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Worst heisman winners of all time. According to yahoo

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  • Worst heisman winners of all time. According to yahoo

    The Heisman Trophy rewards the best player in college football - in theory, at least. In actual practice, several winners of the award had dubious credentials at best.

    The Heisman Trophy winner doesn't necessarily have to achieve success at the NFL level in order to "validate" the award. That's not what the Heisman is for. But it should reward the best player in college football, regardless of position. Too often, it only rewards the quarterback who happens to play for the best team in college football. I'd love to see some linebackers and offensive linemen winning this award, but I doubt that day will come anytime soon.



    Here's a rundown of the seven worst Heisman Trophy winners of all time. None of these players had bad seasons, they just didn't achieve enough to rightfully claim college football's highest individual honor.

    7. Gary Beban (UCLA, 1967)

    As far as I can tell, Gary Beban won the Heisman merely for playing through injuries. It certainly can't be because of his passing numbers, which amounted to less than 1,500 yards and as many interceptions and touchdowns during the 1967 campaign. You have to wonder what made voters pick Beban over O.J. Simpson, who guided USC to the national championship that season, which included a crucial victory over Beban's Bruins.

    6. Jason White (Oklahoma, 2003)

    Larry Fitzgerald of Pittsburgh was the most dominant player in college football in 2003. No reasonable college football observer would argue otherwise. Except, apparently, for the Heisman voters.

    White had a good season but he wasn't nearly as good as Fitzgerald, making him an undeserving winner. Fitzgerald was totally dominant, routinely going up into triple coverage and pulling the ball down. White, meanwhile, was so good that he wasn't even drafted. A guy named Eli Manning finished third in the voting. White was the worst choice of the three.

    5. George Rogers (South Carolina, 1980)

    Another good pick for the list of worst Heisman Trophy winners is running back George Rogers. Rogers benefited from a weak field in 1980 to claim the trophy ahead of freshman Herschel Walker of Georgia. Another good contender was defensive lineman Hugh Green, who was denied the award because Heisman voters just can't bring themselves to give the trophy to defensive players. Jim McMahon also put up huge passing numbers (47 TDs) for BYU.

    4. Gino Torretta (Miami, 1992)

    Toretta is the textbook case of a quarterback from the best team in football winning the award by default because lazy Heisman voters didn't care to look any further. While Torretta's 3,060 yards and 132.8 passer rating were very good, Marshall Faulk of San Diego State and Garrison Hearst of Georgia both put up big numbers at the running back position. Either would've been a better Heisman Trophy winner, but Torretta benefited from playing for one of the best teams in the country.

    3. Paul Hornung (Notre Dame, 1956)

    Try to imagine a player from a 2-8 team winning the Heisman Trophy today. It would never happen, given the Heisman committee's misguided belief that the winner has to come from a dominant team. It should be perfectly fine to reward a player from a mediocre team. Still, two and eight? Johnny Majors and Jim Brown were among the other candidates who might have been better Heisman Trophy choices.

    2. Rashaan Salaam (Colorado, 1994)

    Salaam won the trophy only because of the antiquated notion that "If you rush for 2,000 yards, you have to win the Heisman!" Salaam's season was not nearly as impressive as that of Penn State's Ki-Jana Carter, who averaged a ridiculous 7.8 yards per carry but pocketed fewer yards than Salaam because he was taken out of nearly every game early, since his undefeated Nittany Lions were always way ahead. Neither Salaam nor Carter had much success at the NFL level, however.

    Another more-worthy trophy winner would have been Steve McNair of Alcorn State, who tore up the record books with 44 touchdown passes and almost 6,000 yards of passing and rushing offense.

