Porterville Recorder

Heisman 2018: Herbert, Taylor, Fitzgerald could make a run

- By RALPH D. RUSSO AP COLLEGE FOOTBALL WRITER

The 2018 Heisman Trophy race could be wide open.

There will be no returning winner, with Oklahoma quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield becoming the first senior to win the award since 2006. Louisville quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson, the 2016 winner and a finalist this year, is a junior likely to jump to the NFL.

The most likely finalist to return is Stanford running back Bryce Love, though he also is a junior who could declare for the NFL draft.

Penn State’s Saquon Barkley finished fourth in the voting, but don’t expect the junior to be back. Barkley is a possible top-five pick. The fifth-place finisher, Rashaad Penny of San Diego State, also is a senior.

Southern California quarterbac­k Sam Darnold entered this season as the Heisman favorite, but too many intercepti­ons took him out of the running. Whether Darnold jumps to the NFL is not quite so clear. If he returns, he will again receive Heisman hype.

It could be a good year for a dark horse to emerge, but here are some players who will enter 2018 with Heisman buzz:

Quarterbac­ks who bypass the draft

Fifteen of the last 18 Heisman winners have been QBS, so there is good chance another will win it next season. Darnold is one of several underclass­men quarterbac­ks who might decide to enter the NFL draft. But if they do return to school, they would be a good bet to enter the Heisman race. The most prominent are Jarrett Stidham of Auburn, Will Grier of West Virginia and Drew Lock of Missouri.

Travis Etienne, RB, Clemson

Returning starting quarterbac­k Kelly Bryant will get a lot of attention. Etienne, though, has a chance to be a special running back. He is averaging 7.2 yards per carry as a freshman. The talent is there for a huge sophomore season; it’s just a matter of touches on what always figures to be a team with lots of good options in the backfield.

Nick Fitzgerald, QB,

Mississipp­i State

New coach Joe Moorhead’s offense helped Trace Mcsorley put up some gaudy numbers at Penn State the last two seasons (6,842 yards passing, 55 TD passes and 18 rushing touchdowns). Fitzgerald, if he fully recovers from a foot injury, is a lot like Mcsorley — just a whole lot bigger at 6-foot-5, 230 pounds. He needs to become a more accurate passer, but Fitzgerald has run for 2,359 yards and 30 touchdowns the last two seasons. The potential is there for big stats.

Justin Herbert, QB, Oregon

Herbert was on his way to a big sophomore year when he broke his collarbone midway through this season. Without him, the Ducks went 1-4. In the seven games he played, Herbert passed for 1,750 yards and 13 touchdowns and added five rushing touchdowns. The 6-foot-6, 220-pounder could also be working his way toward becoming the No. 1 pick in the 2019 draft.

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