The Welland Tribune

Oklahoma QB Murray wins Heisman Trophy

The first time that QBs from the same college have won consecutiv­ely

- BRIAN HEYMAN

NEW YORK — The Oakland A’s selected Kyler Murray with the ninth overall pick in June’s Major League Baseball draft, but the game plan for the Oklahoma centre-fielder/quarterbac­k was to chase a football title and a Heisman Trophy before taking a swing at pro baseball.

Murray found himself playing from behind in the bid to claim the college game’s most famed individual prize. Tua Tagovailoa had announced his arrival when he took over at QB for Alabama in the second half of last season’s U.S. college football title game and kept on rolling for the Crimson Tide this season as the starter for an undefeated, top-ranked team.

The sophomore left-hander establishe­d himself as the perceived Heisman favourite until he stumbled right before the finish line. Tagovailoa turned over the favourite designatio­n to Murray. The redshirt junior showed a considerab­le closing kick.

When the Heisman results were announced Saturday night in New York, it was Murray’s trophy. Tagovailoa finished second and Ohio State redshirt sophomore QB Dwayne Haskins came in a distant third.

“This is crazy,” Murray said. “Man, this is an honour, something that I’ll never forget, something I’ll always treasure the rest of my life.”

It marked the first time QBs from the same college won in consecutiv­e years. Murray backed up last year’s winner, Baker Mayfield.

“It is extremely special,” Sooners coach Lincoln Riley said.

Murray was on 92.03 per cent of the ballots. That stands third all-time. He received 517 first-place votes to Tagovailoa’s 299 and 2,167 votes to Tagovailoa’s 1,871, a record for a runner-up.

Murray is the college leader in total yards (4,945), points responsibl­e (306) and passing efficiency (205.7). He has thrown for 4,053 yards and 40 touchdowns, including 743 yards and six TDs in those last two games, and ran for 892 yards and 11 scores.

His emotions showed when he thanked Riley, telling him, “You pushed me harder than any coach ever has.”

The Texas native is scheduled to go to spring training with the A’s after batting .296 with 10 homers, 47 runs batted in and 10 steals in 51 games at Oklahoma last season and then signing for

US$4.66 million. “As of right now, everybody knows the plan,” Murray said.

But will he stick with the plan or give up baseball for football? He’s listed at fivefoot-10, but he’s fast and accurate. He will see how he’s perceived by the NFL. Perhaps the dual threat in football can try a dual-sport run as a pro.

“If it was an option, I’d be open to doing it,” Murray said. “But it’s kind of like a fake thing that people outside of it bring it up.”

Tagovailoa has thrown for 3,353 yards and a school-record 37 TDs with only four intercepti­ons.

But he suffered a left ankle injury against Georgia in the first quarter of the SEC title game and struggled, going 10for-25 and throwing two intercepti­ons before being KO’d in the fourth quarter by a right ankle injury. The Hawaii native had arthroscop­ic surgery on the left one, but he said his recovery is going well. He’s out of his walking boot and expected to be ready when the Tide (13-0) plays their College Football Playoff semi against Murray and No. 4 Oklahoma (12-1) at the Orange Bowl on Dec. 29.

Don’t look for Heisman regrets from Tagovailoa regarding that last game.

“Unfortunat­ely, I threw two intercepti­ons and I got hurt — both my ankles,” he said. “That’s just how the ball rolls sometimes.”

 ?? CRAIG RUTTLE
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Oklahoma quarterbac­k Kyler Murray, pictured here with the Heisman Trophy, was also drafted by baseball’s Oakland A’s in June.
CRAIG RUTTLE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oklahoma quarterbac­k Kyler Murray, pictured here with the Heisman Trophy, was also drafted by baseball’s Oakland A’s in June.

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