    1. Eric Crouch (Nebraska, 2001)

    Eric Crouch is easily the worst Heisman Trophy winner of all time. The Cornhusker quarterback passed for just 1,510 yards and had a ratio of 7 touchdowns to 10 interceptions. That's pathetic for a major-university starting QB and represents some of the worst numbers ever for a Heisman-winning QB. It's true that Crouch rushed for another 1,115 yards, but that hardly makes up for his abysmal passing numbers. Even worse is that Crouch beat out a number of other very good signal-callers, including Rex Grossman, Ken Dorsey, Joey Harrington and David Carr. Then there was Antwaan Randle El - if voters wanted a running quarterback, he should've been the winner.

    Crouch's overrated Huskers were trounced in the national championship game and he was forced to switch to defense when he attempted an NFL career, as no professional team could take him seriously as a passer.

    Worst Heisman Trophy Winners: Sources
    College Football Statistics & History | College Football at Sports-Reference.com

    *Note: This article was written by a Yahoo! contributor. Sign up here to start publishing your own sports content.

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    Updated Dec 7, 5:15 pm EST
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    Last edited by bryce; 12-09-2010, 02:34 PM.

  • #2
    I agree with some of these..

    Comment


    • #3
      I agree with Crouch and White. Wow was Crouch overrated. It would be the equivalent of giving it to Josh Nesbitt today. And Fitzgerald was absurd at Pitt. He got completely hosed but everyone saw it coming...

      Comment


      • #4
        I pray Dimer doesn't see this...

        Comment


        • #5
          Charles Woodson should be on the list for the simple fact that he beat out Peyton...complete joke.
          "Happens to everyone. Time to time, everyone goes bust. You'll be back in the game before you know it."

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by kbsooner21 View Post
            I pray Dimer doesn't see this...
            Just in case he doesn't.


            Players not considered for Yahoo list based on the fact they would all ty for 1st:


            1952 Billy Vessels - 1969 Steve Owens - 1978 Billy Sims - 2003 Jason White - 2008 Sam Bradford



            Comment


            • #7
              Peyton 3800+ yds, 37 TDs 11int
              Woodson 580 all purpose yds, 4TDs, 47 takcles, 1 sack, 8ints

              Number 1 hose job in my book.
              "Happens to everyone. Time to time, everyone goes bust. You'll be back in the game before you know it."

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by ToDaClub View Post
                Just in case he doesn't.


                Players not considered for Yahoo list based on the fact they would all ty for 1st:


                1952 Billy Vessels - 1969 Steve Owens - 1978 Billy Sims - 2003 Jason White - 2008 Sam Bradford



                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Meekmeister View Post
                  Peyton 3800+ yds, 37 TDs 11int
                  Woodson 580 all purpose yds, 4TDs, 47 takcles, 1 sack, 8ints

                  Number 1 hose job in my book.
                  I agree 1000%. I was sitting in my living room when they made the pick.I was fucking stunned!!!!!!!!!

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Here are the 5 best HT winners according to College Football News

                    1. Barry Saunders 1988 OK. State. Ran for 2628 yards and 39 TDs. If you included the bowl game he played in that year it would be 2850 yards and 44 TDs.

                    2. Tony Dorsett 1976 Pitt.. Ran for 1948 yards and 23 TDs. Averaged 215 yards a game ovfer the last 7 games of the season.

                    3. Marcus Allen 1981 USC. First 2000 yard rusher in college. Ran for 2342 yards and 22 TDs.

                    4. Cam Newton 2010 Auburn Ran for 20 threw for 28

                    5. Herschel Walker 1982 Georgia. Ran for 1752 and 17 TDs.

                    Hard to argue with Barry Sanders having the greatest HT season of all time.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Off subject but I have heard AU has Cecil Newton on the travel list to NY this weekend. So much for AU "distancing" the rev from their program.
                      "Happens to everyone. Time to time, everyone goes bust. You'll be back in the game before you know it."

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Meekmeister View Post
                        Off subject but I have heard AU has Cecil Newton on the travel list to NY this weekend. So much for AU "distancing" the rev from their program.
                        The father of Auburn quarterback Cam Newton said Thursday he will not attend the Heisman Trophy award ceremony because his presence might “rob Cam and the event of a sacred moment.”

