Posted
Wednesday, November 23, 2005; 11:18 a.m.
He Has Them Buzzing
Bush's electrifying performance dazzles even those
Heisman voters who weren't watching the game.
Bill Plaschke, Los Angeles Times
The race is over. It ended immediately after Reggie Bush stopped
running.
Shortly after 11:15 p.m. Saturday night, Bush put down the football
and picked up the Heisman.
It's done. He has won. His 513 all-purpose yards for USC against
Fresno State clinched it, no matter what happens in the next two
weeks in College Station or Houston or even at the Coliseum.
It's all about Fargo.
In that North Dakota town lives Mike McFeely, a respected sports
columnist who is also a Heisman Trophy voter. I phoned him Tuesday
and asked for his pick.
"Reggie Bush," McFeely said. "He is the premier
player in the country, and Saturday's game solidified it."
He paused.
"Even though I never saw one second of it."
What? He is going to vote for Bush to win arguably the most prestigious
individual award in U.S. sports, yet his deciding factor was a game
he never saw?
"I haven't seen Reggie Bush play at all this year," he
said. "I haven't seen Vince Young either. I haven't seen any
Division I-A games, either on television or in person."
It turns out, McFeely writes about Division I-AA North Dakota State,
so his Saturdays are consumed with the Bison, allowing him little
time to be buffaloed by the big guys. For the last five years, his
Heisman opinion has been formed by Internet reports and video clips.
He votes on the buzz. And Saturday night, with runs that will be
replayed forever in chat rooms and on cable, Reggie Bush stole the
Heisman buzz.
"Yeah, that's how it works for me," McFeely said. "Pretty
comical, isn't it?"
Pretty perfect, if you ask me. Of 923 Heisman voters, there are
probably 500 just like McFeely, well-meaning media folks and former
winners who, for whatever reason, never actually watch a game.
Some no longer cover football. Some no longer even cover sports.
Some of the former winners spend their Saturdays pushing cars and
selling homes.
"Many of the voters are only borderline qualified," said
Wendell Barnhouse, veteran college football writer from the Fort
Worth Star-Telegram. "And some of them are idiots."
This voting pool cannot simply be swayed, it must be shocked and
awed. On Saturday, Bush did both, swirling around the Coliseum field
as if propelled by a leaf blower, creating one of the best performances
in college football history while under some of the greatest pressure
in college football history — 513 yards with a two-year winning
streak on his back.
For those who buy only the buzz, the sale was final, and far reaching.
The buzz was enough to give Bush the lead, for the first time this
season, in the two main Heisman predictors, the Rocky Mountain News
poll and the ESPN poll.
The News' list is the veteran, having correctly predicted the winner
in 15 of the last 18 years using 10 voters in five regions.
"Vince Young has had an impressive season," said the
News' Randy Holtz, a voter, speaking of the Texas quarterback. "But
Bush has had a better one."
The buzz will also be enough to keep Bush in the lead even though
Young has two remaining games before the Dec. 7 voting deadline,
while Bush has only one.
This is because Young's Longhorns are playing two mediocre teams
— Texas A&M in the regular-season finale and then probably
Colorado in the Big 12 championship game — while USC plays
11th-ranked UCLA.
"Even if Young has amazing games, they won't be against good
enough opponents to vault him ahead of Bush," Holtz said.
If nothing else, the kid thinks he has already garnered the first
official vote.
Yeah, that would be from his teammate, last year's winner and eligible
voter Matt Leinart.
Said Bush with a smile: "I told him he's voting for me."
Said a noncommittal Leinart with a bigger smile: "I told him
he better stay on my good side."
Said Bush: "I told him, he's won his award, it's my turn."
It was strange indeed Tuesday, seeing two of the top Heisman candidates
talking so freely about the award while standing next to each other.
On what other team could a player approach the defending Heisman
winner, a guy who may be the best quarterback in college football
history, and ask him to vote against himself?
On what other team would the Heisman winner laugh about it?
"It's a wild scene," Coach Pete Carroll said.
But it's a scene scripted over the past several years by the coach
himself, a genuine culture of unselfishness that has allowed both
candidates to realize neither is as big as the team.
"I understand how the media can make an issue of this, watching
how these two guys handle it, seeing if they will crack," Carroll
said. "But one thing we've always understood around here is
that things happen because of the team. Without the winning, nobody
gets the recognition. That has humbled everyone a little."
Leinart said he doesn't even know how to vote. A USC official has
phoned the Heisman folks to ask about the ballot.
When it arrives, Leinart can certainly be excused for voting for
himself, seeing as he is playing just as well as last season under
twice the pressure.
But Bush was there when the passing game didn't work against Arizona
State.
Bush was there when almost nothing worked against Notre Dame.
And Bush was everywhere, all night, in a victory over Fresno State
that required every last yard.
"He had the big numbers in the must-see games, then came through
with a really big number in a must-win game," said Dick Weiss,
New York Daily News college sports columnist and voter.
Added Holtz: "He carried them on his shoulders in a game in
which they could have lost everything."
Of all the incredible digits accrued by the nation's all-purpose
yardage leader, the most amazing is this:
Reggie Bush averages 10 yards every time he touches the ball.
Think about it. Ten yards is a first down. That means he is officially
unstoppable.
Yet when asked about his favorite highlight of the season, Bush's
response says more about him and his Heisman worthiness than all
those yards combined.
He talks about the play that went one inch.
"My best play this year, it was against Notre Dame,"
he said, smiling. "It was my push."
Heisman watch
This year's Heisman Trophy voting race probably will come down
to Reggie Bush and Matt Leinart of USC and Vince Young of Texas:
PLAYER POSITION SEASON STATISTICS
REGGIE BUSH USC, Junior Running back (6-0, 200) 1,398 yards rushing
and 383 yards receiving; had 513 all-purpose yards against Fresno
State
VINCE YOUNG Texas, Junior Quarterback (6-5, 230) 2,414 yards passing
and 22 touchdowns; 774 yards rushing and eight touchdowns
MATT LEINART USC, Senior Quarterback (6-5, 225) 66% completion percentage;
3,217 yards passing, 24 touchdowns and seven interceptions
Competition in the backfield
Reggie Bush's chances for winning the Heisman Trophy may not be
helped by having to split votes with his own quarterback, 2004 winner
Matt Leinart, who has passed for 3,217 yards in 10 games. The yardage
posted by both the last 10 running backs to win the award, and their
quarterbacks: Year Heisman winner, school Rush yds Quarterback Pass
yds
1999 Ron Dayne, Wisconsin 2,034 Brooks Bollinger 1,133
1998 Ricky Williams, Texas 2,124 Major Applewhite 2,453
1995 Eddie George, Ohio State 1,927 Bobby Hoying 3,269
1994 Rashaan Salaam, Colorado 2,055 Kordell Stewart 2,071
1988 Barry Sanders, Oklahoma State 2,628 Mike Gundy 2,163
1985 Bo Jackson, Auburn 1,786 Pat Washington 873
1983 Mike Rozier, Nebraska 2,148 Turner Gill 1,516
1982 Herschel Walker, Georgia 1,752 John Lastinger 907
1981 Marcus Allen, USC 2,427 John Mazur 1,128
1980 George Rogers, South Carolina 1,894 Garry Harper 1,266
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