Kenny Hill’s the big man on campus this week in College Station.

A few minutes after Texas A&M’s sophomore quarterback put the finishing touches on a 511-yard, three-touchdown, explosion at South Carolina, the Aggies jumped from a second-tier squad in the SEC West to instant division contenders with an unstoppable offense.

Hill was trending and the nickname Kenny Thrill was born.

Not bad for a squad that “hasn’t played the bigger teams” since arriving in the SEC two years ago according to Steve Spurrier.

Foot. In. Mouth.

“I heard somebody say we made a bunch of yards against some little teams,” Kevin Sumlin said after the Aggies’ 680-yard outburst. “But we seemed to make a few yards tonight.”

Sumlin knows what he’s talking about, boasting a track record of developing quarterbacks in a pass-heavy scheme that speaks for itself.

Hill’s the latest product of Sumlin’s system and has scouts salivating at his potential despite minimal game footage. Thirteen NFL scouts were attendance last Thursday night but most, if not all, were there to see South Carolina running back Mike Davis and first-round lock Cedric Ogbuehi.

Hill seized everyone’s attention and was the game’s most impressive player with numbers too filthy to ignore.

“This was a perfect storm kind of deal tonight in that he had a lot of time to pick his spots, and the lanes in the secondary were huge,” a scout told ESPN. “But he still had to drop it in there. I didn’t seem him make but one or two questionable decisions.”

How will Hill perform in Saturday’s home opener against Lamar?

Heismanesque most likely if he plays long enough.

The Cardinals (1-0) don’t have the talent to match-up with the Aggies at any position and gave up 27 points over the weekend to Grambling State, a team that’s won two games since the start of the 2012 campaign.

Hill’s primary back-up, five-star true freshman Kyle Allen, is expected to see playing time should Texas A&M roll.