                        Cecil Newton, who was invited to attend Saturday by the Heisman Trust, released the statement Thursday through George Lawson, the Atlanta-based Newton family attorney.

                        “For all of my fifty years of life, coupled with 25 years of marriage, I have made an exhausting attempt to be a good husband, father and generally a good person of integrity,” said Cecil Newton, who was involved in a failed pay-for-play scheme during his son’s recruitment to Mississippi State. “The past 60 days have caused all that my family worked to accomplish to come into question.

                        AdChoices


                        Auburn QB Cam Newton, a favorite for the Heisman, won the Maxwell Award trophy for best all-around player on Thursday.
                        (Phelan M. Ebenhack/AP Photo)
                        “So that my son Cam Newton can receive all the honors and congratulations that he has worked so hard to accomplish without distraction, I have decided not to be in attendance at the ceremony as it will perhaps rob Cam and the event of a sacred moment.”

                        Cam Newton is the favorite to receive the Heisman Trophy on Saturday in New York. The other finalists are Boise State quarterback Kellen Moore, Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck and Oregon running back LaMichael James.

                        The junior college transfer has led the Tigers to a Southeastern Conference title and into the BCS national championship game against Oregon on Jan. 10 in Glendale, Ariz.

                        The NCAA reinstated Newton after a one-day suspension by Auburn last week, ruling that neither the player nor Auburn knew of his father’s attempts to get money.

                        Newton told ESPN on Thursday that he hadn’t directly asked his father what transpired between him and Mississippi State, but “at the end of the day I can look him in the eye and know he has my best interests at heart.”

                        Newton said it wasn’t for him to say if his father had done anything wrong, but he knows his father is there for him.

                        “My love for him is unconditional,” Cam Newton said. “This type of situation can split a family but it makes us stronger.”

                        The NCAA and state officials continue to investigate the payment scheme, trying to determine who knew what and if laws were broken.

                        Two lawyers from the Mississippi secretary of state’s office met with Kenny Rogers—the former Mississippi State player involved with Cecil Newton in the pay-for-play plan—and his attorney for more than four hours on Thursday afternoon in Waukegan, Ill.

                        Doug Zeit said the discussion at his office was a “fact-finding mission” centered around an alleged conversation on Nov. 27, 2009, when Rogers says Cecil Newton asked for up to $180,000 from two Mississippi State assistant coaches in exchange for his son’s commitment to the Bulldogs.

                        Zeit said the two sides also discussed Rogers’ phone calls made to Bill Bell and John Bond, two other former Mississippi State players who have been involved in the Newton saga.

                        “We basically talked about the same things we’ve been talking about for weeks—Cecil Newton’s solicitation and Kenny Rogers’ involvement relaying that message,” Zeit said. “We don’t believe Kenny Rogers broke any laws and are looking forward to this situation being over.”

                        Cam Newton was in Florida on Thursday for ESPN’s College Football Awards Show, where he picked up the Maxwell Award given to the national player of the year and the Davey O’Brien Award for the top quarterback. Earlier in the day, he won the Walter Camp player of the year award.

                        Newton was the SEC offensive player of the year after accounting for 49 touchdowns, best in the nation, and setting school records for both passing and rushing touchdowns in a season.

                        AP Sports Writer David Brandt in Jackson, Miss., contributed to this report.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by kbsooner21 View Post
                          I pray Dimer doesn't see this...
                          do you remember how much fun we all had with the stoops quote about Jason white baggin groceries at wal mart...lmao

                          how did that guy even get to be a qb let alone a heisman trophy winner?
                          2013 NCAA POD Record

                          8-3ATS +3.80 units

                          2013 NFL POD Record

                          1-2 ATS -4.50 units

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by 10DimeBry View Post
                            do you remember how much fun we all had with the stoops quote about Jason white baggin groceries at wal mart...lmao

                            how did that guy even get to be a qb let alone a heisman trophy winner?
                            I used to have steam pouring out of my ears at times

                            Man, what some great laughs

                            Comment

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