Baltimore Sun Sunday

Oklahoma’s Murray edges Alabama’s Tagovailoa

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NEW YORK — Kyler Murray replaced a Heisman Trophy winner by becoming a Heisman Trophy winner.

The Oklahoma quarterbac­k won college football’s most prestigiou­s individual award Saturday night, edging Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa and setting up a College Football Playoff matchup of Heisman winner versus runner-up.

The fourth-ranked Sooners play the topranked Crimson Tide in the Orange Bowl semifinal Dec. 29 in the seventh bowl matchup of Heisman winner and runner-up, and first since second-place finisher Vince Young and Texas beat Reggie Bush and Southern California in the 2006 Rose Bowl.

This season, Murray stepped into the starting job at Oklahoma held by last year’s Heisman winner and first overall NFL draft pick, Baker Mayfield. Oklahoma is the first school with have Heismanwin­ning quarterbac­ks in consecutiv­e seasons and the fifth overall with winners in back-to-back years.

Unlike most seasons, the winner was far from a foregone conclusion, but Murray (517 first-place votes and 2,167 points) ended up with a fairly comfortabl­e margin of 296 points over Tagovailoa. Ohio State quarterbac­k Dwayne Haskins, the other finalists, was a distant third with 783 points. Three more quarterbac­ks followed: Will Grier of West Virginia, Gardner Minshew II of Washington State and McKenzie Milton of Central Florida.

Murray was named on 92 percent of the Heisman ballots, third most all time. Tagovailoa’s 1,871 points received was the most for a runner-up in the 84-year history of the Heisman.

Tagovailoa was the Heisman frontrunne­r for most of the season, but Murray surged late as the Sooners turned to him and its offense to bailout a leaky defense down the stretch. Meanwhile, Tagovailoa picked a bad time to have his worst game of the season, throwing two intercepti­ons in the Southeaste­rn Conference championsh­ip against Georgia and leaving early with a sprained ankle.

Murray’s first season as a starting quarterbac­k in college is set up to also be his last. He has already signed a $4.66 million contract with the Oakland Athletic after he was selected in the first round of the Major League Baseball draft in June. Listed at 5-foot-10 and 195 pounds, Murray is small for an NFL quarterbac­k but talented enough to be an intriguing prospect if he ever decided to give it a try. Oklahoma’s late-season Heisman campaign for Murray harkened back Bo Jackson, the 1985 Heisman winner who went on to star in both the NFL and MLB, and his Bo Knows Nike ads.

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