Good Bo Wallace.

Bad Bo Wallace.

Which quarterback will show up this season in the SEC West?

Good Bo Wallace tossed three touchdown passes in the second half of Thursday’s 35-13 win over Boise State, showing touch on a lofty throw to Laquon Treadwell near the goal line and threading the needle to Cody Core across the middle.

Bad Bo Wallace, the one that’s turnover-prone with questionable decision-making and a deliberate delivery, was picked off three times in the opening 30 minutes.

On the surface, Wallace’s 387-yard outing inside the Georgia Dome was a solid performance, but his lack of awareness upon closer inspection was a real head-scratcher for Hugh Freeze.

“I’m looking forward to breaking the film down and seeing (what happened). Two of the three interceptions were a bit unbelievable to us, because they weren’t even in his progression on the route,” Freeze said. “He’ll be the first to tell you that and he knows that. It was a bit amazing. He was a little out of sync.”

Not a glowing recommendation for a senior quarterback and the SEC’s returning leader in nearly every statistical category including completions, attempts, yards and touchdowns.

At times, Wallace is reckless with the football. He disregards roaming safeties and too often locks onto targets.

The Rebels’ most important player won’t become a better decision-maker overnight, but 18th-ranked Ole Miss has issues if its facilitator on offense causes the coaching staff to hold its breath on every throw.

If Boise State’s vanilla coverages fooled Wallace, what’s going to happen against SEC West heavyweights?

Careless throws were supposed to be corrected by this point as a two-year starter, but Good Wallace vs. Bad Wallace could be a crippling season-long problem.

The mass exodus of SEC quarterbacks has forced Wallace into the spotlight and it doesn’t appear that he’s ready to shoulder the expectations that come with it.