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tomdalton22
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A little article from ESPN on Barry's Heisman year 25 years ago. His numbers were out of this world!
Can we take a moment and bow our heads in reverence to arguably the greatest season ever produced by a major college player?
I'm talking about Barry Sanders and his 1988 season at Oklahoma State.
This is the 25-year anniversary of Sanders winning the Heisman Trophy, so it's only right that BMOC offers a reminder of his greatness. And, yes, Sam Bradford, you should definitely get Sanders a cold drink after he steals your spot on the Heisman House couch.
Malcolm Emmons/USA TODAY SportsOklahoma State's Barry Sanders rewrote the record book while delivering a season for the ages in 1988.
The 1988 numbers are almost obscene:
? He rushed for an NCAA all-time record 2,628 yards in 11 games.
? He averaged an NCAA-record (geez, just about everything he did that season remains an NCAA record) 238.9 rushing yards per game, 7.64 yards per carry.
? He had four games of 300 or more rushing yards and five games of 200 or more yards.
? He had 37 rushing touchdowns.
? He had 3,250 all-purpose yards.
? He scored at least two touchdowns in all 11 games and at least three TDs in nine games.
? Even his brother, Northwestern running back Byron Sanders, had a big year in 1988, gaining 1,062 yards (making them the NCAA's all-time leading brothers duo).
Sanders wasn't on anybody's Heisman radar at season's beginning. Then he returned the season-opening kickoff against Miami of Ohio for a touchdown and rushed for 178 yards and a pair of scores. As the year wore on, Sanders' weekly stat sheets got so big they needed lap band surgery.
According to a recent story by John Helsley in The Oklahoman, Oklahoma State was only on national television one time that season. So the Cowboys' sports information office began a Heisman campaign that cost about $50,000 and included weekly phone calls to select voters.
Even without the campaign, Sanders would have won. Voters aren't that dumb. Sanders was virtually unstoppable that season and the numbers couldn't be ignored. He easily outdistanced his personal choice for the Heisman (preseason favorite Rodney Peete of USC).
But here's what's cool about Sanders, one of 11 children of a Wichita, Kan., roofer: when he reluctantly appeared via satellite from Tokyo (the Cowboys were playing a game there against Texas Tech) for the presentation ceremony, Sanders made sure his offensive linemen were on hand.
"It still takes my breath away," former Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones told Helsley.
And fellow Heisman winner Marcus Allen of USC once said of Sanders: "He was one of the few that would make other athletes' jaws drop."
Can we take a moment and bow our heads in reverence to arguably the greatest season ever produced by a major college player?
I'm talking about Barry Sanders and his 1988 season at Oklahoma State.
This is the 25-year anniversary of Sanders winning the Heisman Trophy, so it's only right that BMOC offers a reminder of his greatness. And, yes, Sam Bradford, you should definitely get Sanders a cold drink after he steals your spot on the Heisman House couch.
Malcolm Emmons/USA TODAY SportsOklahoma State's Barry Sanders rewrote the record book while delivering a season for the ages in 1988.
The 1988 numbers are almost obscene:
? He rushed for an NCAA all-time record 2,628 yards in 11 games.
? He averaged an NCAA-record (geez, just about everything he did that season remains an NCAA record) 238.9 rushing yards per game, 7.64 yards per carry.
? He had four games of 300 or more rushing yards and five games of 200 or more yards.
? He had 37 rushing touchdowns.
? He had 3,250 all-purpose yards.
? He scored at least two touchdowns in all 11 games and at least three TDs in nine games.
? Even his brother, Northwestern running back Byron Sanders, had a big year in 1988, gaining 1,062 yards (making them the NCAA's all-time leading brothers duo).
Sanders wasn't on anybody's Heisman radar at season's beginning. Then he returned the season-opening kickoff against Miami of Ohio for a touchdown and rushed for 178 yards and a pair of scores. As the year wore on, Sanders' weekly stat sheets got so big they needed lap band surgery.
According to a recent story by John Helsley in The Oklahoman, Oklahoma State was only on national television one time that season. So the Cowboys' sports information office began a Heisman campaign that cost about $50,000 and included weekly phone calls to select voters.
Even without the campaign, Sanders would have won. Voters aren't that dumb. Sanders was virtually unstoppable that season and the numbers couldn't be ignored. He easily outdistanced his personal choice for the Heisman (preseason favorite Rodney Peete of USC).
But here's what's cool about Sanders, one of 11 children of a Wichita, Kan., roofer: when he reluctantly appeared via satellite from Tokyo (the Cowboys were playing a game there against Texas Tech) for the presentation ceremony, Sanders made sure his offensive linemen were on hand.
"It still takes my breath away," former Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones told Helsley.
And fellow Heisman winner Marcus Allen of USC once said of Sanders: "He was one of the few that would make other athletes' jaws drop."