The Commercial Appeal

College football Week 11 QB rankings

- Paul Myerberg

If the season ended today, the Heisman Trophy finalists would be Alabama quarterbac­k Bryce Young, Michigan State running back Kenneth Walker III and ... who?

There’s a reason why names like Georgia defensive tackle Jordan Davis are bandied about when discussing which players will earn the invite to Manhattan in December, and it has to do with the smaller number of quarterbac­ks under serious considerat­ion.

With Oklahoma freshman Caleb Williams no longer in the mix following the Sooners’ loss to Baylor, only three quarterbac­ks join Young in the Heisman conversati­on: Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud, Pittsburgh’s Kenny Pickett and Mississipp­i’s Matt Corral.

Of that group, Stroud would seem to have the best chance at joining Young and Walker as Heisman finalists thanks to his numbers and the Buckeyes’ stretch of games to end the regular season. Up next for Ohio State are Michigan State, Michigan and a possible appearance in the Big Ten championsh­ip game.

Stroud comes in just behind Young in this week’s list of the best quarterbac­ks in the country:

1. Bryce Young, Alabama: The Alabama offense against New Mexico State was not a fair fight: Young completed 21 of 23 throws for 270 yards and five touchdowns, setting a new program record in completing his first 13 attempts. These November tune-up games against pitiful competitio­n are always kind to Alabama quarterbac­ks, who have thrown for 24 touchdowns without an intercepti­on in recent games against the Aggies, Western Carolina, The Citadel, Mercer, Chattanoog­a and Charleston Southern.

2. C.J. Stroud, Ohio State: Stymied two weeks ago by the Nebraska defense – the only opponent in the Big Ten to hold the first-year starter to under nine yards per attempt – Stroud hit on 81.6% of his throws for 361 yards and five scores in the Buckeyes’ rout of Purdue.

3. Kenny Pickett, Pittsburgh: The Panthers beat North Carolina in overtime last week despite a rare intercepti­on from Pickett, his fourth in 385 attempts.

After averaging one intercepti­on for 46.3 attempts in his first three years as the starter — which is a really good average — Pickett has tossed one pick for every 96.3 throws in 2021.

4. Matt Corral, Ole Miss: The numbers really don’t favor Corral, who threw for 12 more touchdowns and averaged roughly an additional yard per throw last season across a similar number of attempts (326 in 2020 and 309 so far in

2021). Last year’s 10-game schedule was also more difficult, with nine games against the SEC and a bowl game against Indiana. Corral’s Heisman case rests instead on his importance to a team that is in line to reach a New Year’s Six bowl in coach Lane Kiffin’s second year.

5. Caleb Williams, Oklahoma: The bottom finally fell out for Williams, who had an outstandin­g first month as the

Sooners’ starter but went for 142 yards and two intercepti­ons in the loss to Baylor. That drops the true freshman out of contention for the Heisman.

6. Desmond Ridder, Cincinnati: Ridder went for 304 yards in the Bearcats’ 45-28 win against South Florida, his highest total so far this season and his first time over the 300-yard mark since a win against Central Florida last November. He also ran for a season-high 65 yards and a touchdown, giving him 155 yards on 38 carries in Cincinnati’s last three games.

7. Will Rogers, Mississipp­i State: Rogers leads the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n in completion percentage (75.7%) and ranks second behind Young in the SEC with 29 touchdown passes. And he is very high-volume: With 539 attempts, Rogers tops the FBS and is one game away from breaking the SEC single-season record of 559 set by Kentucky’s Jared Lorenzen in 2000.

8. Sam Hartman, Wake Forest: Hartman’s completion percentage has dipped below 50% in each of Wake’s last two games. The shootout loss to North Carolina was followed by Saturday’s shootout win against North Carolina State, which left the Demon Deacons in very good shape to claim the ACC Atlantic and play for the conference championsh­ip. But Hartman has also thrown five of his eight intercepti­ons in these past two games, which is worrisome.

9. Carson Strong, Nevada: Despite a great game from Strong, who hit on 34 of 48 passes for 350 yards, three touchdowns and zero intercepti­ons. Nevada’s 23-21 loss to San Diego State essentiall­y ends any shot the Wolf Pack had of playing for the conference championsh­ip. Strong became the first Mountain West quarterbac­k to complete more than 70% of his throws for more than 300 yards with multiple touchdowns and no intercepti­ons against the Aztecs’ defense since Nevada’s Cody Fajardo did so in 2012.

10. Stetson Bennett, Georgia: Yes, Stetson Bennett. The backup to JT Daniels in the preseason, Bennett might be difficult to unseat as his steers the Bulldogs to the SEC championsh­ip game. You know who leads the conference in yards per attempt (10.9) and efficiency (184.6)? Bennett, that’s who.

 ?? CHARLES LECLAIRE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Pittsburgh quarterbac­k Kenny Pickett runs for a first down against North Carolina on Nov. 11. Pittsburgh won 30-23 in overtime.
CHARLES LECLAIRE/USA TODAY SPORTS Pittsburgh quarterbac­k Kenny Pickett runs for a first down against North Carolina on Nov. 11. Pittsburgh won 30-23 in overtime.

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