Sugar Skulls QB Mylik Mitchell, seen here playing for Kent State against Alabama in 2016, has been one of the league's top newcomers this season.

Tucson Sugar Skulls quarterback Mylik Mitchell was ready to hit the workforce after his football-playing career paused.

The โ€œCleveland boyโ€ was a star quarterback at John Hay High School in Ohio before he signed with Kent State. Mitchell suffered a season-ending ACL injury in Kent Stateโ€™s 48-0 loss to Alabama in Tuscaloosa during his freshman season in 2016.

After a brief stint at Kent State, Mitchell โ€œworked in factories, picking ordersโ€ and making corrugated boards for Georgia-Pacific manufacturing company.

โ€œOnce I got a raise, Iโ€™m like, โ€˜If I stay doing this for too long, itโ€™s going to be the last thing I do,โ€™โ€ Mitchell said. โ€œI got out of there before it got too lucrative. ... I had a few older guys at work tell me, โ€˜You canโ€™t be in here, man, you gotta chase your dreams.โ€™โ€

Mitchell signed with Ferris State, a Division II school in Michigan, and won two national championships with the Bulldogs. Following Mitchellโ€™s collegiate career, he โ€œgot the opportunity to play in the IFL and I took it,โ€ he said, and signed with the Tucson Sugar Skulls before this season.

Through two games this season with Mitchell, who wears zero for his jersey number, at quarterback, the Sugar Skulls have the highest-scoring offense in the IFL, averaging 52 points per game. Mitchell is the leagueโ€™s third-best rusher, averaging 77 yards per game. He has completed 24 of 35 passes for 282 yards, four touchdowns and an interception.

Mitchell completed 15 of 18 passes for 154 yards and three touchdowns, in addition to four rushing touchdowns. The first-year Sugar Skulls quarterback has accounted for 12 touchdowns this season.

Tucson head coach Billy Back called Mitchell โ€œa smooth operator.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s poised and doesnโ€™t get rattled. Thereโ€™s not much that bothers him and he can throw from every arm angle. Heโ€™s all of 6-3, maybe 6-4, and is just an athlete,โ€ Back said. โ€œHeโ€™s got the second-best jumpshot on the team behind me, so he can do things. Heโ€™s a leader. ... Heโ€™s a great leader and a heck of a ball player.โ€

Mitchell and the Sugar Skulls (1-1) host their first home game of the season on Sunday, when they face the defending IFL champion Bay Area Panthers (2-0) at Tucson Arena. The Panthers are quarterbacked by former IFL MVP and Sugar Skulls quarterback Daquan Neal, who reunited with former Sugar Skulls head coach and general manager Dixie Wooten, who is Bay Areaโ€™s offensive coordinator.

Earlier this week, Wooten was complimentary of Mitchell and said, โ€œheโ€™s an NFL-caliber quarterback.โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s tall, heโ€™s big, can run and throw and do everything,โ€ Wooten said. โ€œHe puts a lot of fear in defenses.โ€

Mitchell joined โ€œSpears and Aliโ€ on ESPN Tucson this week to look back on the first two weeks of the season, life in Tucson, and why the โ€œdrive never leavesโ€ to play football.

Mylik Mitchell left, won two national championships with Ferris State, a D-II school.

How would you assess the start to your IFL career?

A: โ€œI just try to be grateful for it, just knowing I could aways be at home, doing something else thatโ€™s not enjoyable. I just try to have fun. I donโ€™t really look at the stats, just try to get wins. Itโ€™s a team sport, so Iโ€™m not going to take the credit for 12 touchdowns โ€” a couple of them were walk-ins. Iโ€™m just trying to have fun, man. Itโ€™s a long season and I want to make sure I have fun all 19 weeks.โ€

Through the first two weeks of the season, do you feel like Tucson has an identity?

A: โ€œWeโ€™re still trying to find it. We still got players coming in and out, still got guys that got things to learn, plays to put in, formations and things like that. We knew coming in that weโ€™d get these first couple weeks to get cleaned up. Weโ€™ll get to rolling here in the next few weeks and youโ€™ll really get to see the identity then.โ€

Were you always a left-handed quarterback?

A: โ€œI write with my right hand. I donโ€™t know how that happened. ... Iโ€™ve been playing sports since I was a little kid.โ€

Playing in the IFL is not for the faint of heart, so why do you continue chasing that dream of playing pro football?

A: โ€œThe drive never leaves. If you want to step on the football field, you better have that drive or youโ€™re going to end up falling behind or getting yourself hurt out there. I try to go out there with maximum intensity and make the other team feel it every play.โ€

What are your impressions of Tucson as a city so far?

A: โ€œThe weather. Iโ€™m from Cleveland, so I love that. At midnight, Iโ€™m outside. ... In terms of Tucson in general, I love the food. Thereโ€™s food everywhere. We live kind of out of the way and it takes 15 minutes to get anywhere. ... Itโ€™s cool, I enjoy it. I havenโ€™t been here long, but Iโ€™ve got about four months left here and Iโ€™m sure Iโ€™ll get into something.โ€

Tucson Sugar Skulls head coach Billy Back shares his vision on building a new 'culture' for the Southern Arizona Indoor Football League team, and what it's been like so far in leading Tucson to a 1-1 early-season record. (Aidan Wohl/Special to the Arizona Daily Star)


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Contact Justin Spears, the Starโ€™s Arizona football beat reporter, at jspears@tucson.com. On X(Twitter):

@JustinESports