The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hurts has shown poise of a veteran

Quarterbac­k thrives in high-profile role for No. 1 Alabama.

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It’s easy to appraise Jalen Hurts’ by the numbers: The yards, the touchdowns and the wins.

But perhaps the most notable number is his age, 18. Top-ranked Alabama’s freshman quarterbac­k has shown poise beyond his years under the pressure of leading the Crimson Tide to a Southeaste­rn Conference title and playoff berth.

Alabama’s offensive leader is just a teenager from Texas who hadn’t led a team to a championsh­ip since he was an 8-year-old on the East Houston Aggies. He hasn’t often looked like an 18-yearold on the field.

“I’m a firm believer in age being nothing but a number,” Hurts said. “And I feel like if you step up to any situation and you’re able to play your game, be confident, have the poise you need to have, you’ll be all right.”

Hurts is trying to become only the second non-redshirt freshman quarterbac­k to lead a major college team to a national title. Oklahoma’s Jamelle Holieway replaced an injured Troy Aikman in 1985 and led the Sooners to eight straight wins.

So far, Hurts is 12-0 as a starter since claiming the job after the opener and has been named SEC offensive player of the year. His journey to a College Football Playoff semifinal matchup with No. 4 Washington on Dec. 31 hasn’t been all paved in crimson glory, but more a season-long rubber band-like grind of snapping back from negative plays, like a fumble that Mississipp­i returned for a touchdown. Big plays often follow the bad ones.

Hurts has gotten better later in games, including in the second half of the Iron Bowl against Auburn and the SEC championsh­ip game against Florida.

“That’s unusual because freshmen are rookies,” Alabama offensive coordinato­r Lane Kiffin said after the SEC championsh­ip game in Atlanta. “What do they do? They usually screw up in the fourth quarter. He’s special.”

Of course, Hurts has also had few games that were still undecided in the fourth quarter.

He has, of course, benefited from a supporting cast full of NFL talent and the nation’s best defense, much like Bama predecesso­rs including Jake Coker, AJ McCarron and Greg McElroy — each of whom led the Tide to national titles.

Hurts arrived in Tuscaloosa in time to play Clemson’s Deshaun Watson for the scout team leading up to the national championsh­ip game last season. He has been able to escape some of the grind of being quarterbac­k of a national title contender since coach Nick Saban doesn’t allow freshmen to talk to reporters during the regular season. So the SEC championsh­ip postgame scrum looked like a full-out blitz, with Hurts surrounded by reporters and TV cameras scrambling for his first public comments as Bama’s starter.

He handled it with aplomb and didn’t bite when asked to evaluate his season.

“As a team, I think we’ve done a great job,” Hurts said, repeating himself when asked a second time.

Being the quarterbac­k of a dynasty in a state where college football reigns supreme could overwhelm any player, freshman or senior.

“He’s handled it extremely well,” said McElroy, an SEC Network analyst who helped lead the Tide to the 2009 national title. “Has he been perfect? No. Is there a lot of room for improvemen­t? Absolutely. But given the pressure and the circumstan­ce of playing quarterbac­k at Alabama — as soon as you’re named the starter you immediatel­y become one of the most heavily scrutinize­d people in the entire state.”

Hurts, the son of a high school coach, has put up big numbers along the way, already running for more yards in a season than any other Tide quarterbac­k.

He has rushed for 841 yards and 12 touchdowns, keeping the offense going even when the passing game isn’t clicking. He has also completed 65.3 percent of his passes for 2,592 yards and 22 touchdowns with nine intercepti­ons.

Hurts has been a better finisher than starter. He has passed for 14 touchdowns and been intercepte­d just twice in the second half of games, when he’s also produced many of his biggest plays. That includes a 21-yard fourth-quarter touchdown run in a 10-0 win at LSU in a game that was otherwise dominated by the defenses.

“I think people were on him a little bit after the LSU game and I just told him, ‘Man, Jalen, you just went into Tiger Stadium at night in an Alabama-LSU game and won and really made the one significan­t play on offense,’” Kiffin said. “He’s a special player.”

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON / AP ?? Jalen Hurts is two wins away from becoming the second non-redshirt freshman quarterbac­k to lead a majorcolle­ge team to a national title.
BRYNN ANDERSON / AP Jalen Hurts is two wins away from becoming the second non-redshirt freshman quarterbac­k to lead a majorcolle­ge team to a national title.

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