Kyler Murray’s last game for Allen High
looked similar to most of his games, 22 out of 32, 316 yards, 5 TD’s. The difference this time was that he will
never again take the field for the Eagles.
Between start #1 and start #42 what Murray achieved was stunning: 42-0
as a starter, 3 state championships, 3 championship game MVP awards, a Gatorade
National Player of the Year award, twice Texas player of the year, named as an
Under Armour All-American, being tabbed a 4-star recruit (#54 in the US), and finishing
4th in the prestigious Nike Elite 11 QB competition. The Dallas Morning News last week proposed
that he was the most accomplished QB coming out of DFW in the last 40 years,
and that was before title #3.
The record will show that Kyler Murray
threw for 10,386 yards and 117 TD’s, and ran for 4,139 yards and another 69 TD’s. His career completion % was 64% and his average completion went for
over 16 yards. Amazing numbers. For me, I will remember him as the most
skilled high school player I’ve ever seen and the most consistent. I won’t soon forget the shock of seeing
Westerberg unleash Murray in the first game of his junior year against
Southlake; going deep time and again, this little dude we thought was just a
running QB. He played QB like a 22-year
old instead of a 17-year old. It may
just be that he peaked early, having a QB Dad in the house. Time will tell. But I won’t judge Kyler Murray on whether he
succeeds in the SEC. I feel privileged
to have watched him for 2 and a half years.
He never mailed in a game, or let the team down once. He sort of became a mythical figure in his
own time; the fans here just came to believe that Kyler Murray could not lose. I told everyone who would listen: appreciate
this while you can.