The Riverside Press-Enterprise

USC'S Williams raises concerns at combine

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Caleb Williams and Jayden Daniels arrived in Indianapol­is as Heisman Trophy winners. Drake Maye is seeking to add to his family’s impressive athletic legacy.

And the only player who might prevent those three talented quarterbac­ks from going 1-2-3 in this year’s NFL draft appears to be All-america receiver Marvin Harrison Jr.

On Friday, the four top prospects attended the league’s scouting combine, and for the next eight weeks, they will be vying for the No. 1 spot.

“I think I’ve put in all the hard work, the time, the effort, the energy into being that. I don’t think of a Plan B,” Williams said. “That’s kind of how I do things in my life. I don’t think of a Plan B, stay on Plan A. When things don’t work out, I find a way to make a plan work.”

Williams has been favored to become the top pick almost from the moment he won the Heisman in 2022.

Now, however, there are nagging questions about Williams. He has heard concerns over his size, how he handled the team’s struggles in 2023, his mentality, even some rumored contract demands.

Yet on Friday, instead of addressing those questions, he may have raised another issue. Williams, who had already said he wouldn’t work out in Indy, surprising­ly said he was also opting out of medical exams at the combine.

“Not 32 teams can draft me. There’s only one of me,” Williams said. “The teams I go to for my visit, those teams will have the medical and that will be it.”

Harrison also has taken an unconventi­onal approach. He did no combine-specific training and doesn’t intend to work out in Indy or at Ohio State’s Pro Day.

Could their decisions affect the top of the first round? Perhaps.

Chicago picks No. 1 and has Justin Fields, once thought to be its quarterbac­k of the future. There is talk that the Bears would either take Williams and trade Fields or keep Fields and pair him with Harrison.

Washington and New England both have young quarterbac­ks who struggled last season. If those teams decide to start over, they could be choosing between Williams, Maye or Daniels.

DRAKE MAYE >> Before Daniels’ emergence last season, Maye had been regarded by many as the No. 2 quarterbac­k in the class.

His father, Mark, played in the World League of American Football. Two of his brothers won national championsh­ips in 2017 — Luke with North Carolina’s basketball team and Cole with Florida’s baseball team. Drake’s other brother, Beau, walked on to the Tar Heels basketball team. His mother, Aimee, was a high school basketball standout.

JAYDEN DANIELS >> Then there’s Daniels, the San Bernardino Cajon High product who turned down the chance to enter last year’s draft after a strong finish at LSU.

Instead, he altered his offseason training program and came back with 15 pounds of added muscle, along with what receiver Malik Nabers described as a stronger, more precise arm.

Daniels turned in a dazzling 2023 season, became the third LSU player to win the Heisman and has been climbing on draft boards ever since. Can he do enough before draft day to separate himself from Williams, Maye and Harrison and go No. 1?

“The best situation is whoever believes in me,” Daniels said. “Obviously, if someone’s going to take a chance on me, say, you know, ‘This kid could change our organizati­on or franchise, can be the face of the franchise,’ that’s somebody who supports me, believes in me. Obviously if they call my name, they believe in me as a quarterbac­k.”

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