Albuquerque Journal

Bulldog, Sooner fullbacks to do very different jobs

Oklahoma’s Flowers is a hybrid, while Georgia’s Payne is a blocking throwback

- BY RALPH D. RUSSO

LOS ANGELES — Oklahoma’s Dimitri Flowers and Georgia’s Christian Payne have the same title but very different job descriptio­ns.

Both are listed as fullbacks. For Flowers, that’s really a misnomer. Oklahoma coach Lincoln Riley thinks of Flowers as an H-back, as in hybrid. The senior lines up everywhere — receiver, tight end, tailback — allowing the Sooners’ offense to quickly morph from one look to another.

Payne, meanwhile, is the quintessen­tial fullback for Georgia. The senior lines up in front of a tailback and blocks — and that’s pretty much it.

“I’m not used like a lot of fullbacks in the country, and that just goes to attribute to coach (Lincoln) Riley and how smart he is on the offensive side of the ball,” Flowers said. “It’s kind of crazy to see that we play the same position, but do almost two totally different things.”

No. 2 Oklahoma and No. 3 Georgia meet for the first time Monday at the Rose Bowl in a College Football Playoff semifinal that features two ways of playing offense. The Sooners’ spread highlights the modern move toward position-less football, with players who can be mixed and matched to provide a variety of options for Heisman Trophy winner Baker Mayfield. The Bulldogs take a more traditiona­l approach to offense, while still keeping opponents guessing. Nowhere is the difference between the two styles more apparent than the No. 1 fullbacks on each team’s depth chart.

Flowers was a three-star recruit out of San Antonio, Texas, who did a little bit of everything in high school, including play quarterbac­k. Finding a player with the physical skills to handle what the Sooners expect from him is not as challengin­g as finding one capable of handling all there is to learn.

“Really, really, tough,” Riley said Saturday at Rose Bowl media day.

Flowers said he has lined up in as many as eight spots during a game.

Flowers has only 36 touches this season (13 carries and 23 catches), but he has scored eight touchdowns (four rushing and four receiving). As a runner, the 247-pounder mostly handles short yardage, averaging 2.0 yards per carry. As a receiver, he is a big-play threat at 17.9 yards a catch.

Flowers’ versatilit­y allows the Sooners to operate up-tempo because they don’t need to change personnel as often. Tight end Mark Andrews provides similar benefits. The All-American is split out wide or lined up in the slot far more than he is in tight, next to an offensive tackle.

“They can be in one personnel grouping and be in a twoback pro set, and then next play they can be in a threerecei­ver set, and the next they can be a four-wide receiver set. Then they can be in empty, with the same personnel on the field,” Georgia defensive coordinato­r Mel Tucker said. “It puts a lot of pressure on your defense.”

The pressure Georgia puts on a defense with Payne is all about brute force. The hometown hero from Athens came to the Bulldogs as a walk-on linebacker under former coach Mark Richt, who also used prototypic­al fullbacks. During Payne’s freshman year, coaches found themselves a short on healthy fullbacks in practice and grabbed Payne away from the defense.

“I was like, shoot, that’s my way to get on the field,” Payne said.

Still, the opportunit­ies are limited. Traditiona­l offenses aren’t so traditiona­l anymore. Georgia uses multiple widereceiv­er looks and multiple tight ends, and at times has star tailbacks Nick Chubb and Sony Michel on the field at the same time. When the 242-pound Payne is out there, it is to pave the way for running backs or protect the quarterbac­k. Payne has 11 rushes for 47 yards and 12 catches (none this season) for 119 yards and one touchdown in his career.

“I know playing fullback is not a very glorified position,” Payne said. “I really, really enjoy seeing Chubb and Sony and Bryan Herrien and Elijah Holyfield … scoring touchdowns. If I’m on the field and they score a touchdown, it makes me feel like I did my job.”

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