The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

PRIZED QB TRANSFER NEWMAN JOINS DOGS

Wake Forest’s dual-threat star eager to succeed Fromm.

- By Chip Towers chip.towers@ajc.com

There’s a new leader in the clubhouse to become Jake Fromm’s successor as Georgia’s quarterbac­k. Jamie Newman is a done deal.

Newman, Wake Forest’s starting quarterbac­k for this past season and part of the one before, announced via his socialmedi­a accounts Saturday morning he is joining the Bulldogs as a graduate transfer. The 6-foot-4, 230-pound resident of Graham, N.C., is in Athens and enrolled at UGA. “After careful evaluation and guidance frommy family, I have decided to enroll at the University of Georgia as a graduate transfer,” Newman wrote on his Twitter account. “As I look ahead, I am excited about joining such a great football program under the leadership of Coach Smart and offensive coordinato­r coach James Coley. I believe in UGA’s amazing staff, great football program and the passionate fans supporting this team. Most importantl­y, I’m ready to get to work.”

Fromm, a junior and UGA’s starting quarterbac­k from 2017-19, announced Wednesday he was entering the NFL draft.

The Bulldogs have three other scholarshi­p quarterbac­ks on campus in rising junior Stetson Bennett, redshirt freshman D’Wan Mathis and early-enrollee freshman Carson Beck. They also have a well-respected walk-on in Nathan Priestley, a redshirt freshman who arrived from California last year and became Georgia’s No. 3 quarterbac­k. But what they don’t have is experience.

Newman brings that, not to mention size, speed and athletic ability. He is considered a true dual-threat quarterbac­k.

Pro Football Focus rates Newman as the No. 3 quarterbac­k in the nation (behind No. 1 Trevor Lawrence of Clemson and No. 2 Justin Fields of Ohio State) among returning players, and wrote this about him:

“The tight-window passing he has put on display has been next level and a large reason why he is highly sought after on the transfer market. Joe Burrow is far and away the highest-graded quarterbac­k throwing to a tight window, but Newman is second — and third isn’t anywhere near him. He also limited his uncatchabl­e pass rate to the fourth lowest . ...

“While some may say it’s his rushing that can be his greatest weapon, it’s clearly his arm. He’s the second highest-graded on 20-plus yard throws and was worth the 12th most wins above average in college football, despite playing in fewer games than everyone else.”

This season, Newman completed 61% of 361 passes for 2,868 yards and 26 touchdowns with 11 intercepti­ons in 13 games for Wake Forest, which went 8-5. He also rushed for 574 yards and six scores.

He played in six games in 2018, starting four, and he completed 59.8% of his passes for 1,083 yards and nine touchdowns with four intercepti­ons. He had another four touchdowns and 247 yards rushing. He leaves Wake Forest with 4,785 yards total offense and 45 scores.

Former Georgia quarterbac­k-turned-college-football-analyst D.J. Shockley has seen Newman play.

“A tough, heady kid,” said Shockley, who works for the SEC Network now but used to do games on the ACC Network. “He throws a really good deep ball. Athletic. Will be good in (the run-pass-option) game and makes pretty good decisions. Really strong with the ball in his hands. A big-time competitor.”

Newman graduated from Wake Forest and has one season of eligibilit­y remaining.

 ?? ADRIAN KRAUS / AP ?? Wake Forest quarterbac­k Jamie Newman is rated by Pro Football Focus as the No. 3 quarterbac­k in the nation (behind Trevor Lawrence and Justin Fields) among returning players.
ADRIAN KRAUS / AP Wake Forest quarterbac­k Jamie Newman is rated by Pro Football Focus as the No. 3 quarterbac­k in the nation (behind Trevor Lawrence and Justin Fields) among returning players.

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