The Butkus Foundation announced today that Clemson linebacker Isaiah Simmons has been named as one of 12 semifinalists for the collegiate Butkus Award. Additional information from the Butkus Foundation is included below.
CHICAGO – (November 4, 2019) – Semi-finalists for the 35th annual Butkus Award® honoring the nation’s best linebackers at the collegiate and high school levels were revealed today by the Butkus Foundation. The list includes 12 collegiate and 15 high school linebackers.
Butkus Award 2019 Collegiate Semi-Finalists and College
Joe Bachie, Michigan StateZack Baun, WisconsinJordyn Brooks, Texas TechTae Crowder, GeorgiaJordan Glasgow, MichiganJake Hansen, IllinoisAnfernee Jennings, AlabamaKenneth Murray, OklahomaMicah Parsons, Penn StateIsaiah Simmons, ClemsonEvan Weaver, CaliforniaLogan Wilson, Wyoming
The committee noted three probable semi-finalists had their season not been interrupted due to injury; Dylan Moses of Alabama, Markus Bailey of Purdue and Cale Garrett of Missouri.
Selection is handled by a panel of 51 coaches, recruiters, scouts and journalists who vote separately and confidentially using a 3-2-1 process, with a write-in option offered. Selectors and selection criteria are posted at www.thebutkusaward.com.
Finalists in both divisions will be announced November 25, and winners will be announced on or before December 10. The pro winner will be announced in early 2019.
The 2018 Butkus Award winners:
Professional: Khalil Mack, Chicago BearsCollegiate: Devin White, LSU (now Tampa Bay Buccaneers)High School: Nakobe Dean, Horn Lake, Miss. (now Georgia)
The Butkus Award® is presented by the Butkus Foundation, a 501c3 non-profit organization which advances health and wellness through special initiatives. This includes the I Play Clean® program encouraging athletes to play using their natural ability, and the Butkus Takes Heart™ program encouraging preventive heart scans and screening among adults.
The Butkus Award a member of the National College Football Awards Association (NCFAA) which encompasses college football’s most prestigious awards. NCFAA’s 25 awards have honored more than 800 since 1935.