šŸˆ Hurts:a star in the making

Jalen Hurts has been a star in the making for a long time
Aaron Suttles | Beat Writer

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Jalen Hurts is a coach’s kid.

You may not know what that means on the surface, but you recognize the qualities when you see them. The poise, calm and maturity the true freshman quarterback showed last Saturday night, even after fumbling away his first college play, are all qualities of a coach’s kid.

Jalen is the son of Averion Hurts, the head coach at Channelview High School, where his son starred as one of the nation’s top prep dual-threat quarterbacks.

So when he shook off that turnover on his first career snap and started making plays, the coaches in Texas’ Class 6A, District 21 weren’t surprised. They knew it was only a matter of time before Hurts made his mark on college football.

He’d left his impression on Houston-area football for the previous two seasons.

ā€œHe beat us on a Hail Mary his junior year. It was probably one of the most incredible individual performances I’ve seen since we played Vince Young in 2001,ā€ said Jon Kay, head coach at North Shore High School. ā€œYou knew then that he was special.

ā€œIt’s literally a last-second pass with time running off the clock. We had gotten to him and kind of rattled him and he pulled up in the pocket and let one fly in the back of the end zone that got tipped to another receiver and they ended up beating us in a high-scoring affair. Now looking back on it you can see what kind of special athlete that he was."

What makes Hurts special?

Fair or not, most dual-threat quarterbacks are stereotyped as runners first. That’s not the case with Hurts. He can legitimately throw the football.He can run, too. That speed and elusiveness was on display against Southern Cal when he ran for two touchdowns.

What’s not fully appreciated by his opponents, and sometimes his teammates, is how physical he is. Hurts was a track and field star at Channelview, where he threw discus, shot put, ran the 100 meters and 4x100 relay and was a power lifter. He has squatted more than 500 pounds.

ā€œThat balance and power that he generates ... traditionally those power lifters and shot put guys are bigger kids,ā€ Kay said. ā€œYou can’t tell by looking at him, but it’s there. He’s just explosiveness. You can’t judge a book by its cover.

ā€œWe’ve got some pretty significant football players on our team that would hit him full speed and just bounce off. I don’t know that we’ve seen a kid that had the combination of balance and power to go along with speed.ā€

His talent was first brought to light at Alabama during bowl preparations when, as an early enrollee, Hurts played the role of Clemson’s Deshaun Watson, working as the scout-team quarterback. By all accounts, the veterans of an experienced, nasty defense didn’t exactly take it easy on him.

ā€œI knew he was going to be special (after that first practice),ā€ Geno Matias-Smith said.

Smith was a senior safety on that squad. He remembers a young guy not exactly shrinking away from the challenge.

ā€œHe ran scout team without any fear coming out of high school,ā€ Matias-Smith said. ā€œYou know we had some guys on that defense who were roughing him up. He was taking it. Reuben (Foster) gave him a few good licks.ā€

That Alabama defense was one of the best in the country, and against it Hurts made enough plays to turn the veterans’ heads.

ā€œI remember him breaking a few runs,ā€ Matias-Smith said.

When Hurts uncorked that 39-yard touchdown pass to ArDarius Stewart in the second quarter against USC, one that traveled more than 50 yards on a rope, Averion Hurts’ phone blew up. Those Houston-area high school coaches were as proud as if Jalen were their star pupil.

ā€œThere wasn’t any question in my mind that Jalen would be a playmaker in college,ā€ Deer Park head coach Chris Massey said. ā€œI think he’s one of the best high school quarterbacks I’ve seen in a long time.

ā€œTime and again, no matter what they say about Hurts’ ability, inevitably the phrase ā€œa coach’s kidā€ will get mentioned. How exactly Averion being a football coach affected Jalen’s ability, personality and demeanor is hard to quantify, but those who know the family say there is no question it did.

It starts with his maturity level.ā€œI was a coach’s kid,ā€ Massey said. ā€œCoach’s kids don’t get away with stuff. I asked my dad one time, ā€˜Why are you always on my rear end?’ And he said, ā€˜I can’t let you get away with anything. If I let you, I have to let everybody else and I’m not doing that.’

ā€œI think from that respect, he’s probably been held to a higher standard all along. I think that shows in the maturity factor.ā€œHe’s grown up in it. Because he’s a coach’s kid, he’s probably got a lot more experience than a normal true freshman would have just because you’re talking about it all the time, even at home.ā€

The poise didn’t surprise Kay either.

