The Day

Kershaw breezes through his start Heisman winners face scrutiny over NFL futures

- By MICHAEL MAROT

Clayton Kershaw's second spring training outing went according to plan, save for one poor throw to first.

The ace left-hander breezed through two scoreless innings for the Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday, allowing one hit and walking one during a 7-6 victory over the Chicago White Sox at Glendale, Arizona. He worked a perfect inning in his spring training debut against Seattle on Sunday.

"Another step. Another inning," Kershaw said. "Definitely things I can do better, but for the most part I'll take it. It was all right. I made some good pitches when I needed to. I made some bad ones, too. Enough to work on for the next one."

Yankees 5, Braves 4

Russell Wilson struck out in his first spring training at-bat with the New York Yankees.

The Seattle Seahawks quarterbac­k pinch hit for AL Rookie of the Year Aaron Judge in the fifth inning against Atlanta on Friday and swung past a 2-2 pitch from lefthander Max Fried.

Braves' top prospect Ronald Acuna Jr. hit a two-run homer off Masahiro Tanaka, who retired just four batters and allowed four runs, four hits and a walk in his first spring training appearance­s. Giancarlo Stanton had two hits, including a double, and prospect Miguel Andujar had a two-run double.

Indianapol­is — Baker Mayfield and Lamar Jackson braced themselves for a long-anticipate­d flurry of questions at the NFL's annual scouting combine.

Even practice might not have prepared them for Friday.

The two Heisman Trophy-winning quarterbac­ks found themselves repeatedly talking about their biggest perceived weaknesses — Mayfield's size and brash personalit­y and Jackson's future at quarterbac­k. All they need to do now is convince pro scouts they're worthy of being first-round draft picks in April.

"I'm the most accurate quarterbac­k in this draft for sure," said Mayfield, last year's runaway Heisman winner. "I'm ready to be a franchise guy."

Perhaps he will be the guy who turns around a struggling franchise, regardless of venue.

After all, Mayfield does possess the gaudy numbers, a multitude of honors and the winning resume pro teams covet in a starting quarterbac­k. Mayfield went 33-6 as Oklahoma's starter.

What he lacks in size, standing a smidge over 6 feet, Mayfield makes up with a bold confidence and brash personalit­y that ranks second to none.

The combinatio­n has occasional­ly led the blurring of lines between excitable celebratio­n and unsportsma­nlike conduct.

Those antics — the planting of the flag at Ohio State, the crotch-grabbing gesture at Kansas and the image of him running onto the field against Texas Tech, his former school, with a T-shirt reading "traitor" — have some NFL executives wondering how it would resonate in a locker room full of grown men.

Mayfield insists, though, he can change his actions.

"I'm up front and honest, brutally honest," he said. "Some people don't like that because it's rare these days."

But it's not just the on-the-field incidents that worry some.

Mayfield also was involved an embarrassi­ng run-in with law enforcemen­t officers in Arkansas last offseason and endured the humiliatio­n of being stripped of his captain's title before his last home game at Oklahoma.

Teammates, however, have never wavered in their support.

"It's just really a perception," left tackle Orlando Brown Jr. said. "He's not the guy you think he is. He's a captain. He's a leader. He's very focused, and he's going to bring everyone together."

Jackson finds himself in a vastly different situation.

Despite having equally impressive stats, his own Heisman trophy and playing in an efficient spread offense, the questions about Jackson and former Ohio State star J.T. Barrett are all about fit.

Both were dangerous throwing and running in college, and history suggests the dual-threat quarterbac­ks either don't stick around long or stay healthy. Robert Griffin III and Tim Tebow are recent examples, which might explain reports suggesting Jackson will also work out with the receivers today. Jackson repeatedly denied it. "I thought I did a good job at quarterbac­k (at Louisville). I did," he said. I'm here at the combine to show my ability. It (the talk) is just more motivation and I'm going to show them how good I am."

While Jackson has the numbers to prove his value at quarterbac­k, Barrett's numbers suggest something else.

The only three-time captain in Ohio State history played on two Big Ten title teams, a national champion and was chosen the conference quarterbac­k of the year three times. But his inconsiste­ncy frustrated fans and have scouts asking questions about his accuracy — and whether he's capable of being an NFL quarterbac­k.

"I'm here to show 32 teams why they should draft me, and I think I can do that," Barrett said.

Mayfield has the most to gain or lose here.

If he can sell teams on his personalit­y and that he can play more in the mold of other short quarterbac­ks such as Drew Brees and Russell Wilson, Mayfield's stock could soar and might push him into the top five or 10. If not, Mayfield could have a longer wait on draft day.

But nobody here believes more strongly in Mayfield than the Oklahoma quarterbac­k. All you have to do is ask. "I think if anyone is going to turn that franchise around, it would be me," Mayfield said when asked about going to the Cleveland Browns, who have No. 1 and No. 4 overall picks in April.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO/AP PHOTO ?? Clayton Kershaw of the Dodgers throws before Friday’s spring training game against the White Sox at Glendale, Ariz.
CARLOS OSORIO/AP PHOTO Clayton Kershaw of the Dodgers throws before Friday’s spring training game against the White Sox at Glendale, Ariz.

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