Baltimore Sun

Freshmen expected to have big impact

Quarterbac­ks at Clemson, Southern Cal among star first-year performers

- By Steve Megargee

Freshmen should play a bigger role than ever in college football this season, thanks to an NCAA rule change.

The NCAA is allowing players to participat­e in up to four games and still qualify for a redshirt season that would enable them to maintain four years of eligibilit­y. That rule change should put many more freshmen on the field than in past years.

“It’s a seismic change in our world,” Baylor coach Matt Rhule said.

Of course, more and more freshmen have been making an impact on the game well before this rule change. With a growing number of freshmen enrolling in school early and participat­ing in spring practice rather than preparing for their senior proms, newcomers already have been delivering big performanc­es on college football’s biggest stage.

The latest example of that came in last year’s College Football Playoff championsh­ip game, when freshman Tua Tagovailoa came off the bench in the second half to rally Alabama to an overtime victory over Georgia.

“I know the freshmen are more ready now than maybe ever before,” Utah coach Kyle Whittingha­m said. “Back when I first got into coaching, 95 percent of your freshman class would redshirt. Now it’s probably less than 50 percent.”

A rundown of some true freshmen with the opportunit­y to make a major impact this fall: LSU WRs Ja’Marr Chase and Terrace Marshall: LSU doesn’t return any wideouts who had more than 219 yards receiving last season, so the Tigers could use some playmakers in the passing game. Chase and Marshall fit the profile. Chase was LSU’s leading receiver in a scrimmage Saturday. Marshall was the nation’s No. 3 receiver and No. 13 overall prospect in his class according to a composite ranking of recruiting sites compiled by 247Sports. Southern California QB JT Daniels and WR Amron St. Brown: These former high school teammates at Santa Ana (California) Mater Dei already are accustomed to connecting for touchdowns. St. Brown was the nation’s No. 2 receiver and No. 11 overall prospect according to the 247Sports Composite. Daniels was ranked second among pro-style quarterbac­ks and 16th overall. Daniels is competing with sophomore Matt Fink and redshirt freshman Jack Sears for the right to replace New York Jets firstround draft pick Sam Darnold as USC’s starting quarterbac­k. Daniels threw three touchdown passes to St. Brown at a recent scrimmage. Clemson QB Trevor Lawrence: Lawrence is so promising that he’s forged a legitimate preseason competitio­n with incumbent starter Kelly Bryant, who helped the Tigers win an Atlantic Coast Conference title and reach the College Football Playoff last season. Lawrence was the nation’s No. 1 overall prospect in his class according to the 247Sports Composite. Oklahoma DB Brendan Radley-Hiles: Oklahoma has played championsh­ip-caliber offense the last few seasons but hasn’t had a defense to match. Radley-Hiles could help change that. The Sooners have high hopes for the top-50 recruit and expect him to contribute right away. Big 12 media selected him as the conference’s preseason newcomer of the year. Alabama CB Patrick Surtain Jr.: Alabama needs immediate help in the secondary after losing its top six defensive backs from last year’s national championsh­ip team. That should create an early opportunit­y for Surtain, rated by the 247Sports Composite as the nation’s No. 1 cornerback and No. 6 overall prospect in his class. Surtain is the son of former Miami Dolphins and Kansas City Chiefs cornerback Patrick Surtain, a three-time Pro Bowl selection. Nebraska RB Maurice Washington: The most valuable player of the 2018 Under Armour High School All-America game has been the talk of Nebraska’s camp. Washington qualified academical­ly just a few days before the start of preseason practice but has performed well.

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