USA TODAY US Edition

UNC’s Maye surging in Heisman race

- Paul Myerberg

Drake Maye is becoming impossible to ignore as a contender for the Heisman Trophy.

North Carolina’s redshirt freshman quarterbac­k has been electric since the season opener and played an irreplacea­ble role in the Tar Heels’ ACC Coastal championsh­ip and steady climb up the College Football Playoff rankings.

While there were some concerns about how UNC would fare without three-year starter Sam Howell under center, Maye has responded with perhaps the finest season by a passer in school history.

Beyond the counting totals – he’s tied for first nationally with 34 touchdowns and ranks third with 3,412 passing yards – Maye has been at his best late in games, tossing eight touchdowns without an intercepti­on in the fourth quarter to help the Tar Heels win six games decided by a single possession.

While he’s trailing the three Heisman front-runners, Maye could book a seat as a finalist should he lead UNC past Clemson for the ACC championsh­ip. He’s also rising fast on USA TODAY Sports’ list of the top quarterbac­ks in the country:

1. Caleb Williams, Southern Cal (1)

The Trojans struggled out of the gate against Colorado before dropping 24 points in the second quarter and pulling away for a 55-17 win. Williams did toss an intercepti­on, just his second in 342 throws, but averaged 10.3 yards per attempt with another three touchdowns against the Buffaloes, giving him 31 on the season.

2. Hendon Hooker, Tennessee (2)

Missouri had drawn within a possession of Tennessee at 28-24 in the third quarter when Hooker found Jalin Hyatt for a 68-yard touchdown, opening the floodgates. Beginning with that score, the Volunteers turned a close game into a 66-24 rout and took a big step toward the national semifinals.

3. C.J. Stroud, Ohio State (3)

Without the sloppy conditions that plagued Ohio State against Northweste­rn, Stroud rebounded with a familiar passing line in an easy win against Indiana: 17 completion­s in 28 attempts, 297 yards and five touchdowns without an intercepti­on. He now has four games with five or more scores this season.

4. Drake Maye, North Carolina (7)

What’s overlooked amid Maye’s gaudy passing totals is his huge impact as a runner. He leads North Carolina and ranks eighth in the Atlantic Coast Conference with 584 rushing yards, which includes yardage deducted by the 26 sacks the Tar Heels have allowed on the season.

5. Bryce Young, Alabama (4)

Young has carried Alabama on his back all season with very little help, as seen most recently in Saturday’s win against Ole Miss. The reigning Heisman winner threw for 209 yards and three touchdowns without an intercepti­on in the 30-24 victory, accounting for a huge chunk of the Crimson Tide’s meager offensive output behind yet another disappoint­ing performanc­e from the offensive line.

6. Max Duggan, TCU (5)

Duggan was held under 200 passing yards for the second game in a row and averaged just 4.3 yards per throw in the win against Texas but managed once again to make the right throws and the right decisions to keep the Horned Frogs unbeaten. Was this the toughest test of the regular season for Texas Christian? If so, this Big 12 Conference squad will be the most unexpected playoff participan­t in the format’s history.

7. Michael Penix Jr., Washington (NR)

Penix has bounced on and off this list all season but should be here to stay after outplaying Oregon’s Bo Nix in the Huskies’ huge rivalry upset of the Ducks. Penix completed 74.3% of his attempts for 408 yards on 11.7 yards per throw as Washington improved to 8-2 and into the mix for a New Year’s Six bowl bid.

8. Stetson Bennett, Georgia (8)

Bennett has four intercepti­ons in his past three games, with two against Florida and another pair in Saturday’s blowout win against Mississipp­i State. He’s still tossed just 12 picks in 616 throws since the start of last season, or an average of one for roughly every 51 attempts. His ability to avoid bad mistakes makes it even harder for overmatche­d opponents to upset the defending national champions.

9. Bo Nix, Oregon (6)

For Oregon, it’s painful to think about what could’ve been had Nix not suffered an apparent leg injury on the Ducks’ third-to-last offensive possession. He missed the ensuing series, which saw backup Ty Thompson hand the ball off four times before a turnover on downs. While Nix returned to nearly lead Oregon to the game-tying field goal, that failed possession would have looked very different with him under center.

10. Jordan Travis, Florida State (NR)

Travis is the headliner for what is shaping up to be Florida State’s breakthrou­gh season under Mike Norvell. In his past two games, Travis has averaged 10.2 yards per attempt with more touchdowns, six, than incompleti­ons, four. On the year, he is one of seven Power Five quarterbac­ks with 20 or more touchdowns and fewer than five intercepti­ons, joining Maye, Stroud, Williams, Duggan, Young and UCLA’s Dorian Thompson-Robinson.

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 ?? SCOTT TAETSCH/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? North Carolina quarterbac­k Drake Maye shows off his running skills against Virginia during the first half at Scott Stadium.
SCOTT TAETSCH/USA TODAY SPORTS North Carolina quarterbac­k Drake Maye shows off his running skills against Virginia during the first half at Scott Stadium.

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