2.5, he throws the ball with outstanding velocity and shows an excellent feel for the pocket and fantastic footwork on film. The nation’s fourth-ranked pro-style quarterback according to 247Sports Composite rankings, also is a terrific fit for what we anticipate Chris Petersen will do on offense in Seattle. This could be a kid that everybody is talking about in a couple of years if he develops well at UW, where he committed (very quietly I might add) on March 31 following an unofficial visit to the school.

â€¨

2- Drew Lock to Missouri

The Tigers were the first to jump in with an offer (in basketball no doubt) for Lock, from Lee’s Summit (Mo.) and shortly thereafter it seemed like a foregone conclusion he would end up in Columbia. The 6-foot-5 athletic talent has an excellent arm and can move, plus he’s got size. In the Tigers’ offensive system he’s a terrific fit, he can very likely put up big numbers. Given all of that, one can see how you could look back on this one as not only an underrated, un-hyped commitment, but a high program impact one.

Steve Witfong and JC Shurburtt of 247Sports have always been high on Brian Lewerke.

3- Dwayne Lawson to Miamiâ€¨

The 247Sports Crystal Ball was sitting at 75 percent in favor of UCF when the 6-foot-5, 210-pound Lawson, from Hillsborough High in Tampa, Fla., committed to the Canes- very quietly. Lawson obviously has pro potential from a size standpoint and he has a big arm. If Miami can mold and develop him, he’s the type of prototypical quarterback prospect that the pro scouts love and given that the Canes will nearly every year have speedy playmakers for him to distribute the ball to (and put up big numbers), it’s not hard to imagine him doing it. Lawson is a three-star prospect, but is a top 10 pro-style quarterback prospect (No. 10) according to 247Sports Composite rankings.

4- Brian Lewerke to Michigan State

247Sports National Recruiting Director Steve Wiltfong and I first saw Lewerke at the Columbus (Ohio) Elite 11 and Nike Camp at this time last year. Wiltfong and I both felt like the 6-foot-3, 180-pounder from Phoenix (Ariz.) Pinnacle had a lot going for him. Fast-forward to this year and he lights it up at the Bay Area Nike Football Training Camp and there is little doubt that his film is good. Lewerke committed to Michigan State in April and is a perfect fit for the Spartans offense. In true Michigan State fashion, this was not a fireworks display of a pledge, but it could turn out to look that way in hindsight once Lewerke’s career in East Lansing gets rolling.

â€¨

5- Lorenzo Nunez to South Carolina

The Gamecocks quietly worked Nunez during much of the spring and ended up landing the nation’s No. 8 dual-threat quarterback prospect May 8, beating North Carolina State for his services. The skill set of the 6-foot-3, 190-pound Nunez further emphasizes that South Carolina head coach Steve Spurrier’s offense has evolved to where a mobile quarterback with a good arm is a better fit than a statuesque pocket passer. Nunez received a lot of attention early in the cycle, but his commitment barely made a splash on the national scene. Neither did Connor Shaw’s commitment to South Carolina in the spring of 2010, but by the time Shaw graduated, most observers of the Gamecocks program see it as significant.