Do Indiana & Vanderbilt Have Real Heisman Trophy Candidates?

They each come from non-traditional college football programs. Indiana University has long been a college basketball blueblood, while Vanderbilt University is the only Division I program that does not have an actual functioning athletic department. With only six men’s collegiate sports, during this century Vandy’s only athletic success has come in baseball.

Yet here we are, at the end of October, with Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza and Vanderbilt’s Diego Pavia as two of the leading candidates for the highest individual honor in College Football, the Heisman Trophy.

The race is far from over of course, and right now there are no shortage of qualified candidates according to Fox. But to call this an unusual season would be an understatement.


Arch Manning Was Anointed. Then He Wasn’t

Going into the season, it was Texas quarterback Arch Manning’s trophy to lose. And he did, in week one. Ohio State shut Manning and the Longhorns down, and Arch’s candidacy crashed.

That opened the door for pretty much everyone else, including the two guys from non-traditional football powers. Mendoza, who transferred to Indiana from Cal, and Pavia, who arrived in Nashville after two seasons at New Mexico State, are the party crashers among the more traditional candidates from power programs. Those include quarterbacks Ty Simpson from Alabama, Gunner Stockton from Georgia and Marcel Reed from Texas A&M. Most college football observers believed before the season that the actual best football player out there was Ohio State wide receiver Jeremiah Smith. Smith has had a sensational season so far (49 receptions, 602 yards and seven TD’s) but it’s the Buckeye’s quarterback, Julian Sayin, who’s getting the Heisman hype in Columbus.

The only thing that appears certain is that a quarterback will win the award for the 20th time in the last 25 seasons.


Heisman Typically Goes to the Player with the Best Stats

Putting up glittering statistics are the best way for a Heisman candidate to get noticed of course. Simpson’s numbers thus far are spectacular: 2,184 yards, 20 touchdowns and just one interception. For Stockton, it’s 1,553 yards, 10 TD’s and one INT. Reed, a dual threat for the Aggies, has 1,992 passing yards with 17 TD’s and six picks, plus 349 rushing yards and six more TD’s. Sayin has put up 1,872 passing yards, with 19 TD’s and three INT’s.

Impressive numbers to be sure.

Mendoza can match those stats, and was the leader at the halfway point, according to Fox analyst Joel Klatt. At the end of October he’s got 1,923 passing yards, with 24 TD’s and just three picks.

Pavia is the classic dual threat, with 1,628 passing yards to date, and 15 TD’s with five picks. He’s also rushed for 458 yards and five more touchdowns.


What Will it Take for Either or Mendoza or Pavia to Win the Heisman?

If either of the interlopers are to crash the party in New York City in December, it will be largely due to unprecedented team success. While the Heisman isn’t an “MVP” award in the true sense, succeeding at schools that don’t previously have a history of football success by leading either or both programs into the College Football Playoff could push either Mendoza or Pavia – or both – to the top of the Heisman voter lists.

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