Six semifinalists for the 2019 Outland Trophy – five
offensive linemen and one defensive tackle – were announced Wednesday by the Greater
Omaha Sports Committee. The six semifinalists are players from
six schools at four different positions representing four different
conferences.
The 2019 Outland
Trophy, presented by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases
(NFID), is awarded annually to the nation's best college interior lineman on
offense or defense.
NFID is presenting the trophy to help increase awareness about the
importance of annual influenza (flu) prevention. Getting vaccinated each
year is your best line of defense against the flu. The All-America
Committee of the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) selected
the semifinalists.
The field for the 2019 Outland Trophy is as follows, listed in alphabetical
order: Wisconsin center Tyler Biadasz, Auburn defensive
tackle Derrick Brown, Oregon offensive tackle Penei
Sewell, Clemson guard John Simpson, Georgia offensive
tackle Andrew Thomas and Iowa offensive tackle Tristan
Wirfs.
Former University of Pittsburgh tackle Mark May, the 1980 Outland Trophy
winner, is serving as the Outland Trophy #FightFlu ambassador on behalf of
NFID. May is making media appearances on behalf of the #FightFlu public
awareness campaign to remind everyone six months and older to get an annual flu
vaccine.
The six semifinalists will be paired to three finalists next Monday. The
recipient of the 74th Outland Trophy will be announced during ESPN's The Home
Depot College Football Awards on Dec. 12, live from the College Football Hall
of Fame in Atlanta. The official presentation to the winner will be made at the
National Foundation for Infectious Diseases Outland Trophy Award Dinner
sponsored by Werner Enterprises on Jan. 15, 2020 in Omaha, Neb.
Here is a closer look at each of the semifinalists:
Tyler Biadasz, C, Wisconsin (6-3, 321, Jr., Amherst, Wis.):
Biadasz is the latest of outstanding Wisconsin linemen paving the way for
record-setting running backs, as Jonathan Taylor is the nation's leading scorer
(21 TD's) and needs just 20 more yards to break Donnel Pumphrey's FBS record
for most rushing yards in a three-year span (5,653), which is also Biadasz's
tenure of 37 consecutive starts. Also in Biadasz's favor is pass protection,
where the line has helped the Badgers complete 72.2 percent of their passes,
fourth nationally. Biadasz is Wisconsin's second consecutive semifinalist
(offensive guard Michael Deiter last year). Offensive tackles Gabe Carimi
(2010) and Joe Thomas (2006) are previous Outland winners.
Derrick Brown, DT, Auburn (6-5, 318, Sr., Sugar Hill, Ga.):
Brown is the rare playmaker tucked in the middle of Auburn's line. Consistently
double-teamed, Brown has still produced 43 tackles that are fourth on the
Tigers' defense along with 9.0 tackles for loss and 4.0 sacks, both second on
the team. The team captain's best games have come in November, with seven tackles
each against second-ranked LSU and Ole Miss and most recently six against
fifth-ranked Georgia. The Ole Miss game was one of three times he earned the
SEC Defensive Player of the Week award. He was also the Trophy's Defensive
Player of the Month for October. Brown has 157 career tackles, 30.0 TFL's and
13.0 sacks. Auburn claims two previous Outland Trophy winners, defensive tackle
Tracy Rocker in 1988 and offensive lineman Zeke Smith in 1958.
Penei Sewell, OT, Oregon (6-6, 325, So., Malaeimi, American Samoa/St.
George, Utah): Sewell is regarded as the top offensive lineman
in the Pac-12 and, in short, he's the best lineman on the nation's best
offensive line. As such, an Oregon lineman has taken seven of the Pac-12's 10
Offensive Lineman of the Week awards, and Sewell has three of those. Head coach
Mario Christobal says he's the best lineman he's ever coached. Sewell was the
Outland Trophy Offensive Player of the Month for September and leads the team
with 45 knockdowns, blocking for an offense that is 22nd nationally at 460.4
yards per game. He has five or more knockdowns in five of 10 games.
Run-blocking is his specialty but he has yielded only six quarterback pressures
this season on 364 pass-blocking snaps and has not allowed a sack.
John Simpson, G, Clemson (6-4, 330, Sr., North Charleston, S.C.):
Simpson has been a regular in the ACC weekly honor roll with three Offensive
Lineman of the Week awards, the latest coming Nov. 11 after grading at 90
percent with four knockdowns in a 55-10 win over N.C. State. Simpson lines up
inside a line that has Clemson's offense still ascending with record-setting
numbers, averaging 543.1 yards per game, third nationally. It has reached 50
points in a fourth straight game for the first time in program history (and 45-plus
in six straight) and has posted 500 or more yards in six straight games. As for
pass protection, Simpson is part of a line that has allowed only 12 sacks in
its last 19 games. He became the first Clemson offensive lineman to score a
touchdown since 2011 with a one-yard plunge against N.C. State. His senior
class at Clemson is 52-3 overall the past four seasons. The Tigers have never
had an Outland winner but had two semifinalists last year (defensive tackle
Christian Wilkins and offensive tackle Mitch Hyatt).
Andrew Thomas, OT, Georgia (6-5, 320, Jr., Lithonia, Ga.):
October's Outland Trophy Offensive Player of the Month has been the eldest
stalwart on Georgia's left side protecting quarterback Jake Fromm, continually
grading at 90 percent or above, and it has yielded plenty of results. Georgia
is fourth in the SEC at 208.6 rushing yards per game and 24th nationally. The
Bulldogs are tied for fourth in the SEC at 32.4 points per game and are tied
for second in the nation with yielding only 0.6 sacks per game this season.
Thomas has been the SEC Offensive Lineman of the Week twice this season,
helping running back D'Andre Swift post a second consecutive 1,000-yard rushing
season. Georgia boasts the 1968 Outland Trophy winner, defensive tackle Bill
Stanfill.
Tristan Wirfs, OT, Iowa (6-5, 322, Jr., Mount Vernon, Iowa):
Wirfs starts primarily on the right side and has paced the protection for
quarterback Nate Stanley, who is third in the Big Ten in passing yards (2,331)
and passing yards per game (233.1). His 66 passing touchdowns (14 this season)
are second all-time at Iowa and he needs nine more in three games to pass the
leader, Chuck Long. Wirfs has 30 career starts at both tackle spots – he
started three games at left tackle earlier this season and the last six (and
seven total) on the right. He was the first true freshman under coach Kirk
Ferentz to start at offensive tackle. Iowa has four all-time Outland Trophy
winners, most recently 2014 with offensive tackle Brandon Scherff, along with
offensive tackle Robert Gallery (2003), defensive tackle Alex Karras (1957) and
offensive guard Calvin Jones (1955).
The Outland Trophy is the third-oldest major college
football award. Created in 1946 when Dr. John Outland presented the FWAA with a
financial contribution to initiate the award, the Outland Trophy has been given
to the best interior lineman in college football ever since. Dr. Outland, an
All-American at the University of Pennsylvania in the late 1890s, eventually
took up practice in Kansas City, Mo. An avid outdoorsman, Dr. Outland believed
linemen did not get the credit they deserved and wanted an award to recognize
them.
The Outland Trophy is a member of the National College Football Awards Association
(NCFAA), which encompasses the most prestigious awards in college football.
Founded in 1997, the NCFAA and its 24 awards now boast over 800 recipients,
dating to 1935. Visit ncfaa.org to learn more about our story.
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