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THE WINNER IS ...We'll find out who wins the Heisman today. Here's who it should be.

The Post and Courier
Saturday, December 8, 2007


Photo of Gene Sapakoff
Florida quarterback Tim Tebow (left) and Arkansas running back Darren McFadden are the leading contenders to walk away with the Heisman Trophy when it is presented tonight in New York.

AP

Florida quarterback Tim Tebow (left) and Arkansas running back Darren McFadden are the leading contenders to walk away with the Heisman Trophy when it is presented tonight in New York.

The Heisman Trophy ballot sat on the kitchen counter all week and every glimpse forced recollection of the moment. Fourth quarter in Fayetteville, Ark., South Carolina's season on the line and looking promising after the Gamecocks have sustained an onslaught of Darren McFadden and Felix Jones, rallied from a 28-10 deficit and just cut the Razorbacks' lead to six.

Then McFadden, all 6-2 and 215 pounds of him, scored untouched on an 80-yard dash around the right side to highlight a 321-yard night. Arkansas took a 48-36 lead and the game was over.

There are many ways to evaluate Heisman Trophy candidates, including personal witness. All of the methods have flaws.

For instance, my third choice is the most valuable player in the Atlantic Coast Conference, the guy who did more to make an average team into a bowl participant than anyone else: Virginia defensive lineman Chris Long.

Pure subjectivity.

But an analysis of the two Southeastern Conference players who will finish atop the Heisman voting when the award is presented tonight offers a chance to compare McFadden and Florida quarterback Tim Tebow against seven common opponents.

They faced LSU, Tennessee, Auburn, Kentucky, South Carolina, Mississippi and Troy.

In comparing the hybrid passer who set touchdown rushing records and the uniquely talented tailback good at throwing touchdown passes, what better way than game-by-game vs. the same teams?

LSU

--McFadden: 32 carries for 206 yards and three TDs (one in overtime) and a TD pass in

--Arkansas' 50-48 triple-overtime upset. Oh, and three kick returns for 49 yards.

--Tebow: 12-for-26 for 158 yards with an interception and two TD passes, 16 carries for 67 yards and one TD in a 28-24 loss.

--Edge: McFadden.

Tennessee

--McFadden: 22 carries for 117 yards, three catches for 17 yards, two kick returns for 39 yards in a 34-13 loss.

--Tebow: 14-for-19 for 299 yards with one interception and two TD passes, 18 carries for 61 yards and two TDs in a 59-20 win.

--Edge: Tebow.

Auburn

McFadden: 17 carries for 43 yards, one catch for five yards, one kick return for 29 yards in a 9-7 loss.

Tebow: 20-for-27 for 201 yards with one interception and one TD, 19 carries for 75 yards with one TD in a 20-17 loss.

Edge: Tebow.

Kentucky

McFadden: 29 carries for 173 yards and one TD, two catches for 10 yards, one kick return for 25 yards in a 42-29 loss.

Tebow: 18-for-26 for 256 yards with no interceptions and four TDs, 20 carries for 78 yards and one TD in a 45-37 win.

Edge: Tebow.

South Carolina

McFadden: 34 carries for 321 yards and one TD, one TD pass, one catch for four yards, two kick returns for 30 yards in a 48-36 win.

Tebow: 22-for-32 for 304 yards with one interception and two touchdowns, 26 carries for 120 yards and five TDs in a 51-31 win.

Edge: Too close to call, too dominant for anyone to finish second.

Mississippi

--McFadden: 22 carries for 110 yards, two catches for 10 yards in a 44-8 win.

--Tebow: 20-for-34 for 261 yards with no interceptions and two touchdowns, 27 carries for 166 yards and two touchdowns in a 30-24 win.

--Edge: Tebow.

Troy

--McFadden: 24 carries for 151 yards and one TD, one TD pass, two catches for 30 yards, one kick return for 19 yards in a 46-26 win.

--Tebow: 18-for-25 for 236 yards with no interceptions and three TD passes, 17 carries for 93 yards and two TDS in a 59-31 win.

--Edge: Tebow.

--Final common opponent tally: Tebow wins, 5-1-1.

Who cares if he's only a sophomore? Tebow is the first major college player to throw for 20 touchdowns and rush for 20 touchdowns in the same season and, more importantly, he routs a very worthy McFadden in this unusually numerous common-foe comparison.

Reach Gene Sapakoff at gsapakoff@postandcourier.com




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Comments

This article has  5 comment(s)

Posted by tigerama on December 8, 2007 at 8:12 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Mcfadden was playing hurt for some of the season and still got to the table. It is about the whole body of work and his career. He has been under consideration every year and now is his last year to win. Perhaps he finished second since he was an underclassman in the past. In Florida's spread offense without a tailback, Tebow will get the majority of touches. Mcfadden shared the touches with Jones and a QB with typically only 20-25 per game whereas Teebow had 60-70. Wrong choice Gene.



Posted by FF40212 on December 8, 2007 at 1:56 p.m. (Suggest removal)

I agree with you on this one Sapakoff (unlike my fellow Tiger fan above). Tebow also played hurt (broken hand). Arkansas also had the "Wild Hog" formation in an attempt to give McFadden the direct snap.

I think Tebow is without a doubt a new-found type of "dual threat" QB. Woodrow Dantzler (and now Pat White at WVU) present a different style of running QB than Tebow. He is a buizer, but at the same time he can always drop back and throw over your head. You truly have to play the whole field with him at QB.

Bottom line, forget the numbers. Tebow proved he is the BEST college football player this year.



Posted by robbybobby on December 8, 2007 at 2:33 p.m. (Suggest removal)

what would tiger fans know about the heisman?



Posted by youmanyo on December 9, 2007 at 8:24 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I guess this coot is proud of the cocaine train George Rodgers



Posted by rebel1 on December 9, 2007 at 4:46 p.m. (Suggest removal)

kind of like that tainted nat champ where putty kat u should of got the death pen. cant win without cheating




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