ā€œThat’s really his mom and dad’s personality,ā€ Kay said. ā€œHe’s a kid who has been in a field house since he was born. You just think of all the football conversations that he’s heard. I really think it paid dividends for him.ā€

UA coach Nick Saban hasn’t publicly named a starter for Saturday’s game against Western Kentucky, although it’s a safe assumption that Hurts will log a lot of snaps.

Under Saban, Alabama has never really had a quarterback like Hurts. Even Blake Sims, who could make plays with his feet, wasn’t as developed a passer or as natural a runner in the zone-read scheme as Hurts.

ā€œHe’s so dangerous,ā€ Massey said. ā€œThere’s not one thing you can do to say, ā€˜OK, we’re going to take away this because this is his strength.’ No, he’ll beat you in some other way.ā€

TideSports.com - Jalen Hurts has been a star in the making for a long time
 
Funny that an article like this comes out about Jalen and not Blake.

A feature piece like this for a player that is still allegedly in a "QB Battle" doesn't get released without CNS's go ahead.

This tells me that Hurts is the guy from here on out.

Blake may still get decent reps to keep him ready in case Hurts gets dinged up.

But, it's clear this is Hurts' offense.
 
The thing that impressed me the most in last week's game was how he was cheering on Alabama's offense after Barnett went in. It also says a lot about his makeup how he did not fall apart after fumbling his first snap. It also says a lot about Blake's makeup that he was able to come back and produce like he did. All of that being said, maybe Hurts and Barnett will be the second coming of Kenny and Joe
 
I believe the person who loses the starting job will eventually be gone by next year , baring injury . Just to much talent to set , for years , for either guy . I would love to be wrong but kids nowadays want instant gratification . So I think the battle is still ongoing .
 
110 of Hurts 118 passing yards were on 2 blown coverages by USCw. His other 4 completions netted 8 yards. Granted, he recognized the opportunities and put the ball on the money. He also showed poise and the how dynamic he can be carrying the ball. He moved ahead in the race but IMO it's certainly not game over in QB race.
 
110 of Hurts 118 passing yards were on 2 blown coverages by USCw. His other 4 completions netted 8 yards. Granted, he recognized the opportunities and put the ball on the money. He also showed poise and the how dynamic he can be carrying the ball. He moved ahead in the race but IMO it's certainly not game over in QB race.

@T&B eluded to (putting it lightly) the team rallying around Jalen more in another thread .

Nothing against Blake, but maybe Jalen is a better leader, has better leadership qualities. Equal in the amount of talent, albeit with different skillsets, but one assumes the leadership role better, and the team is behind him.

That would be Jalen.
 
110 of Hurts 118 passing yards were on 2 blown coverages by USCw.

I will never, for the life of me, understand this type of thinking. Those two passes happened. Was Jalen supposed to ignore the corner that got absolutely toasted by ArDarius and throw it into double coverage to Ridley instead? Or when both a safety and corner blitzed on the same time (because either a) USC's players are extremely stupid or b) USC's DC is even stupider) should Jalen have just ignored it and threw to a tight end maybe? Rather than hitting a wide open Stewart for a TD?
 
I will never, for the life of me, understand this type of thinking. Those two passes happened. Was Jalen supposed to ignore the corner that got absolutely toasted by ArDarius and throw it into double coverage to Ridley instead? Or when both a safety and corner blitzed on the same time (because either a) USC's players are extremely stupid or b) USC's DC is even stupider) should Jalen have just ignored it and threw to a tight end maybe? Rather than hitting a wide open Stewart for a TD?
I say this is call good vision on the field. He saw that Stewart was wide open and toss to him. I will go with A) and B) both is correct RIGHT?
 
I will never, for the life of me, understand this type of thinking. Those two passes happened. Was Jalen supposed to ignore the corner that got absolutely toasted by ArDarius and throw it into double coverage to Ridley instead? Or when both a safety and corner blitzed on the same time (because either a) USC's players are extremely stupid or b) USC's DC is even stupider) should Jalen have just ignored it and threw to a tight end maybe? Rather than hitting a wide open Stewart for a TD?

Perhaps I can help. Hurts gets credit for recognizing the bust and getting the ball out. His sideline first down completion showed an accurate and very strong arm - credit. On his one intermediate throw he zeroed in on a bracketed WR and threw a pick - that's a demerit, or a debit if you're a banker. The rest of his throws were for losses or very small gains, or his five incompletions. Barnett had two long passes, one that was a great job of looking off the safety, and another that showed nice touch throwing over the top. Most of his other completions were shorter, like Hurts, and he threw one incompletion.

Based on what I've seen, I'm just not ready to say Hurts is the better passer.

RTR,

Tim
 
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