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Mariota declares for the NFL Draft

ASSOCIATED PRESS
FILE - In this Oct. 5, 2013, file photo, Oregon starting quarterback Marcus Mariota smiles on the sideline during the fourth quarter of an NCAA college football game against Colorado in Boulder, Colo. Mariota is The Associated Press college football player of the year. He won the AP vote in the same landslide fashion he won the Heisman Trophy, receiving 49 of the 54 votes submitted by the AP Top 25 media panel. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota is leaving Oregon early for the NFL.

Mariota announced his long-awaited decision to forgo his senior season on Oregon’s website. The team said he filed paperwork on Wednesday, a day before the NFL deadline. 

“I will miss being with my teammates,” he said in a statement. “Being a part of this team was something special that I will always treasure.”

Mariota was the leader of Oregon’s high-flying offense for three seasons. This season, the Ducks (13-2) defeated Florida State at the Rose Bowl in college football’s first playoffs, but fell 42-20 to Ohio State in Monday night’s national championship game. 

Mariota, who won every major award he qualified for: the Heisman, AP Player of the Year, the Maxwell and Walter Camp awards and Pac-12 Offensive Player of the Year. He set a conference record for most touchdowns in a single season with 58; 42 via pass, 15 on the run and a touchdown catch. 

His passing touchdowns set a Pac-12 single-season record. He also set the conference’s career mark for career touchdowns with 136.

He threw at least one touchdown pass in all 41 college games he played in at Oregon, starting in every one of his appearances. And he’s one of just four quarterbacks in FBS history to pass for more than 10,000 yards and run for more than 2,000 in his career.

“It’s been an honor to watch Marcus develop over the last four years, and I’m excited to see what his future holds,” Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said in a statement. “He’s given this program everything we could have asked, and he’ll be the standard by which others are judged. Mahalo.” 

Led by Mariota, Oregon finished No. 2 in this season’s final AP rankings. Overall, the Ducks ranked third in the nation in total offense with an average of 547 yards per game. The Ducks’ passing offense under Mariota was ranked 10th nationally with an average of 312.5 yards a game. Mariota’s passer efficiency rating (181.7) topped the nation.

A Saint Louis School graduate, Mariota was known for his steady demeanor from the start. Off the field, he was shy and unassuming, but he stayed on the field following every game to shake hands and pose for pictures. 

Mariota said before Monday’s season finale that he would trade his Heisman for a national championship, but it wasn’t to be. In the final game he threw for 333 yards and two touchdowns. 

“My main focus was to be a great teammate,” he said following the game. “That’s all I hoped to accomplish. I don’t really care about legacies.”

Mariota is fiercely proud of his roots: His helmet facemask was designed to include the numbers 8-0-8 in a nod to the state’s area code, and following the national championship his family gifted him with stacks of lei that he wore in the locker room.

“I think you could argue that this was the best, if not certainly one of the top two or three greatest seasons in college football history,” Helfrich said of Mariota following the game. “And then you add in the person and the legacy that he has from that standpoint, and there has never been one greater. None.”

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