There when teams needed them most
Leadership of Lawrence and Fields evident at a young age
There has never been any doubt about the football abilities of Clemson’s Trevor Lawrence and Justin Fields of Ohio State. Their youth quarterback coach could see the power arms, nimble feet and accurate decision- making when theywere budding Georgia prep stars.
Ron Veal also saw the character and resolve in Lawrence and Fields.
“Both were mostly quiet, taking everything in” as rising Georgia prep quarterbacks, Veal said in aphoneinterview. “Until itwas time to speak up.”
The quarterbacks felt itwas time during the offseason, and now they’ll square off in the College Football Playoff semifinals when Clemson takes on Ohio State in the SugarBowl on Friday night.
It was their off- field actions that helped set up the the showdown.
Lawrence and Fields spoke out on social justice issues and were out spoken to ensure players’ views were heard in discussions abouthaving a seasonamidthe coronavirus pandemic. College athleteswere angeredby the deaths ofGeorge Floyd, BreonnaTaylor and others. They also were disheartened and confused by questions if theywould or should play as the virus raged throughout the country. Bothsteadied theirteammates and gave fans something to rally around through theirwords and actions, Veal said.
“They were leaders when their teams needed them,” he said.
In June, Lawrencewas among Clemson players who organized a march for social justice near campus. Fields and team mates put out a powerful video for social change with social media hastags, “# BlackLivesMatter,” and “# FightForChange.” Fields was part of a campus demonstration where Ohio State players, students and staff knelt for nine minutes in the wake of Floyd’s death.
In August, Lawrence and Fields were among those who started the “# WeWantToPlay” movementthat evencaught theear of First Fan, President Donald Trump, who spokewith Lawrence by phone. When the Big Ten Conference initially called off its fall season, Fields created anonline petition to play that gained 300,000 signers in less than aweek.“Wewanted tocometogether and have a voice so people who are making decisions can hear,” Fields said.
The kind of player activism Lawrence and Fields demonstrated is one of the most positive things tocomeout of thepandemic, said researcher Richard Lapchick, who heads the The Institute of Diversity and Ethics in Sports atUCF.
Lapchick said player voices can cause change and determine who schools hire to lead football and basketball teams.
“Ithas an affectonsociety ingeneraland it’s also going tohave aneffectonthe college level,” Lapchick said.
The quarter backs’ efforts had an impact: The Atlantic Coast Conference opened play in September while the Big Ten reversed course and started in mid- October. Now, the two signal callers are a victory away fromthe national title game.
Lawrence won his third ACC championship as a starter, as the second- ranked Tigers routedNotreDame34- 10twoweeks ago. Lawrence is pleased with his play but isn’t satisfied.
“I have goals for myself and for my team ,” he said. “I want to put us in the best position to win.”
Ohio State topped Northwestern for its fourth consecutive Big Ten crown.
Lawrence played at Cartersville High in Georgia while Fields was about 20 miles South at Harrison High in Kennesaw, becoming the nation’s top college quarterback prospects. Lawrence signed with Clemson, where he’s won a national title, three A CC crown sand gone 34-1 as a starter.
Fields, after abumpy first year atGeorgia, transferred to Ohio State where the Buckeyes have gone 19- 1 with him as the starter.
Lawrence entered his junior year as the likely overall No. 1 NFL draft pick while Fields is projected to go a few spots later, possibly as high as No. 2. Both could’ve easily opted out without impacting their NFL futures even though the Tigers and Buckeyeswere both expected to challenge again for the national title.
“That’s notwhatthey’re about,” Veal said.