The Palm Beach Post

Can Browning walk Mayfield’s Heisman path?

Washington QB tops list of dark-horse candidates for trophy.

- By Joe Reedy

Washington’s Jake Browning is hoping to repeat what Baker Mayfield did last year.

Mayfield was a Heisman Trophy long shot in the preseason but ended up winning the award while leading Oklahoma to the College Football Playoff for the second time in three years.

Browning was sixth in the Heisman voting two years ago after leading the Huskies to the Pac-12 title and the playoff, where they lost to Alabama in the semifinals. His productivi­ty declined last year as his touchdowns fell from 43 to 19.

Washington was 10-3 last season, but is the preseason favorite to win the Pac-12. Browning and the Huskies will also have an early opportunit­y to make a favorable impression to the rest of the nation as they face Auburn in the opener in Atlanta on Sept. 1.

Browning — who has thrown for over 9,000 yards and 78 touchdowns the past three seasons — is facing high expectatio­ns, but none might be bigger than what coach Chris Peterson expects out of the senior. “Jake plays really good football and has made some spectacula­r plays,” Peterson said. “We’re looking for him to do that at the most difficult position in football at a really high, elite level play after play after play.”

A look at other Heisman long shots looking to improve their odds:

Ed Oliver, DT, Houston: The junior might have set the record for being the earliest to announce that he is entering the NFL draft. But there is good reason for that: Oliver might be the top pick. The 6-foot-3, 290-pound defensive lineman faces huge odds to win, but with 38½ tackles for loss the last two seasons and the possibilit­y that coach Major Applewhite could use him on some offensive plays, he could at least get to New York as one of the finalists.

McKenzie Milton, QB, Central Florida: Milton was eighth in the voting last year after he led the Knights to an improbable 13-0 record and a victory over Auburn in the Peach Bowl. He was second in the nation in passing efficiency (179.3) and yards per attempt (10.22), finishing behind Mayfield. UCF, though, has a new coach in Josh Heupel after Scott Frost left for Nebraska. Also hampering Milton’s bid is a lack of weekly exposure. The Knights’ first national appearance won’t be until Sept. 15 against North Carolina.

Drew Lock, QB, Missouri: Lock set a Southeaste­rn Conference record last season with 44 touchdown passes. Three SEC quarterbac­ks have won the award since 2007, but the senior is going to need to produce wins for a Tigers squad that lost five of its first six last season before finishing 7-6.

Cam Akers, RB, Florida State: New coach Willie Taggart says that the theme of his offense is “lethal simplicity.” That is also an apt descriptio­n of Akers. The sophomore had four 100yard games last season along with setting Florida State’s freshman rushing record with 1,025 yards. Akers will be counted on early to be a focal point of Taggart’s offense, starting with the Sept. 3 opener against Virginia Tech.

Brian Lewerke, QB, Michigan State: The junior is a dual-threat quarterbac­k who accounted for 3,352 yards of total offense as the Spartans won 10 games last season. With the turmoil surroundin­g Ohio State’s program, Michigan State could end up as the favorite in the Big Ten East.

Rodney Anderson, RB, Oklahoma: There have been only three occasions where the same school produced different Heisman winners in back-to-back seasons. Anderson didn’t even start until midseason last year, but he finished with 1,442 yards and 18 touchdowns from scrimmage. In his best game, he had 290 yards and four touchdowns from scrimmage in a regular-season win over TCU. At 6-foot-1 and 220 pounds, he is a powerhouse with breakaway speed and good enough hands to have grabbed five touchdown receptions last season.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Washington QB Jake Browning has thrown for more than 9,000 yards and 78 touchdowns the past three years. Since only 19 of those scoring passes came last season, he enters the season as a long shot in the Heisman Trophy race. But with the Huskies picked to win the Pac-12, he’s definitely a dark-horse candidate.
AP FILE Washington QB Jake Browning has thrown for more than 9,000 yards and 78 touchdowns the past three years. Since only 19 of those scoring passes came last season, he enters the season as a long shot in the Heisman Trophy race. But with the Huskies picked to win the Pac-12, he’s definitely a dark-horse candidate.
 ?? AP ?? Oklahoma running back Rodney Anderson could emerge from the shadow of Baker Mayfield.
AP Oklahoma running back Rodney Anderson could emerge from the shadow of Baker Mayfield.

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