USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Murray set to play for A’s but ...

- Jori Epstein

When Tony Dungy sees Kyler Murray, something feels familiar.

A Heisman Trophy-caliber player, selected in the first round of a profession­al sports league other than football, leading his team on a college football title run?

Dungy thinks back 25 years. He was the Vikings’ defensive coordinato­r, scouting draft prospects. Heisman winner Charlie Ward was lighting opponents up for 3,032 yards and 27 touchdowns to land Florida State’s first national title. Dungy told then-Vikings coach Dennis Green to pursue Ward.

“As a defensive coach at the time,” Dungy said, “I’m thinking, ‘Man. I would not want to play against this guy and all the headaches he would provide.’ ”

But would Ward, who instead became a first-round NBA pick with a 12-year career, sign if the Vikings risked the selection?

It’s a conundrum Murray has revived.

Clearly, Murray has elite in two sports.

The Oakland Athletics drafted the outfielder ninth overall and signed him to a $4.66 million guaranteed contract that allowed him to play one more year of Sooners football.

So far in that season, no one has posted more than Murray’s 51 touchdowns (40 passing, 11 rushing) or his 4,945 total yards of offense. His 11.9 yards per pass attempt leads the nation; his 70.9 completion percentage second. Murray’s 205.72 passing efficiency rating is the best the NCAA has ever seen.

But do those numbers make Murray a potential NFL franchise quarterbac­k?

Let’s define that.

A franchise quarterbac­k is the person an NFL team will build around for 10-12 years, longtime quarterbac­k agent Leigh Steinberg says. He’s someone a team wins because of rather than simply with. And when he’s thrown multiple intercepti­ons in a hostile road environmen­t, proved a franchise quarterbac­k compartmen­talizes failures, adopts a quiet mind and elevates his play to secure a victory.

Murray has shown teams can win because of him. Oklahoma’s 12-1 record came despite a defense allowing 32.4 points per game (96th best in the FBS) and 448.1 total yards (108th).

Adversity? Take Oklahoma’s loss, when Murray entered the fourth quarter down 45-24 against rival Texas. Murray threw for a 19-yard touchdown, ran 67 yards for a second and completed a 35-yard pass on a third drive to set up a running back for a game-tying score. The Sooners lost 48-45 on a field goal as time expired.

That leaves longevity, perhaps the biggest question for the generously listed 5-10, 195pound dual-threat quarterbac­k. JEFFREY MCWHORTER/AP Is Murray durable enough to sustain big hits, committed enough to shun his baseball opportunit­y and go all in for football?

NFL analysts point to Big 12 quarterbac­ks Patrick Mahomes and Baker Mayfield and Super Bowl champions Drew Brees (6-0) and Russell Wilson (5-11) as evidence Murray’s stature wouldn’t preclude NFL success.

“The game has evolved,” said Murray’s father, Kevin, who helped Texas A&M beat Heisman dual-sport athlete Bo Jackson in the 1986 Cotton Bowl. “And so has the quarterbac­k position.”

Murray’s ability to read, process and deliver are “critically important traits” teams look for, Kevin Murray says.

“He flat knows how to play,” said Steinberg, whose clientele have included Mahomes and Troy Aikman.

“If a team could overlook the size situation, they’d have a prototypic­al player.”

Gil Brandt, who spent 29 years as the Cowboys’ vice president of personnel, calls Murray “probably as good a runner/passer combinatio­n as any quarterbac­k I’ve ever seen.” He’s certain scouts are writing reports on Murray.

Draft analyst Dane Brugler projects Murray a top-50 pick, depending on which teams in the market for quarterbac­k buy in to Murray’s skill set.

ESPN draft expert Mel Kiper Jr. said Murray would fall to Round 2 due to his size. ESPN draft expert Todd McShay insists he’d go in the first.

“It’s more about quick twitch, guys that can get the ball out, move,” McShay said.

“And he does that as well as anyone in the country.”

But will teams risk a draft pick on a 5-10 quarterbac­k with a guaranteed Athletics’ contract?

Superagent Scott Boras, who helped Murray negotiate with the A’s for another college football season, says his client was “fully aware he could play in the NFL” when signing.

“This man has a contract,” Boras told USA TODAY. “He will be in spring training with the Oakland A’s. That’s the commitment.”

But Murray told Tim Tebow on ESPN last week that he’d discuss his future with his family after the Sooners’ playoff run.

“Weigh out the option of what the NFL thinks of me,” Murray said. “Right now, my future is already kind of planned out, but we’ll see what happens.”

Sooners coach Lincoln Riley has told inquiring NFL minds simply that Murray “loves football.”

“That to me is an indication he has a chance,” said Brandt, who persuaded 1964 Heisman winner Roger Staubach to prioritize the pigskin over baseball.

 ??  ?? Kyler Murray has signed to play baseball but perhaps the door for playing pro football hasn’t completely shut.
Kyler Murray has signed to play baseball but perhaps the door for playing pro football hasn’t completely shut.

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