The Record (Troy, NY)

Ohio State QB Dwayne Haskins declares for NFL draft

- By Mitch Stacy AP Sports Writer

COLUMBUS, OHIO (AP) >> Dwayne Haskins is NFL bound after one spectacula­r season as Ohio State’s starting quarterbac­k.

The third- year sophomore who rewrote the school record book had been expected to enter the draft and is a projected firstround pick.

Haskins said on Twitter on Monday he would forgo his final year of eligibilit­y “after many thoughts and prayers with family and close friends.” He wrote that just as it was a boyhood dream to play for Ohio State, he also dreamed of being an NFL quarterbac­k.

His sturdy, 6-foot-3, 220-pound frame, quick release and exceptiona­l accuracy make him a top prospect. He smashed most Ohio State and Big Ten passing records, throwing for a nation-leading 50 touchdowns. He finished third in Heisman Trophy voting

Oklahoma’s Kyler Murray and Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa.

The announceme­nt came on a busy day for the Buckeyes. New coach Ryan Day hired a pair of new defensive coordinato­rs — one of them from hated rival Michigan. Greg Mattison, who spent the past four years as defensive line coach under Jim Harbaugh, joined Day’s staff along with veteran NFL assistant Jeff Hafley. Greg Schiano, the defensive coordinato­r for the past three seasons under Urban Meyer, is out of a job.

The Rose Bowl win over Washington on Jan. 1 turned out to be the last game for both Haskins and Meyer. Haskins was named MVP after completing 25 of 37 passes for 251 yards and three touchdowns in the finale for Meyer before retirement.

Day, who worked with Haskins as quarterbac­ks coach, likened him to Atlanta Falcons quarterbac­k Matt Ryan and former Heisman Trophy winner Sam Bradford. Day coached both in the NFL.

“Those are the two guys I’ve been around that are in that same category right now — their anticipati­on, their accuracy, the way the ball comes off their hand,” Day said. “I’d compare him to those two guys.”

Haskins’ NFL decision was telegraphe­d by Justin Fields, the Georgia quarterbac­k who announced Friday he was transferri­ng to Ohio State. Haskins said the two talked first, and it was seen as unlikely Fields would have transferre­d unless Haskins was moving on.

After a redshirt year in 2016, Haskins backed up J.T. Barrett in 2017. After Barrett was injured during the Michigan game, Haskins entered and led the Buckeyes to a comeback victory.

He battled Joe Burrow for the starting job in the spring and secured it when Burrow transferre­d to LSU last summer. He proceeded to change the Buckeyes into a pass-first team, throwing for more than 400 yards five times, including a career-high 499 in the Big Ten Championsh­ip win over Northweste­rn. That came after he threw for six touchdowns in the 62-39 rout of Michigan the previous week.

He was the Big Ten offensive player of the week a record six times. The only blemish on Haskins’ resume is the inexplicab­le 49-20 loss at unranked Purdue Oct. 20. Haskins passed for 470 yards in the game, primarily because the Boilermake­rs had shut down Ohio State’s run game and forced the Buckeyes to throw 73 times. The loss kept Ohio State out of the College Football Playoff and hurt Haskins’ Heisman bid.

His departure will make for another intriguing quarterbac­k derby beginning in spring practice between Fields, a dual-threat player with a big arm, and fleet Tate Martell, who already has two years playing under Day’s tutelage. Redshirt freshman Matthew Baldwin also will be in the mix.

Martell, who was the heir apparent before Fields’ arrival, said he is determined to stay at Ohio State and win the starting job.

 ?? JAE C. HONG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this Jan. 1, 2019, file photo, Ohio State quarterbac­k Dwayne Haskins runs against Washington during the first half of the Rose Bowl NCAA college football game, in Pasadena, Calif.
JAE C. HONG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this Jan. 1, 2019, file photo, Ohio State quarterbac­k Dwayne Haskins runs against Washington during the first half of the Rose Bowl NCAA college football game, in Pasadena, Calif.

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