NEW YORK — This year's Heisman Trophy ceremony will be an ode to the new era of college athletics.
Football is one of the sports most noticeably transformed by the transfer portal, the NCAA's relaxed rules on eligibility for players who change programs, and name, image and likeness deals that have made being a student-athlete a more profitable venture for some.
Three of the four Heisman finalists are quarterbacks who blossomed into stars at their second schools and were having so much fun in college that they decided to stick around an extra year — or two.
"It's different for everybody. It depends on how they want their life to go," LSU quarterback Jayden Daniels said Friday. "We decided to transfer, and to start fresh, and to stay an extra year because we felt like we had something more to prove."
Whether it is Daniels, Oregon's Bo Nix or Washington's Michael Penix Jr., the Heisman Trophy winner is likely to be a transfer quarterback for the fifth time in seven years.
The 89th Heisman will be handed out Saturday night in midtown Manhattan. Those three quarterbacks and Ohio State receiver Marvin Harrison Jr. are the finalists. Daniels, the AP college football player of the year, is the favorite to take home the big bronze statue.
The four spent Friday in New York City, sightseeing, talking to reporters and posing for photos with the trophy. In addition, the three quarterbacks made an appearance at a fast-food chicken joint in Times Square; they all have endorsement deals with the national chain.
Even before transfer rules opened up in 2021 amid the coronavirus pandemic, the number of quarterbacks switching schools was on the rise, with some finding stardom with a new team.
Oklahoma helped make Baker Mayfield (2017) and Kyler Murray (2018) Heisman winners in their second college stops. Then in 2019, former Ohio State quarterback Joe Burrow won a Heisman and a national championship at LSU.
Southern California's Caleb Williams, last year's Heisman winner, was part of a new wave of portal transfers, following coach Lincoln Riley from Oklahoma to the Trojans with immediate eligibility as a sophomore.
Daniels, Nix and Penix Jr. have taken more circuitous routes to the top of the college football.
Nix was a five-star recruit and freshman starter at Auburn. A Tigers legacy whose father was also an Auburn quarterback, Nix spent three years on the Plains. He had some high highs and low lows, and Nix decided after 2021 to try something else.
It could not have worked out much better.
The Ducks contended for a playoff spot last year, and with a chance to make another championship run, Nix came back for a fifth college season — taking advantage of the extra year of eligibility the NCAA gave out to those who were in school during the first two years (2020-21) of the pandemic.
The 23-year-old threw 40 touchdown passes this season and is threatening the Football Bowl Subdivision record for completion percentage in a season at 77.2%.
"I just think at the end of the day, you want to go somewhere where you're going to grow as a player, where you're going to be able to reach your full potential and to experience life and enjoy life in that period of college football, because you only get it for three, four or five, whatever years," Nix said.
Penix, 23, is in his sixth year. He spent four injury-plagued years at Indiana before transferring to Washington in 2022 to play for Huskies coach Kalen DeBoer, who had been offensive coordinator with the Hoosiers.
"He's definitely the biggest factor into me transferring to Washington. It's just having that trust out there on the field and just knowing that every time I snap the ball, I have opportunity to do something great with it," Penix said. "You know that feeling is something that you can't match."
Penix leads the nation at 324 passing yards per game and beat Oregon and Nix twice this season, guiding the second-ranked Huskies (13-0) to the Pac-12 title and a berth in the four-team playoff.
Daniels, who turns 23 on Dec. 18, took the opposite path from Nix, going from the Pac-12 to the Southeastern Conference. He played three seasons at Arizona State before transferring to LSU last year.
His first season in Baton Rouge wasn't that much different than his time in Tempe — good but inconsistent.
He, too, took advantage of the chance to play another college season, and it all came together this fall. He leads the nation in total offense at 412 yards per game with an average of an astounding 10.7 yards per play.
Daniels has a chance to become the rare Heisman winner in the Bowl Championship Series/College Football Playoff era to play for a team that wasn't a national title contender late in the season. The Tigers went 9-3 and didn't even reach the SEC title game.
Daniels, a Southern California native, said he stepped out of his comfort zone and into the unknown when he decided to go to LSU.
"Going from the West Coast all the way to the Bayou, I didn't know what i was getting myself into down at LSU," Daniels said, "but I'm glad that I did choose that."