Alabama’s Smith first receiver to win Heisman in 29 years
NEWYORK» On an Alabama team stacked with stars, DeVonta Smith emerged as the best player in college football.
Smith became the first wide receiver to win the Heisman Trophy in 29 seasons Tuesday night, breaking the monopoly quarterbacks have had on college football’s most prestigious award by beating out three of them.
Smith finished with 447 first-place votes and 1,856 points to easily outdistance Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence (222, 1,187), teammate Mac Jones (138, 1,130) and Florida’s Kyle Trask (61, 737).
The Crimson Tide senior is the fourth receiver to win the Heisman, joining Michigan’s Desmond Howard in 1991, Notre Dame’s Tim Brown in 1987 and Nebraska’s Johnny Rodgers in 1972.
Quarterbacks had won 17 of the previous 20 Heisman trophies, including the last four.
Smith is the third Alabama player to win the Heisman, all since 2009.
Like Tide running backs Mark Ingram (‘09) and Derrick Henry (2015), Smith will play in the national championship game as a Heisman winner.
The Heisman voting was complete on Dec. 21, so playoff performances were not a factor. But Smith made those who supported him feel good about it with a brilliant threetouchdown game against Notre Dame in the CFP semifinals last weekend.
Smith has 105 catches for 1,641 yards and 22 total touchdowns going into the final game of his college career — which will also be his third national championship game.
Smith carved out a place in Alabama’s storied history as a freshman, catching the winning 41-yard touchdown pass from Tua Tagovailoa in overtime against Georgia to give the Tide the 2017 national championship.
For the next two seasons, Smith was still often the overlooked star in the Tide’s talented 2017 class of receivers that included All-American Jerry Jeudy and Henry Ruggs. Both of those players decided to skip their senior seasons and enter the draft last year. Both were selected in the first round.
Smith returned to school to complete his degree and form an explosive combination for the Tide with junior Jaylen Waddle. Then Waddle went down with a seasonending leg injury on Oct. 24.
As the Tide’s undisputed No. 1 receiver, Smith shined. The week after Waddle went out, Smith had 11 catches for 204 yards and four TDs against Mississippi State.
Smith’s soaring onehanded TD grab against
LSU was not just his signature play, but one the 2020 season’s best.
A former four-star recruit from Amite, La., Smith came to Tuscaloosa from LSU’s backyard, disappointing the many Tigers’ fans in his hometown.
He had only seven receptions as a freshman, and while he scored the winning TD in the national title game, the story was of the game was the guy who threw it.
Tagovailoa was Alabama’s Heisman contender for the next two years.