Orlando Sentinel

Bulls bank on Barnett to realize his potential

- By Joey Knight

TAMPA — The concern wafted in Charlie Strong’s psyche. Perhaps it still does to a degree. Locker rooms teem with delicate egos, and Strong had just punctured two.

How would veteran USF quarterbac­ks Brett Kean and Chris Oladokun respond to being informed coaches had settled on 6-foot-5 graduate transfer Blake Barnett as the starter? Just as significan­tly, how would their peers take the news?

“A lot of times, that is one of your biggest fears,” Strong acknowledg­ed, “because they have developed those relationsh­ips.”

Together, the pair had poured gallons of sweat equity into USF’s program while patiently waiting for Quinton Flowers’ turn as legend-in-residence to end. Kean had spent three years as a backup, Oladokun two. As recently as April, the presumptio­n was one of them would be chosen as Flowers’ heir.

Barnett, 22, arrived in May. On Tuesday, Strong confirmed he had won the job.

“I just tried to get a feel for the team and see what the pulse was,” Strong said. “And I asked some guys, ‘OK, whoever comes out [as No. 1,] are you guys gonna have an issue with it?’ ”

Strong said the responses have been favorable. Senior slot receiver Tyre McCants, the only offensive player made available Tuesday, corroborat­ed as much.

“I think with [Barnett], he’s very poised back there,” McCants said.

But in the immediate wake of Strong’s announceme­nt, it would be naive to suggest nary a feather has been ruffled over the most significan­t decision of USF’s preseason. And at a time when transferri­ng has gone nearly amok, one must presume Kean and Oladokun — two of the team’s more popular guys — have at least contemplat­ed their futures. All of which means the pressure is on Barnett to validate his coaches’ decision and produce at this, his third Division I-A stop. If August has provided any sign, he will.

“He’s done some things this camp that surprised a lot of us,” McCants said. Strong concurs. “I was shocked to see [the mobility] because he said to me, ‘I run faster than what you thought,’ ” he said. “I said, ‘Yeah, you [do]. I never saw that speed.’ ”

Barnett’s physical upside or skill set never has been the issue. His ability to effectivel­y employ them on college’s biggest stage has. His career stats entering Saturday’s game against Elon: 14-for-24, 259 yards, two touchdowns, one intercepti­on.

His well-chronicled tenure at Alabama peaked his redshirt freshman year when Nick Saban named the Southern California native the opening-night starter against USC in 2016. But he was pulled midway through the first quarter when the offense began sluggishly, and essentiall­y Wally-Pipped by Jalen Hurts.

He left Tuscaloosa shortly thereafter. Then last year at Arizona State (after a junior-college stopover), he couldn’t unseat incumbent Manny Wilkins, spending the season as a backup.

Yet Strong believes this bizarre collegiate odyssey has helped Barnett mature. So has fatherhood.

On March 12, Barnett and wife Maddie — a profession­al model and surfer whom he met at the 2015 Under Armour All-America Game — welcomed Brooks Archer Barnett into the world. The family resides in Tampa.

“With each player, I make ’em tell their story,” Strong said. “I get ’em in front of everyone, in front of their team, and I say, ‘Listen, I want you to tell your story. But I don’t want you to talk about football; I don’t want to hear anything about football.’

“So Blake gets up and was talking about, ‘I’ve been there guys. I was a five-star, I was the No. 1 player in the country. I was this, I was that. … It probably happened too fast for me. So now that I’ve settled down — I have a family, I have a child — it’s a totally different perspectiv­e for me.’ ”

Strong shared one other anecdote. He was leaving his office one night around 9 o’clock when he encountere­d Barnett, seated on the sidewalk.

“I said, ‘What are you doing?’ Strong recalled. “He said, ‘I’m waiting for my wife to pick me up. … I’ve been up here in the film room because I’ve got to pick this offense up, Coach.’ ”

If perspectiv­e, maturity and potential really have converged for Blake Austin Barnett, perhaps this is finally the year he puts it all together.

 ?? GARY COSBY JR./ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Blake Barnett throws in Alabama’s spring game in 2016, one of many stops he made en route to USF’s starting quarterbac­k job.
GARY COSBY JR./ASSOCIATED PRESS Blake Barnett throws in Alabama’s spring game in 2016, one of many stops he made en route to USF’s starting quarterbac­k job.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States