The Mount Rushmore Of K-State Running Backs

The Mount Rushmore Of K-State Running Backs

Last week I wrote about the Mount Rushmore of K-State quarterbacks, whom I decided were Michael Bishop, Collin Klein, Lynn Dickey, and Ell Roberson. There was little argument among the masses with my picks, which wasn’t very surprising. This week I tackle the running backs. Unlike the quarterbacks, I believe there will be some argument with the four running backs. There are a couple of obvious choices here, but after the first two, there are many options to fill the final two spots. I am a numbers guy, so I leaned heavily on the numbers and rushing statistics to make the final two picks. This still turned out to be more difficult than I thought it would be. Without further ado, here is my Mount Rushmore of K-State running backs.

Darren Sproles

Sproles is the best running back in K-State history, and second place isn’t close. He put up monstrous numbers, won a Big 12 championship, finished 5th in the 2003 Heisman Trophy voting, and went on to have a stellar NFL career. Here is a sampling of his place in the K-State record books….

Four of the top 10 yardage games in school history.

K-State record holder for rushing yards in a season.

Three of the top five rushing yardage seasons in school history.

K-State record holder for career rushing yards. Almost 2,000 yards ahead of second place.

K-State record holder for average yards per carry in a career.

Second place in career rush touchdowns (After Collin Klein.)

K-State record for consecutive 100-yard rushing games (10). Second place is six.

K-State record holder for all-purpose yardage in a season and career.

Veryl Switzer

Switzer was a charter member of the K-State Athletics Hall of Fame and the football Ring of Honor. He was the first African-American scholarship player to graduate from Kansas State and is one of the first African-American players to play in the Big 7 Conference. I call him the Jackie Robinson of K-State sports. He was an All-American in 1951, 1952, and 1953 and is the highest drafted player in K-State history, going number four to the Green Bay Packers in 1954. I can’t find his exact college rushing statistics anywhere, but nobody can deny the impact he had on Kansas State University.

John Hubert

Hubert played at K-State from 2010 to 2013 and quietly put up some outstanding numbers. I say “quietly” because he was never considered one of the stars of the team he played on, a team led by Collin Klein and Arthur Brown, among others. He rushed for over 900 yards for three straight seasons, which places him second on the K-State career rushing list. He is also second in career 100-yard games and is in the top five in career all-purpose yardage. The numbers don’t lie, so because of that, he makes Mount Rushmore.

Daniel Thomas

Thomas only played two years at K-State, in 2009 and 2010. He ran for 1,265 yards in 2009 and 1,585 yards in 2010. Here is where he ranks in some key categories in the K-State record book….

Third on the K-State career rushing list.

Top five in career average yards per rush.

Second in rushing yards per game in a season (2010).

K-State record holder for rushing yards per game in a career.

Top five in career rushing touchdowns.

Top seven in career all-purpose yards.

There are some great K-State running backs I had to leave off the list. Isaac Jackson, Mack Herron, David Allen, Larry Brown, Eric Hickson, Mike Lawrence, JJ Smith, and Alex Barnes, just to name a few. I strongly considered putting David Allen on Mount Rushmore since he was officially listed as a running back, but his rushing statistics don’t justify it. However, there is no doubt about his impact on K-State football, and he is a shoo-in for the Mount Rushmore of best return men in K-State history, which I may get to eventually.

Next up are the wide receivers!

2 thoughts on “The Mount Rushmore Of K-State Running Backs

  1. This by far was most in-depth look at what in my opinion threw the years is real strengths of KSU football ! It’s always been our running backs and the list goes back for a long time! But l have lost my parent an there Dempewolf Catbacker gen. But they all loved Veryl Switzer God bless him

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