Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

IN THE RUNNING TO BE TWO-COUNTY HERO

Heisman-chasing QB from Broward AND Palm Beach County

- By Shandel Richardson Staff writer

University of Louisville quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson doesn’t want to make this a competitio­n.

As very young player, he dominated the Broward County youth football scene. As a teen, he did the same while playing high school football in Palm Beach County.

Instead of claiming one area, he’d rather just embrace both counties for putting him in contention for winning the Heisman Trophy. Jackson is among the five finalists in New York City awaiting Saturday night’s announceme­nt at PlayStatio­n Theater in Times Square.

No one from either county has ever won the award for the nation’s top college football player. So football fans in both areas can feel like their local hero has broken through on the nation’s biggest stage if he brings home the hardware.

“I’m from Broward County, but Palm Beach, I have friends and family down there, too,” Jackson said earlier this week. “I just take them both.”

Jackson was born in Pompano Beach before moving north of the county line for high school. After turning heads at the Broward County optimist level, he starred for two seasons at Boynton Beach High School. A recordbrea­king sophomore season at Louisville will have him on stage with Michigan linebacker Jabrill Peppers,

“I’m from Broward County, but Palm Beach, I have friends and family down there, too. I just take them both.” Heisman contender Lamar Jackson

Clemson quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson and Oklahoma quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield and receiver Dede Westbrook.

“He claims Broward and Palm,” said former high school teammate Tre’Quan Smith, who now plays safety at Northern Illinois. “It really didn’t matter to us. We didn’t care or talk about it. It’s not where you’re from but how you play.”

Where Jackson is from hasn’t mattered much this season. He became the first player in Division I history with at least 3,300 passing yards and 1,500 rushing yards in a season and the sixth to rush and throw for 20 touchdowns. Jackson was the Heisman favorite and the Cardinals were in contention for the national title until Louisville lost its final two games against Houston and Kentucky.

Still, Jackson helped both counties get exposure. He appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrate­d and was featured by nearly every national college football media outlet. In each interview, he represente­d both counties.

Longtime area recruiting writer Larry Blustein compared it to former Miami Hurricanes

“It really didn’t matter to us. We didn’t care or talk about it. It’s not where you’re from but how you play.” Tre’Quan Smith, high school teammate about which county Jackson might claim

quarterbac­k Ryan Collins, who was one of the area’s top players in the mid-1990s. He lived in Pembroke Pines but played at Hialeah Miami Lakes. Both counties claimed Collins.

“You take a kid who had success at a place like Boynton Beach and those people believe that he is one of theirs,” Blustein said. “And at the same time, he grew up in Broward County in Pompano Beach, and everyone there has a right to feel that he’s theirs as well, so I guess he’s both.”

Jackson has done a solid job of staying neutral. His Twitter page is full of Palm Beach references, including the #561 for the area code. That hasn’t prevented him from staying true to his Broward roots. Jackson became a household name after leading Louisville past Florida State in September. While he was walking off the field, cameras caught him saying, “Free Kodak Black.” It was in reference to the jailed rapper from Pompano Beach who has since been released.

“That’s his hometown,” said Marcus Darrisaw, who was an assistant coach at Boynton Beach. “He went to school in Boynton. He was raised in Pompano Beach, and he’s going to make sure the world knows he’s from Pompano Beach.”

Although both counties can stake a claim to Jackson, only one will be home to the Heisman if he wins the trophy. He already plans to give it to his mother, Felicia, who still lives in Boynton Beach.

“It goes straight to the person it belongs to, my mother,” Jackson said. “I don’t have any control over it after that moment. I feel everything I accomplish­ed in life, it belongs to her. She worked so hard with me and helping me become a man and the player I am today. There’s no telling where I would have been without here. I think everything belongs to her.”

 ??  ?? Lamar Jackson, seen in his playing days at Boynton Beach High, is from across the county line in Pompano Beach. JIM RASSOL/STAFF FILE PHOTO
Lamar Jackson, seen in his playing days at Boynton Beach High, is from across the county line in Pompano Beach. JIM RASSOL/STAFF FILE PHOTO
 ?? ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES ?? Louisville Cardinals quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson runs with the ball against Kentucky.
ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES Louisville Cardinals quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson runs with the ball against Kentucky.

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