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WVU Release WVU's Preston Fox Named to Paul Hornung Award Watch List

Vernon

The Legend
Staff
May 29, 2001
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Beyond The Sun
wvsports.com
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (Aug. 1, 2024) – Redshirt junior wide receiver Preston Fox is one of 48 players named to the 15th Annual Paul Hornung Award Watch List, as announced by the Louisville Sports Commission.



The Paul Hornung Award is given annually to the most versatile player in major college football by the Louisville Sports Commission in memory of the late football legend and Louisville native Paul Hornung. The winner and his family will be honored at the annual Paul Hornung Award dinner in Louisville, Kentucky, in March 2025.



More information about the Award can be found at www.paulhornungaward.com.



The players represent 48 different schools and last season combined for more than 45,000 total yards and 198 touchdowns rushing, receiving, passing and returning kicks and punts. The vast majority of the players on the Watch List play offensive skill positions and most are return specialists; five players are defensive backs and return specialists; and several players play both offense and defense.



By conference, the Big 12 leads with 11 players, followed by the ACC and Big Ten with eight and the SEC with 6 and Mountain West with 5. The MAC and Sun Belt each has three players on the list, CUSA has two, the AAC one and there is one player from an independent school.



Colorado’s Travis Hunter won the Award in 2023 earning first team All-American All-Purpose Player by averaging 119 snaps per game on offense, defense and special teams. He played five positions on defense and averaged 66 snaps per game; he played four skill positions on offense where he played 50 snaps per game. Despite missing three games due to injury, on offense Hunter finished second on the team with 57 receptions for 721 yards and five touchdowns; on defense, he tied for the team lead with three interceptions, recorded 31 tackles, led the team with five pass deflections and had two tackles for loss. He also played substantial time on special teams.



The Paul Hornung Award has created an impressive legacy in 14 years including seven winners who were first-round NFL draft picks – Tavon Austin, Saquon Barkley, Odell Beckham Jr., Christian McCaffrey, Jabrill Peppers, DeVonta Smith and Shaq Thompson.



Hornung, who passed away in his hometown at age 84 in Nov. 2020, played every position in the offensive backfield during his career with the Irish in the 1950s and also played defensive safety, punted, placekicked and returned kickoffs. He was named All-America at quarterback as a senior and won the Heisman Trophy in 1956, then was the first player selected in the NFL draft, going to Green Bay. He earned NFL MVP honors for the Packers in 1961 as a triple-threat halfback and placekicker by setting a single-season NFL scoring record that stood for 46 years. He is a member of the College and Pro Football Halls of Fame, and Vince Lombardi once called him, “The most versatile man ever to play the game.”



The 2024 Watch List was compiled by a panel of college football experts based on a combination of statistics, career performance, SID recommendations and expectations heading into the 2024 season. In addition to the Watch List, the Paul Hornung Award Weekly Honor Roll will recognize players whose performances during the regular season meet the Award’s criteria. Players from both the Watch List and the Weekly Honor Roll are eligible to win the Award.



2024 Watch List Selections



Jaydon Blue, Texas

Zachariah Branch, USC

Barion Brown, Kentucky

Gary Bryant Jr., Oregon

Luther Burden III, Missouri

Kenan Christon, San Diego State

Kevin Coleman, Mississippi State

Ja’Quez Cross, Arkansas State

Jacob De Jesus, UNLV

Dylan Edwards, Kansas State

Emeka Egbuka, Ohio State

Trevor Etienne, Georgia

Major Everhart, TCU

Preston Fox, West Virginia

Julian Gray, Liberty

Jayden Harrison, Notre Dame

Jamal Haynes, Georgia Tech

AJ Henning, Northwestern

Tommi Hill, Nebraska

Travis Hunter, Colorado

Alijah Huzzie, UNC

Kenny Johnson, Pitt

Keegan Jones, UCLA

Parker Kingston, BYU

Caullin Lacy, Louisville

Marion Lukes, Central Michigan

Ismail Mahdi, Texas State

Jayden McGowan, Boston College

Drae McCray, Texas Tech

Easton Messer, WKU

Semaj Morgan, Michigan

Jaylin Noel, Iowa State

Jayden Otts, Cal

Trebor Pena, Syracuse

Zylan Perry, Louisiana

Brennan Presley, Oklahoma State

Richard Reese, Baylor

Trayvon Rudolph, Northern Illinois

Keionte Scott, Auburn

Malik Sherrod, Fresno State

Nicholas Singleton, Penn State

Cam Skattebo, Arizona State

Sutton Smith, Memphis

Cam Stone, Hawai’i

Jacquez Stuart, Toledo

Xavier Townsend, UCF

Bhayshul Tuten, Virginia Tech

Luke Wysong, New Mexico



The Louisville Sports Commission successfully launched the Paul Hornung Award in 2010 to honor its namesake and native son, and to promote outstanding performances by versatile college football players who often go unnoticed.



Previous Paul Hornung Award winners by year:

2023: Travis Hunter from Colorado played offense, defense and special teams, averaged 121 snaps per game; on offense was second on the team with 721 receiving yards and five touchdowns; on defense recorded 31 tackles, five interceptions, five pass deflections and two TFLS.

2022: Jack Colletto of Oregon State played fullback, quarterback and receiver on offense; linebacker and defensive back on defense; and was on all special teams. He scored six touchdowns rushing, completed two passes, made 28 tackles, caused a fumble and recovered a fumble.

2021: Marcus Jones of Houston was an All-American return specialist and lockdown corner who saw duty on offense. He recorded 48 tackles and five interceptions; returned a pair of kickoffs and punts for touchdowns; and caught 10 passes for 109 yards.

2020: DeVonta Smith of Alabama topped the nation in receiving yards and yards after catch and averaged 24 yards per punt return leading the Crimson Tide to the national championship. He scored touchdowns rushing, receiving and returning punts and was a gunner on punt coverage.

2019: Lynn Bowden Jr. of Kentucky made the move from all-purpose receiver/wildcat quarterback/return specialist to quarterback in midseason and led the Wildcats to a 5-2 record and Belk Bowl win over Virginia Tech.

2018: Rondale Moore of Purdue was a dynamic All-American freshman sensation who broke the school record for all-purpose yards in a season and a game with 2,215 and 313, respectively.

2017: Saquon Barkley of Penn State was an electrifying All-American running back who lined up at slot and wildcat quarterback, and returned kicks and punts;

2016: Jabrill Peppers of Michigan played 15 different positions on defense, offense and special teams, and earned first-team All-America at linebacker;

2015: Christian McCaffrey of Stanford was a workhorse on offense and special teams who broke the NCAA record for all-purpose yards, finishing with 3,864;

2014: Shaq Thompson of Washington was a two-way player, earning first-team All-American honors at linebacker and finished as the Husky’s second-leading rusher at tailback;

2013: Odell Beckham Jr. of LSU finished the season ranked second in the nation and first in the Southeastern Conference with 2,222 all-purpose yards and 185.2 average yards per game;

2012: Tavon Austin of West Virginia earned All-American by scoring 17 touchdowns receiving, rushing, returning kicks and punts; and amassing 2,272 all-purpose yards, including 572 yards versus Oklahoma.

2011: Brandon Boykin of Georgia was a lockdown cornerback on defense; scored three touchdowns playing quarterback, running back and slot on offense; and led the SEC in punt and kick returns.

2010: Owen Marecic of Stanford was a two-way starter who averaged 110 snaps per game and earned first-team All-Pac-10 at fullback and honorable mention at linebacker.
 
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