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Having produced Heisman Trophy quarterbacks in recent years with Carson Palmer and Matt Leinart, the Trojans coaching staff felt it had the perfect candidate for the award in 2007.
But Booty didn't strike Heisman gold with injury and inconsistency setting him back.
Booty comes from a family rich in football tradition, which made his journey out West something that the youngster felt he needed to do to establish his own identity. John David's brother, Josh, was a quarterback for the Cleveland Browns who played at LSU for two seasons (1999-2000) following a five-year (1994-98) baseball career as an infielder in the Florida Marlins organization (including 13 games in the majors).
Another brother, Abram, was a wide receiver at LSU (1997-1999) and Valdosta State (2001). His father, Johnny, played quarterback at Arkansas, Louisiana Tech and Mississippi State, then, coached football at Evangel Christian, where John David Booty rose to national prominence as one of the top prep quarterbacks.
At Evangel Christian Academy, Booty earned Student Sports Underclass All-American and Class 5A All-State honors as a sophomore and junior. In 2002, he led his team to the Class 5A state title while throwing for 4,144 yards and 38 touchdowns. He also led the squad to the Class 5A state title as a 2001 sophomore, passing for 4,330 yards and 50 scores.
During his freshman campaign, Booty completed 9-of-11 passes. In his career, he threw for 8,474 yards on 555-of-864 passing (64.2%) with 88 touchdowns and 26 interceptions. Because Louisiana rules allow junior high students to compete on high school teams if the school is a K-12 school, he actually played varsity football for Evangel Christian since the seventh grade.
Prior to his senior year, Booty's father was fired a the team's quarterbacks coach at the Academy and the youngster decided to bypass football that season, opting for early enrollment at Southern California. Asked why he skipped his senior year of high school, the quarterback replied, "Because my dad was fired as our quarterbacks coach, I felt like it was time for me to move on. I felt like I was standing up for my dad and for what I want."
Booty did not see action during the first five games of his 2003 freshman season with the Trojans. Booty eventually saw limited mop-up action in five games in '03, finishing with 90 yards on 7-of-14 passes (50.0%), but lost 10 yards on a rushing attempt, as he missed the final two contests with a left wrist fracture suffered in the UCLA game. Listed third on the depth chart in 2004, a badly bruised elbow in fall camp forced the coaching staff to grant Booty a medical hardship.
With Matt Leinart having won the 2004 Heisman Trophy, Booty anticipated taking over quarterback duties in '05 at USC, but Leinart opted to return for his senior year, relegating the youngster to second on the QB depth chart.
For the 2005 campaign, Booty appeared briefly in 10 games. He threw for 327 yards, three touchdowns and two interceptions on 27-of-42 attempts (64.3%) and amassed 316 yards in total offense. On his way to the NFL, Leinart had a few thoughts about his successor, saying,
With Leinart gone, the 2006 season was Booty's "coming out party," but he was limited in spring camp with a herniated disc in his back that required surgery in late March. He returned to the field fully recovered by fall drills, where he executed the offensive game plan flawlessly.
Late 2006 season struggles, especially in upset losses to Oregon State and UCLA left his junior season unfulfilled, but Booty still ranked first in the Pac-10 Conference in pass efficiency (144.0 rating), total offense (253.38 yards per game), points responsible for (13.85 points per game), passing yards (3,347), passing yards per game (257.46 ypg) and pass completions (20.69).
For the campaign, he connected on 269-of-436 passes (61.7%) for 3,347 yards, 29 touchdowns and only nine interceptions. He also piled up 3,294 yards in total offense and came up with one solo tackle. His accuracy impressed USC offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Steve Sarkisian, who said, "Booty is like Greg Maddux in the way he can put the ball in the spot it needs to be."
Booty continued his slow improvement in 2007. During the early stages of his final season, the Trojans relied more on the running game. He then suffered a middle finger fracture on his throwing hand after suffering four interceptions in an upset loss to Stanford. The injury would sideline him for the Arizona, Notre Dame and Oregon losses. He played with renewed vigor upon his return, throwing just two more interceptions while connecting on 11 touchdown passes in his five contests.
The team captain and All-Pac 10 Conference honorable mention finished his senior season by completing 215 of 340 attempts for 2,361 yards (63.2%), 23 touchdowns and ten interceptions. He scored once on the ground and gained 2,255 yards in total offense, san average of 225.5 yards per game in the ten contests he appeared in.
In 38 games at Southern California, Booty started 23 times. He threw for 6,125 yards on 518-of-832 passes (62.3%), with 55 touchdowns and 21 interceptions. He rushed 61 times for losses totaling 180 yards (minus-3.0-yard average), scoring twice on the ground. In 893 plays, he totaled 5,945 yards, averaging 156.45 yards in total offense per game.
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