Houston Chronicle

OU’s ailing QB tries to make Alabama sick

- By David Wharton

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Now we know what it takes to slow down the best player in college football.

Cough due to cold. Perhaps a touch of fever.

Kyler Murray clears his throat and says: “I was feeling really bad. I didn’t really know what it was.”

The Oklahoma quarterbac­k, just back from a victory tour as the Heisman Trophy winner, felt sick enough this week that he skipped practice.

But Murray insists he will be ready for top-ranked Alabama (13-0) and its formidable defense in a College Football Playoff semifinal at the Orange Bowl on Saturday. He had better be — the No. 4 Sooners (12-1) will need him on the field.

“Throw the ball, run the ball, he

can do a lot of amazing things,” Alabama linebacker Mack Wilson said. “We haven’t really played anyone like him.”

The numbers confirm it. Murray finished the regular season with a national-best 205.7 efficiency rating while completing 71 percent of his passes for 4,053 yards and 40 touchdowns.

The redshirt junior further distinguis­hed himself from such rivals as Alabama’s Tua Tagovailoa and Ohio State’s Dwayne Haskins with a knack for escaping pressure and skittering downfield, rushing for 892 yards and 11 more scores.

The blurry speed was a gift from childhood, but the arm took some working with his father, Kevin, who played quarterbac­k for Texas A&M in the mid-1980s.

“It all started with my dad,” Kyler Murray said. “He always taught me that, to play quarterbac­k, you have to be able to throw the ball and not be the stereotypi­cal guy who has speed and just runs.”

Following in his father’s footsteps, he first enrolled at A&M in 2015, then transferre­d to Oklahoma even though it meant sitting behind Baker Mayfield for two seasons. Only after Mayfield won the Heisman last winter and departed for the NFL did Murray finally get his chance skepticism.

“Nobody expected any of this … except for me,” he said.

Murray had 300-yard games against UCLA and Iowa before passing for 432 yards and six touchdowns against Baylor.

The rest of college football came to understand what his teammates already knew.

His touch was uncanny on deep throws and, when chased from the pocket, he could release the ball from almost any angle, including sidearm, without sacrificin­g accuracy.

“You have to be prepared at any time,” OU receiver CeeDee Lamb said, recalling a recent pass. “I couldn’t even see him but he could see me, so he let it fly.”

In a crucial late-season win over West Virginia, Murray threw for 364 yards and ran for 114. In the Big 12 Conference championsh­ip, he led the Sooners to a comeback victory over Texas with three touchdown passes.

That might have nudged him past Tagovailoa in the Heisman balloting.

“He’s very explosive,” the Alabama quarterbac­k said. “I mean, with what he does in that offense, he does a tremendous job.”

The Sooners lead the NCAA with an average of 577.9 yards and 49.5 points a game. Counting this Orange Bowl game, they have a chance to become the first Football Bowl Subdivisio­n team to produce a 4,000-yard passer, two 1,000-yard rushers and two 1,000-yard receivers.

But not everyone is convinced things will go smoothly.

The Crimson Tide have allowed only 14.8 points a game while averaging 3.2 sacks, ranking in the top five in both categories. There are questions about whether Oklahoma can handle that caliber of defense after playing in the Big 12, where wild scoring has been the norm.

Murray also faces uncertaint­y about his future.

As a star outfielder for OU’s baseball team, he was selected ninth overall in the 2018 draft and signed with the Oakland Athletics for a reported $4.6 million.

Reporters asked him Thursday whether the Heisman had prompted any thoughts about entering the NFL draft instead.

“I’m not focused on that right now,” he said. “My main focus is Saturday, being ready to play this game.”

A moment later, however, he talked about pro football becoming more accepting of quarterbac­ks who, like him, don’t quite reach 6 feet tall. Murray is listed at 5-10 and 195 pounds.

“I’ve always felt I could play in the NFL,” he said, adding that “it’s never bad to have options.”

Murray suspects all that time on airplanes of late might have contribute­d to his falling ill.

Not that his coach is worried.

“He’s one of those guys, the moment is never too big for him,” Lincoln Riley said. “For all that he has gone through the last six months, it’s always been business as normal.”

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