Tennessee quarterback Joshua Dobbs is 2-0 as a starter. In three appearances, Dobbs has thrown for 790 yards, seven touchdowns and two interceptions, while rushing for 289 yards and four touchdowns The sophomore quarterback is being hyped as the savior to a program one game shy of ending its three-year bowl drought. The Vols have seen inconsistency at the quarterback position for the past decade and Dobbs looks to provide an answer under center.

Here’s a look back at Tennessee’s quarterbacks since 2004:

Brent Schaeffer: (2004): Schaeffer started as a true freshman in Tennessee’s opening game in 2004, the first SEC quarterback to do so since freshman eligibility was restored in 1973. However, he split time with fellow freshman Erik Ainge, who took the starting job several weeks later. Schaeffer was asked to transfer the following season after a misdemeanor assault charge.

Erik Ainge (2004-07): Ainge is the most consistent quarterback on this list. Starting for the majority of his four-year career, Ainge ranks third in school history for passing yards and touchdowns. He will be the first to tell you that he made his share of mistakes on and off the field while attending UT, but has since matured and should be recognized as a solid quarterback during his tenure.

Rick Clausen (2004, 2005): Clausen started the final four games in 2004 after Ainge suffered a shoulder injury. He led the Vols to an SEC East title and a Cotton Bowl victory. Clausen split time with Ainge in 2005.

Jonathan Crompton (2008, 2009): Crompton began his time in Knoxville as the No. 2 quarterback in the 2005 recruiting class. However, his first season as a starter was abysmal, throwing for 889 yards, four touchdowns and five interceptions on 86-of-167 passing. As a senior, Crompton was revived in Lane Kiffin’s offense and looked solid through his final eight games.

Nick Stephens (2008): Stephens started six consecutive games during mid-season in 2008. He threw 106 consecutive passes without an interception, the best start among Tennessee quarterbacks. However, Stephens averaged a 48.5 completion percentage and threw three picks and zero touchdowns in his final two appearances as a starter.

Matt Simms (2010, 2011): Phil’s son transfered to Tennessee in Derek Dooley’s first season. However, he never matched the success of his Super Bowl MVP father and struggled behind a young offensive line. Simms lost the starting job to freshman Tyler Bray, but made several starts the following season when the quarterback suffered an injury.

Tyler Bray (2010-2012): Bray’s career in Knoxville can be best summed up in one phrase, “million dollar arm, two cent brain.” Bray is, by far, the most gifted quarterback on this list. However, his decision making on and off the field is what forced Tennessee’s No. 4 all-time passer to go undrafted. Bray never captured a signature win in SEC games and is the only starter listed to have lost to Kentucky.

Justin Worley (2010, 2013-14): Worley saw playing time in Bray’s absence during his freshman season. Facing tough SEC teams and having little experience, the true freshman struggled. He reclaimed the starting job during his junior season and showed improvement before suffering a season-ending injury against Alabama. As a senior, Worley looked poised and enjoyed the best start of his career before, once again, missing the remainder of his season with an injury.

Nathan Peterman (2012, 2013): Peterman has made two starts since enrolling at UT. Both have been terrible. With Dobbs’ current success and two four-star mobile quarterbacks already committed, he shouldn’t ever start another game for Tennessee.