The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Transfer QBs dominate the field

Three of four in CFP began careers at other schools.

- By Tim Tucker ttucker@ajc.com

So how’s that recent trend of college quarterbac­ks transferri­ng to new schools at a frenzied pace working out?

Tremendous­ly well for the quarterbac­ks and their new teams, judging from the College Football Playoff field. Three of the four starting quarterbac­ks in this season’s playoff began their college careers at other schools: LSU’s Joe Burrow transferre­d from Ohio State, Oklahoma’s Jalen Hurts from Alabama and Ohio State’s

Justin Fields from Georgia.

“We’re fortunate that the transfer rule is in place,” LSU coach Ed Orgeron said. “Joe’s one of the most important recruits we’ve had at LSU.”

Two of the transfer quarterbac­ks in the playoff, Burrow and Hurts, will meet in a semifinal game in Atlanta’s Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl. No. 1 LSU (13-0) and No. 4 Oklahoma (12-1) will square off Dec. 28 at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

The playoff ’s other transfer quarterbac­k, Fields, will be in the Fiesta Bowl semifinal in Glendale, Ariz., where No. 2-seeded Ohio State (13-0) will face No. 3 Clemson (13-0), also on Dec. 28. Clemson is the only playoff team without a transfer starting at quarterbac­k. Clemson’s QB, Trevor Lawrence, led the Tigers to the national title as a freshman last season.

The LSU-Oklahoma matchup crystalliz­es the impact of quarterbac­k transfers on college football. Burrow, in his second (and last) season at LSU, is the overwhelmi­ng favorite to win the

Heisman Trophy. Hurts, in his first (and last) season at Oklahoma, is the latest in a line of transfers to thrive at quarterbac­k for the Sooners, following the past two Heisman winners, Kyler Murray and Baker Mayfield.

“The transfers for quarterbac­ks have been good for us — that goes without saying,” Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley said. “I totally believe you have to have very good quarterbac­k play to get into the playoffs and to eventually win it all. It’s such an important position.

“Jalen’s been a very positive impact on our program. His (impact) has been unique because it hasn’t been years; it’s been months. So it’s been kind of fast and furious, but very positive.”

Burrow and Hurts graduated from Ohio State and Alabama, respective­ly, and thus were eligible immediatel­y at their new schools under NCAA rules for graduate transfers. Burrow spent three years (including a redshirt season) at Ohio State, transferri­ng to LSU in May 2018 after losing a spring-practice competitio­n for the Buckeyes’ starting QB job to Dwayne Haskins. Hurts spent three years at Alabama, the first two as a starter and the third as a backup, before transferri­ng in January 2019 rather than spending his senior season backing up Tua Tagovailoa.

Burrow has passed for 4,715 yards and 48 touchdowns this season. “With the spread offense, we couldn’t have had success without him,” Orgeron said. Hurts this season has passed for 3,634 yards and 32 touchdowns, rushed for 1,255 yards and 18 TDs and now is in the playoff for the fourth consecutiv­e season, the first three with Alabama.

Come the Peach Bowl, Mercedes-Benz Stadium won’t be new to Burrow or Hurts. Burrow was named MVP of the Tigers’ SEC Championsh­ip game victory over Georgia there Saturday. Hurts played in the building three times for Alabama — once in a Chick-fil-A Kickoff game, once in an SEC Championsh­ip game, once in a national title game. Alabama won all three.

Hurts was benched for the second half of the national championsh­ip game against Georgia in January 2018 as Tagovailoa took over and led the Crimson Tide to a come-from-behind victory. Then the roles reversed at the SEC Championsh­ip game in December 2018, when Hurts replaced an injured Tagovailoa in the fourth quarter and rallied Alabama to another win over Georgia.

Peach Bowl officials relish the story lines Burrow and Hurts will bring to Atlanta later this month.

“To have Jalen Hurts, who won the SEC Championsh­ip game with tremendous play against Georgia, coming back to the same stadium to play against the No. 1 team in the nation — you can’t write that script any better,” Peach Bowl CEO Gary Stokan said.

The other transfer quarterbac­k in the playoff, Fields, left Georgia for Ohio State in January 2019 after playing sparingly behind starter Jake Fromm as a freshman last season.

The NCAA approved a waiver of the rule requiring non-graduate transfers to sit out a year, making Fields eligible to play for the Buckeyes this season. He has thrown for 2,953 yards and 40 touchdowns (against just one intercepti­on) and has run for 471 yards and 10 more TDs.

Fields’ and Hurts’ former teams didn’t make the playoff. But Burrow possibly could face his former team in the national championsh­ip game. If he relishes that prospect, Burrow wouldn’t say so after the SEC title game.

“Look, we’ll play anybody anywhere,” he said.

 ?? HYOSUB
SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? JalenHurts RONJENKINS/GETTYIMAGE­S Joe Burrow
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM JalenHurts RONJENKINS/GETTYIMAGE­S Joe Burrow
 ?? ANDY LYONS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Justin Fields
ANDY LYONS / GETTY IMAGES Justin Fields
 ?? STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Sophomore quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence of Clemson is the only starting quarterbac­k in the College Football Playoffs who is not a transfer.
STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES Sophomore quarterbac­k Trevor Lawrence of Clemson is the only starting quarterbac­k in the College Football Playoffs who is not a transfer.

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