COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) — Johnny Manziel
certainly has the statistics worthy of a Heisman Trophy winner. He
plays in the powerful Southeastern Conference. He has a signature win —
all things Heisman voters typically look for.
The only question is whether the voters will give the award to a freshman for the first time.
Adrian
Peterson, star running back for the Vikings and the only freshman to
finish second in the voting, is hoping the jinx ends Saturday night.
"Hopefully,
they don't rob him like they did me," Peterson, who lost by 328 votes
to junior Matt Leinart in 2004, said in an interview with The Associated
Press. "I hope he wins."
Manziel may be a
favorite this year, but who knows? Kansas State quarterback Collin
Klein and Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o are the other finalists and
both can make strong cases, too. But neither caught the attention of the
fans quite like Johnny Football, who led the Aggies to an upset of No. 1
Alabama in Tuscaloosa.
Manziel
accumulated 4,600 yards of total offense in 12 games to break the
Southeastern Conference record for total yards in a season. The record
was previously held by 2010 Heisman winner Cam Newton, who needed 14
games to pile up 4,327 yards.
The Aggies, who went 10-2 in their first season in the SEC after moving from the Big 12, certainly hope Manziel is the one to finally break the freshman curse (Manziel is a redshirt freshman, not a true freshman).
On a website the school created to promote Manziel for the award, they point out that he's different than many freshman. Manziel
enrolled in college in January 2010 and will be a junior academically
this spring. He turns 20 on Thursday, making him older than Mark Ingram
was when he took home the Heisman as a sophomore in 2009.
He would
also be just the second Aggie to win the award and the first since John
David Crow in 1957. Crow got a push from his famous coach before the
voting was done that season.
"If John David Crow doesn't win the Heisman Trophy," then-A&M coach Paul "Bear" Bryant said, "they ought to stop giving it."
Crow got a good laugh this week when asked if he believed the same was true of Manziel.
"I don't have near the audience that coach Bryant had," he said, still chuckling. "I'm not sure how big that would go over."
Then the 77-year-old former halfback got serious.
"He
is very, very deserving," Crow said. "I don't care what age he is,
whether he is right-handed or left-handed, wears a 17 shoe or nine shoe,
he is very, very deserving of being named the outstanding player in
college this year."
Manziel's whirlwind
season had a modest beginning with him having to beat out two other
quarterbacks to win the starting position in mid-August.
As his
numbers grew, so did the legend of Johnny Football, a nickname Aggies
bestowed him with as he settled in at College Station. When the Aggies
beat the defending champion Crimson Tide on national television behind
an outstanding performance by Manziel, the phrase seemed to be everywhere.
It's a name that still amuses him.
"I don't know if I really see it as a legend," he said. "It's more of a folk tale, I guess."
His
numbers alone seem like the stuff of some exaggerated Texas football
folk tale. He has thrown for 3,419 yards and 24 touchdowns and run for
1,181 yards and 19 more scores to become the first freshman, first SEC
player and fifth player overall to throw for 3,000 yards and run for
1,000 in a season.
But his eye-popping numbers don't tell the whole story. The improvisation is what really sets him apart. Manziel
has a knack for evading defenders, staying on his feet and finishing
plays that seem impossible. Kind of like Robert Griffin III, the Baylor
star who won the Heisman last year. Or Fran Tarkenton, another wizard at
avoiding defenders.
"I don't think there's many people in this
world that could do some of the things he did," Crow said. "He was born
to run around back there — at least it looks that way to me."
Manziel
was so disappointed when he came out of spring practice as a backup
that he enlisted the help of quarterback guru George Whitfield to refine
his skills this summer. He spent a week at Whitfield Athletix in San
Diego, training up to five hours a day with Whitfield, who has worked
with scores of players including Newton, Vince Young and Andrew Luck.
Whitfield was struck by Manziel's
competitiveness and his desire to soak up every bit of knowledge that
the coach had for not just him, but all of the quarterbacks in training.
Whitfield said the only other quarterback he's seen who can improvise like Manziel is Newton. But he said the 6-foot-1 Manziel might be tougher to deal with than the 6-5 Newton.
"Cam
poses a lot of problems because he's so imposing," Whitfield said.
"Johnny, on the other hand, causes as many problems and it's more
overwhelming to defensive players because they think: 'If I can just
catch him, I can get him on the ground.' But you can't get him."
He's enjoyed watching Manziel develop this season, and saw some flashes of what he could be when the pair worked this summer.
"He's
got this great sense of awareness and vision. He's so creative," said
Whitfield, who then offered a James Bond analogy. "There's always some
kind of 007 escape route in mind. If Cam is Superman, I would say that
Johnny is like 007."
Growing up in Kerrville, Texas, Manziel didn't dream of football stardom. He always pictured his path leading to a baseball diamond.
"I always thought since I was a little kid that I would play pro baseball," said Manziel,
who also starred on his high school baseball team. "My biggest dream
was that I wanted to play in the MLB. I wanted to play for the Rangers
and wanted to play shortstop."
But fate stepped in and altered his dream.
"Then football came along and took center stage," he said.
Manziel's
success on the field seems almost too good to be true. And when he
rescued a kitten from the middle of a busy, four-lane road near Kyle
Field earlier this season, it only added to the mystique of Johnny
Football. (The semi-daring rescue is referenced on his Heisman page.)
"Just rescued a kitten from the middle of Wellborn Rd," Manziel
tweeted in September when he wasn't allowed to talk to the media
because of coach Kevin Sumlin's ban on freshmen interviews. He added a
picture of a scared-looking black cat to prove his story.
Things haven't always been rosy for Manziel.
In June, he was arrested in town after police said he was involved in a
fight and produced a fake ID. He was charged with disorderly conduct
and two other misdemeanors.
"It was a critical mistake in my life," Manziel
said. "It was something that I learned a lot from. It had consequences
with coach Sumlin and my teammates and everyone here in Aggieland. From
that I've had to make changes in my life."
Less than six months after his arrest, Manziel
has helped the Aggies to their best season since 1998, and made Texas
A&M one of the top teams in the nation after last year's
disappointing 7-6 finish.
He's proud to have helped put the Aggies back in the spotlight and knows winning the Heisman would only add to it.
"To
bring a Heisman Trophy back to Aggieland for all these fans since it's
been so all these years since we've had a Heisman Trophy winner ... to
really bring the excitement and really bring something positive back to
Aggieland would be something that is truly an ultimate goal," he said.
He's
got a fan in Peterson, who ran for an NCAA freshman record 1,925 yards
at Oklahoma in 2004 and believes the only reason he didn't win the
Heisman was because he was a first-year player.
"It's sad when you
think about it, because the Heisman goes to the best player in the
country so the voters shouldn't look at it and go over what they've done
over their career," Peterson said. "If he's the best player that year?
Then that's what it needs to be."
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AP Sports Writer Dave Campbell in Minneapolis contributed to this report.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.