Texarkana Gazette

No experience required: Freshman QBs make immediate impact

- By Paul Newberry

ATLANTA—No experience required.

Jalen Hurts came within a single second of leading Alabama to a national championsh­ip in his freshman season. Now, Jake Fromm is on the cusp of a title in his first year at Georgia.

Long gone are the days when a young quarterbac­k needed to ride the bench for a season or two, getting up to speed on a college system much more intricate than what he ran in high school. Even the most successful programs in the land are willing to turn their offense over to an 18-year-old as soon as he steps on campus.

Hurts and Fromm are the most prominent examples of the potential rewards far outweighin­g the ever-dwindling risks.

"There's a completely different mindset now about playing young players," Alabama coach Nick Saban said.

Jamelle Holieway remains the only true freshman quarterbac­k to lead a team to the national title in the modern era, taking over at Oklahoma in 1985 after Troy Aikman was injured.

Hurts came achingly close a year ago, when Alabama lost to Clemson 35-31 on a last-second touchdown pass in the championsh­ip game. Fromm has a chance to match Holieway's feat on Monday night, but he'll have to get by Hurts—a grizzled ol' sophomore this time around—when the Bulldogs (13-1) meet the Crimson Tide (12-1) in an all-Southeaste­rn Conference title game .

Saban points to an increased emphasis on passing games and spread offenses at the high school level, which has fast-forwarded the developmen­t of top quarterbac­k prospects.

"They're not coming up in some hand-the-ball-off I-formation," he said. "Their knowledge and experience is a lot greater than maybe in old-fashioned football."

Fromm threw for 12,745 yards and 116 touchdowns during his four years at Houston County High School in central Georgia, a football hotbed that prepared him well for what he would face with the Bulldogs.

"We would throw it 30, 40 times, even 50 times, as many times as it took," he remembered. "The college offense is a little more wordy. But the passing schemes and the coverages and all that, it's just about all the same. At the end of the day, one guy's running a route, if he's open, you throw it to him. It's not too hard."

Of course, that's overlookin­g all the hard work Fromm put in—Hurts, too—to get to this moment.

"He came in early most mornings during the offseason to throw in quarterbac­k drills," said Von Lassiter, who was Fromm's high school coach. "In season, he came in and went to class, but after lunch he was with the football coaches for the rest of the day. He would watch video, lift weights, we fed 'em, and then we practiced. Then he watched video afterward."

During the summers, Fromm and his teammates traveled around the state to compete in highly competitiv­e 7-on-7 leagues, a mostly passing version of touch football that had become increasing­ly popular, allowing prep quarterbac­ks to further hone their passing skills.

"The way we ran our program in high school was a lot like a college situation, and we really have more time with them than the colleges can have," Lassiter said. "So he's used to sitting in the film room, used to being in the weight room, used to handling all that stuff along with class. It helped to prepares him for college."

 ?? Associated Press ?? In this Jan. 1 file photo, Georgia quarterbac­k Jake Fromm throws a pass during the Rose Bowl NCAA college football game against Oklahoma in Pasadena, Calif. Georgia plays Alabama in the College Football National Championsh­ip game today.
Associated Press In this Jan. 1 file photo, Georgia quarterbac­k Jake Fromm throws a pass during the Rose Bowl NCAA college football game against Oklahoma in Pasadena, Calif. Georgia plays Alabama in the College Football National Championsh­ip game today.

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