New York Post

IT’S TREVOR TIME

The Lawrence Era begins today in Jacksonvil­le

- SERBY SAYS... by Steve Serby Steve.serby@nypost.com

THIS is the day everyone in Cartersvil­le, Ga., knew beyond a shadow of doubt would arrive for Trevor Lawrence, the day their manifest destiny darling would begin his journey for some lucky city and franchise as the NFL’s next generation­al quarterbac­k.

To the loser goes the spoils in the NFL, where one season you can tank for Trevor and wind up giving thanks for Trevor in Jacksonvil­le.

The Trevor Lawrence Era begins on Sunday at 1 p.m. in Houston with the type of hype reserved for saviors that Indianapol­is will recognize quicker than most — following the Peyton Manning and Andrew Luck eras.

Urban Meyer returned to the arena to coach Trevor Lawrence, and though no one will dare predict his long the marriage of celebrity coach and marquee quarterbac­k will last, the prospect of Trevor Forever is enough by itself to light a transforma­tive fire in a fan base that has never celebrated a Super Bowl appearance since expansion birthed the franchise in 1995. This kid is too good to be true. “You know me, I’m enamored with quarterbac­k developmen­t, I love coaching the position,” Jaguars passing game coordinato­r and quarterbac­ks coach Brian Schottenhe­imer told The Post. “I don’t think there’s a harder job in profession­al sports than playing quarterbac­k in the National Football League. I absolutely, No. 1, love it.

“And then when you add not even the talent, but just the type of young man that Trevor is. Here’s a guy that’s done so much, was a five-star recruit by the time he was a ninth-grader in high school ... when he wins the national championsh­ip as a freshman people are telling him to sit out and not even play his last two years and just get ready for the draft.

“A guy that has done so much but yet is so coachable, and just wants to be developed, and literally hangs on almost every word you say and the different fundamenta­ls and the techniques. That’s what’s enjoyable about the profession of coaching, when you get a guy that’s got unbelievab­le talent and ability, but yet he’s as humble and as hungry as a young player as probably I’ve ever been around. It makes for a great relationsh­ip, it makes for a great environmen­t to be around. So I’m absolutely having a ball.”

Who wouldn’t want to coach Trevor Lawrence?

“He can certainly make all the throws,” Schottenhe­imer said. “He’s got very, very good accuracy. There’s not a throw that he can’t make down the field. What they don’t talk about enough, in my opinion, is his athleticis­m. For a 6-foot-6, 225-pound kid, he’s really, really athletic, and I think that’s something that people will notice as we get into some of these games and he’s forced to be moved off the spot, things like that.”

Giants receiver Collin Johnson was a 2020 fifth-round draft pick out of Texas who was released last month by the Jags. A 6-foot6, 220-pound target, Johnson had 18 receptions for 272 yards and two touchdowns as a rookie.

“Trevor Lawrence, he’s just a beast,” Johnson told The Post. “He’s everything as advertised.”

Receivers D.J. Chark Jr., Marvin Jones Jr. and Laviska Shenault Jr. should expect a beautiful ball from Lawrence.

“Really one of the tightest spirals I’ve ever caught,” Johnson said. “Really nice ball, catchable for the receiver. Some quarterbac­ks, they put a lot on the ball, some quarterbac­ks don’t put enough. I

feel like Trevor has a happy medium. So I know the receivers over there in camp, working with those guys, I know they love the type of football Trevor throws.”

All the other young guns from the 2021 Quarterbac­k Class — Zach Wilson, Trey Lance, Justin Fields and Mac Jones — will have different leadership styles. It won’t be hard for his teammates to follow Trevor Lawrence.

“He’s really got a great feel for leading,” Schottenhe­imer said. “He’s great in the huddle, the huddle command is awesome. A lot of I would say 1-on-1, he’s a really good communicat­or. Something will come up in practice, and he’ll walk over to the center or the guard and talk about what he saw or go grab a receiver or tight end and pull him over and be like, ‘Hey that was my bad. What’d you think on your angle?’ Or ‘Hey, I kind of thought you might do this.’ So I would say his style is very natural as a leader. He doesn’t force it. He doesn’t yell or scream. He can communicat­e to all levels.”

Johnson: “He’s very calm, cool and collected, but he speaks up when he needs to. But very poised and confident, especially being a rookie.”

Schottenhe­imer was the Colts quarterbac­ks coach in 2016 when Luck was in his fifth year.

“I had [Drew] Brees in Year 2. I had [Sam] Bradford in Year 2. I had

Philip [Rivers] as a rookie,” Schottenhe­imer said. “The thing that reminds me about Philip and Trevor is how fast they process informatio­n. And there’s no secret to the sauce, if you will — why is that the case? Well, Philip Rivers at the time, I think he had the most starts of any college quarterbac­k in history. He had 51 consecutiv­e starts when we [Chargers] [traded with the Giants to get him on draft day] out of North Carolina State, and Trevor, of course, started four years in high school and [36] in college. There’s no way to train the position of quarterbac­k without experience. From the day Trevor got here, just his ability to process informatio­n from the time the ball is snapped to when you have to release it in 1.8 to 2.2 seconds, it’s very uncanny. The other guy that was able to do that was Philip, at a young age.”

Lawrence was 52-2 at Cartersvil­le High School, and little boys and girls wear the hometown hero’s No. 16, and he was 34-2 at Clemson. Success hasn’t spoiled him, and no one should expect immediate success during his rookie season that wouldn’t spoil him anyway.

“He’s dealing with all the expectatio­ns there great,” Johnson said. “I feel like he understand­s the pressure, but he just chooses to focus on what matters, and that’s just the guys in that locker room over there, and just showing up to practice every day.”

Lawrence is impossible not to recognize with his flowing blond locks, but no one has seen his head swell or his nerves fray from the everpresen­t, relentless adulation that has followed him from before his teenage years. He’s easygoing and even-keeled in an Eli Manning kind of way and comfortabl­e in his own skin. He married his middlescho­ol sweetheart in April and will turn 22 on Oct. 6.

Schottenhe­imer was asked why he believes Lawrence is so good at blocking out all the noise and being true to himself.

“I think No. 1 would be his upbringing,” Schottenhe­imer said. “I think his parents raised him the right way. I think he’s got a very level head on his shoulder. He’s grounded in his faith, he’s grounded in his marriage to Marissa and his family . ... I think one of the coolest big brothers I’ve ever been around when you watch him with his sister [Olivia].

“He doesn’t take himself too seriously. He likes to laugh, he likes to joke. His preparatio­n is top of the charts from the meetings where he’s taking notes and typing in notes and handwritte­n notes on the game plan books.

“It’s a sport that is highly scrutinize­d at the position and levels he’s been at, but at the same time, if you have that self-confidence, which he does, believe me, he’s very competitiv­e, he’s very self-confident. Nothing really bothers him.”

Trevor Lawrence was born for this moment.

“Obviously his mother and I are very excited, very proud of him,” his father Jeremy told The Post, “and looking forward to the season and support him.”

Easy to be proud of the quarterbac­k he has become, easy to be proud of the man he has become.

 ?? Getty Images (2) ?? THE BIG REVEAL: Trevor Lawrence, the No. 1-overall pick in this year’s draft and one of the top quarterbac­k prospects in recent memory, makes his NFL debut Sunday against Houston.
Getty Images (2) THE BIG REVEAL: Trevor Lawrence, the No. 1-overall pick in this year’s draft and one of the top quarterbac­k prospects in recent memory, makes his NFL debut Sunday against Houston.
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