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Tim Tebow Wins Heisman Trophy!

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  • Tim Tebow Wins Heisman Trophy!

    Florida QB Tebow is first sophomore to win Heisman
    ESPN.com news services

    Updated: December 8, 2007, 8:55 PM ET
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    The Heisman Trophy has been handed out every year since 1935 and all the winners have been either juniors or seniors.

    Florida sophomore Tim Tebow broke that trend and scored one for college football's underclassmen.


    Off And Running

    Florida QB Tim Tebow is the first sophomore to win the Heisman Trophy in the 72 years of the award. Tebow's 22 rushing touchdowns are tied for the FBS record for rushing touchdowns in a season by a quarterback. (Air Force's Chase Harridge also had 22 in 2002.)


    The charismatic and multitalented quarterback, who has already had a season like no other in major college football history, became the first sophomore to win the award on Saturday night.

    Arkansas running back Darren McFadden, last year's Heisman runner-up, Hawaii quarterback Colt Brennan and Missouri quarterback Chase Daniel were the other finalists.

    Conventional wisdom suggests Tebow's class status would leave him at a disadvantage against three upperclassmen, but Heisman voters have warmed up to the idea of voting for underclassmen over the years.

    "I'm still a college football player," Tebow said Friday to a gathering of reporters at a hotel in Manhattan. "It doesn't matter what year you are."

    For decades, underclassmen were an afterthought at Heisman time.

    After SMU sophomore tailback Doak Walker finished third in the Heisman voting in 1947, the next underclassmen to break the top three was Georgia's Herschel Walker, who finished third as a freshman in 1980 and second as a sophomore before winning it as a junior in '82.

    During most of those 35 seasons, freshmen were ineligible to play.

    "Sophomores in the past, such as a deserving Doak Walker in '47, for example, weren't given proper consideration because freshmen weren't eligible, and there was an obvious prejudice against youth," author and sports writer Dan Jenkins, who is the historian for the National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame, wrote in an e-mail to the AP. "Better to vote for somebody who had done more to 'deserve' it rather than a one-season guy."

    After Herschel Walker, it was another 10 years before an underclassman made a serious run at the Heisman. In 1992, San Diego State sophomore Marshall Faulk finished second to Miami quarterback Gino Torretta.

    Since then, the combination of scholarship limitations in big-time college football and early departures to the NFL have given underclassmen more opportunities to play. As a result, more have become Heisman contenders.

    "Sophomores today, having played as freshmen, are what juniors used to be," Jenkins wrote.

    Michael Vick was a redshirt freshman for Virginia Tech in 1999, when he finished third. Florida quarterback Rex Grossman was the runner-up to Nebraska's Eric Crouch as a sophomore in 2001. Two years later, Pittsburgh wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald was a sophomore when he finished second to Oklahoma's Jason White.

    Oklahoma's Adrian Peterson became the first freshman to be the Heisman runner-up in 2004 and last year McFadden was a sophomore when he finished second to Ohio State's Troy Smith.

    Now here comes Tebow, already a folk hero in Gainesville, Fla., with a chance to become the third Florida Heisman winner, joining Steve Spurrier (1966) and Danny Wuerffel (1996), and do something no college football player has ever done -- for the second time this year.

    Tebow visited New York for the first time with his parents and four siblings, including his sister, Christy Allen, who has been doing missionary work in Bangladesh and only found out Thursday she could make the trip.

    Tebow exceeded the monumental expectations placed on him by adoring Gators fans in his first season as a starter. He became the first player to run for 20 touchdowns and throw 20 touchdown passes in the same season. He accounted for 51 TDs overall, including a Southeastern Conference-record 22 on the ground.

    The 235-pound Tebow showed what he could do running the ball last season as a part-time player, complementing senior quarterback Chris Leak and helping Florida win the national title.

    This season, in full control of Urban Meyer's spread offense, Tebow has left no doubt he's more than just a bruiser. Tebow is second in the country in passer rating (177.9), with 3,132 yards and 29 touchdown passes.

    Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

  • #2
    FIGURES AS MUCH...HE DESERVES IT, BUT HE IS 0-2 AGAINST AUBURN!!!

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    • #3
      I really didn't want a sophomore to win it, but after I heard the guy, he seems like he is very well grounded. It's good to see a nice kid do well.
      Fight, Devils Down The Field. Fight With Your Might And Don't Ever Yield.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by SundevilSam
        I really didn't want a sophomore to win it, but after I heard the guy, he seems like he is very well grounded. It's good to see a nice kid do well.
        He is a great kid.. And to think he still has 2 more years to play football.. WOW!!!!!!!! He has already said that he will be at florida for 4 years and he does not intend on going pro he wants to follow in his dad and grand dad's footsteps and go into ministry.. I got the chance to watch him play while he was at Neece High School in Florida when his team came here to bama and played our best team Hoover..

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        • #5
          Originally posted by TMAC951
          He is a great kid.. And to think he still has 2 more years to play football.. WOW!!!!!!!! He has already said that he will be at florida for 4 years and he does not intend on going pro he wants to follow in his dad and grand dad's footsteps and go into ministry.. I got the chance to watch him play while he was at Neece High School in Florida when his team came here to bama and played our best team Hoover..
          I think it is great that he wants to go into the ministry, but why not go into the NFL for at least one contract, get the money, to support your family.

          Like it or not, money does rule the world. He could go into the NFL, get a huge contract and donate it all to the church to spread the word. Just like he said, "God gave me a great tallent". Well use the tallent to earn some money to spread the word.
          Fight, Devils Down The Field. Fight With Your Might And Don't Ever Yield.

