There are 2 5-star quarterbacks in the 2020 recruiting class.

No. 1 Bryce Young has committed to Alabama. No. 2 DJ Uiagalelei has picked Clemson.

The rest will be history, right? Plan the parade and make from in the trophy case.

If only it were that easy.

Just 4 of the 13 5-star QBs in the previous 5 recruiting classes led their team to the Playoff. Only 2 — Trevor Lawrence and Tua Tagovailoa — did so with their original team.

2019

Spencer Rattler (Oklahoma): Rattler was the No. 1 QB in the class after setting all kinds of prep records in Arizona. Soon after he signed, Oklahoma also signed grad transfer Jalen Hurts. Hurts did his thing — win. He won the starting job, won a seat at the Heisman presentation and led Oklahoma to the Playoff. Rattler will have a chance to win the starting job in 2020, but the Sooners reportedly have expressed interest in another grad transfer, Jordan Love. Stay tuned.

Bo Nix (Auburn): Nix won the starting job in fall camp. He had some huge moments and typical true freshman struggles. He beat Oregon and, most notably, Alabama to earn SEC Freshman of the Year honors.

2018

Trevor Lawrence (Clemson): Lawrence was the No. 1 overall recruit in the country and certainly has lived up to the billing. He led Clemson to the national championship as a true freshman and has guided an overhauled Tigers team to the Playoff this season. He is exactly what fans envision when their team signs a 5-star QB.

Justin Fields (Georgia to Ohio State): Fields signed with Georgia but never really had a shot of supplanting Jake Fromm. He played sparingly and wasn’t asked to do much other than run. After transferring to Ohio State, Fields blossomed into a Heisman Trophy finalist.

JT Daniels (Southern Cal): Daniels won the starting job as a true freshman and played well. He threw for 2,672 yards with 14 TDs and 10 INTs. His sophomore campaigned ended painfully — a torn ACL in the season opener. Daniels said last week he plans on returning to USC to regain the starting job. He’ll compete with Kedon Slovis, a freshman who took over and threw for 3,242 yards and 28 TDs against just 9 INTs while leading the Trojans to an 8-4 regular-season record. Slovis arrived as a 3-star prospect but clearly outperformed that ranking.

2017

Davis Mills (Stanford): Mills, the nation’s top-rated QB out of metro Atlanta, spurned the SEC and headed West. Clearly the Stanford education means something. Mills redshirted as a true freshman and appeared in just 1 game in 2018. He earned the starting job midway through this season and threw for a single-game program record 504 yards against Washington State.

Hunter Johnson (Clemson to Northwestern): Johnson, who is from suburban Indianapolis, appeared in 7 games for the Tigers in 2017 but returned to the Midwest after they signed Trevor Lawrence. He won the starting job this season and played in the first 4 games. Johnson suffered a knee injury but also took time out from football to be with his mother, who is battling cancer.

Tua Tagovailoa (Alabama): Tagovailoa also stayed patient during his freshman season, making occasional appearances here and there until he saved Alabama in the 2nd half of the 2017 National Championship Game. The author of “2nd-and-26” rewrote every major single-game and single-season Alabama passing record over the next 2 years before suffering a devastating hip injury.

2016

Shea Patterson (Ole Miss to Michigan): Patterson was the No. 1 QB in the class and No. 4 player overall. The Shea Show was a smash hit almost from the moment he replaced injured starter Chad Kelly. Patterson’s flair for the dramatic was matched only by his propensity to commit turnovers. Patterson’s 2017 season ended early, and with NCAA penalities issued, he transferred to Michigan. With 1 game remaining, Patterson has thrown for a career-best 2,828 yards this season with 22 TDs, matching his career high.

Jacob Eason (Georgia to Washington): A Day 1 starter for Georgia, Eason had a productive freshman season despite carrying too much of the offensive burden for rookie head coach Kirby Smart. He held off Jake Fromm the following year to retain the starting job but was injured in the opener and never started again for the Dawgs. He transferred back home to Washington, sat out last season and had a career-year in 2019. With a bowl game to go, he has thrown for 2,922 yards with 22 TDs and 8 INTs. He’ll have a decision to make, whether to return for his redshirt senior season or enter the NFL Draft.

2015

Josh Rosen (UCLA): Rosen did what you expect a 5-star QB to do. He put up huge numbers as a freshman and after an injury ended his sophomore season, bounced back with an even bigger year as a junior. The Bruins didn’t have as much success — they were 18-20 during his 3 years on campus — but he left early for the NFL and was the No. 10 overall pick of the 2018 NFL Draft.

Blake Barnett (Alabama to Arizona State to USF): It never quite fell into place for Barnett, the No. 2-ranked QB and No. 22 overall player in the class. He was the highest-ranked QB Nick Saban had ever signed. After redshirting in 2015, he competed for the starting job at Alabama but transferred midseason after he lost the competition to true freshman Jalen Hurts. He landed at Arizona State but lost that competition too. After graduating, he transferred to South Florida, where he briefly held the starting job for parts of 2 years.

Kyler Murray (Texas A&M to Oklahoma): Can we agree Murray makes good decision? He chose to leave a chaotic situation in College Station and picked Oklahoma, where he waited patiently behind Baker Mayfield before taking over in 2018. He threw 42 TD passes, led Oklahoma to the Playoff and won the Heisman. His best decision? Choosing the NFL over professional baseball. Murray became the No. 1 overall pick in the 2019 NFL Draft and signed a 4-year rookie deal for $35.5 million — all guaranteed.