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          • #6
            Good for him. He had a great year!

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            • #7
              Originally posted by SundevilSam
              I think it is great that he wants to go into the ministry, but why not go into the NFL for at least one contract, get the money, to support your family.

              Like it or not, money does rule the world. He could go into the NFL, get a huge contract and donate it all to the church to spread the word. Just like he said, "God gave me a great tallent". Well use the tallent to earn some money to spread the word.
              Believe me when i say this bro.. That kid doesnt need any money at all.. He is from a rich ass family that has lots of money.. I can see where your coming from though

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              • #8
                Originally posted by SundevilSam
                I think it is great that he wants to go into the ministry, but why not go into the NFL for at least one contract, get the money, to support your family.

                Like it or not, money does rule the world. He could go into the NFL, get a huge contract and donate it all to the church to spread the word. Just like he said, "God gave me a great tallent". Well use the tallent to earn some money to spread the word.

                wrd..
                "dont judge me in one week, judge me the whole season."

                Comment


                • #9
                  I still think he's a piece of shit.
                  there I said it
                  NOTHING SUCKS LIKE A BIG ORANGE!!!!
                  ROLL TIDE ROLL

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by SundevilSam
                    I really didn't want a sophomore to win it, but after I heard the guy, he seems like he is very well grounded. It's good to see a nice kid do well.
                    Why does anyone care what class he is in? If you are the best player, you are the best player, regardless of how old you are. I'm not asking to be an ass, I'm genuinely interested to know why people feel this way, b/c I know a lot of people do. To me, you can't penalize a guy b/c of his age, and say he has two or three more years to win the Heisman. Arguably this will be Teebow's best season. Florida will find a RB, and it is very doubtful Teebow will put up over 50 TDs the rest of his career. So penalizing him b/c of his age could very likely mean taking away his only chance to win a Heisman in a year he totally deserved to win it.
                    Last edited by harold_bush; 12-08-2007, 11:25 PM.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by harold_bush
                      Why does anyone care what class he is in? If you are the best player, you are the best player, regardless of how old you are. I'm not asking to be an ass, I'm genuinely interested to know why people feel this way, b/c I know a lot of people do. To me, you can't penalize a guy b/c of his age, and say he has two or three more years to win the Heisman. Arguably this will be Teebow's best season. Florida will find a RB, and it is very doubtful Teebow will put up over 50 TDs the rest of his career. So penalizing him b/c of his age could very likely mean taking away his only chance to win a Heisman in a year he totally deserved to win it.
                      Very good question. I knew some one would ask it. And to be honest, I am not sure I can give you a good answer. Mostly it is just a feeling, that I would rather see McFadden win, vs, Tebow. Just thought McFadden is the better overall player. Other than that, maybe it has to do with not wanting a player to win three times in a row. If he won three times in a row, he may be considered the best ever. Is Tebow, the best ever, who knows. But the standard used to be that a sophomore would never be considered for the Heisman. Is that right??? NO. But why not play by the same rules. Hershell could have won 3. Doak Walker may have won 3.

                      Probably has alot to with not liking any university having a chance of winning 3 Heismans in a row, none the less FL, who seems to have the meidas touch right now. Enough of FL in major sports. Props to them, but I am tired of hearing of them and Ohio St.
                      Fight, Devils Down The Field. Fight With Your Might And Don't Ever Yield.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by SundevilSam
                        Very good question. I knew some one would ask it. And to be honest, I am not sure I can give you a good answer. Mostly it is just a feeling, that I would rather see McFadden win, vs, Tebow. Just thought McFadden is the better overall player. Other than that, maybe it has to do with not wanting a player to win three times in a row. If he won three times in a row, he may be considered the best ever. Is Tebow, the best ever, who knows. But the standard used to be that a sophomore would never be considered for the Heisman. Is that right??? NO. But why not play by the same rules. Hershell could have won 3. Doak Walker may have won 3.

                        Probably has alot to with not liking any university having a chance of winning 3 Heismans in a row, none the less FL, who seems to have the meidas touch right now. Enough of FL in major sports. Props to them, but I am tired of hearing of them and Ohio St.
                        Thanks for the explanation. I really don't think you have to worry about Teebow, or any player ever winning the Heisman 3 years in a row. First, no player that wins two straight Heismans would probably hang around for that 3rd time. Secondly, there are simply too many good players now for any player to dominate 3 years in a row.

                        I actualyl surprised myself for pulling for Teebow, b/c I'm Georgia Bulldog alum and diehard. I try to hate everything about Florida, but just thought he should have had it. I also wouldn't have had an issue w/ McFadden though.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by harold_bush
                          Thanks for the explanation. I really don't think you have to worry about Teebow, or any player ever winning the Heisman 3 years in a row. First, no player that wins two straight Heismans would probably hang around for that 3rd time. Secondly, there are simply too many good players now for any player to dominate 3 years in a row.

                          I actualyl surprised myself for pulling for Teebow, b/c I'm Georgia Bulldog alum and diehard. I try to hate everything about Florida, but just thought he should have had it. I also wouldn't have had an issue w/ McFadden though.
                          I thought it was a great question though, because I had thought of it before, and I wasn't sure why I was rooting against Tebow. Seems like a real nice guy though. Very grounded.
                          Fight, Devils Down The Field. Fight With Your Might And Don't Ever Yield.

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                          • #14
                            Glad To See He Won It
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                            • #15
                              good for him. but...... he'll be a nobody in the nFL
                              U-C-O-N-N = Uconn! Uconn! Uconn!

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