The Telegram (St. John's)

Looking back at greatness

Thirty years later, Barry Sanders reflects on his Heisman season

- BY CLIFF BRUNT

It took Barry Sanders four games to figure out how special his 1988 season at Oklahoma State might be.

Returning the season’s opening kickoff for a touchdown against Miami (Ohio) didn’t do it for him. Neither did his dominance of Texas A&M or his 304 yards and five touchdowns rushing against Tulsa.

It started becoming real for him during a masterful performanc­e at Colorado. The Buffaloes were on the rise with a defence that included future NFL players Kanavis Mcghee, Alfred Williams and Deon Figures.

Sanders broke the Buffaloes’ backs with a 65-yard touchdown run in the third quarter. He rushed for 174 yards and four touchdowns as Oklahoma State won 41-21.

“That was the first time I started hearing Heisman chants, which I didn’t think anything of it,” Sanders recalled. “It was just strange to hear people think I actually have a chance to win the Heisman. I was just thinking these were some very ambitious fans.”

Those fans were right, of course. Sanders won the Heisman in a landslide, piling up twice as many points as runnerup Rodney Peete, and his remarkable season set the table for an NFL career that ended in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, NFL MVP honours and the No. 3 ranking in league history in yards rushing behind Emmitt Smith and Walter Payton.

His exploits 30 years ago are still clear to those who watched them - and competed with Sanders and the Cowboys.

The same day Sanders carved up Colorado, rival Oklahoma faced Texas running back Eric Metcalf. Former Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer recalled being asked in the days leading up to the game if Metcalf was the best player in college football.

“I said no, the best player in the country is about 80 miles north of here,” Switzer said. “That stumped everybody. They had no idea what I was talking about. I said I’m talking about that running back they’ve got at Oklahoma State. He’s the best running back in the country.”

Switzer got an up-close look later in the season. Oklahoma won a 31-28 thriller, but Sanders ran for 215 yards and two touchdowns.

It was a typical performanc­e for Sanders during that magical season. He set numerous NCAA records, many of which still stand - among them, his 2,628 yards rushing, 238.9 yards rushing per game and 37 rushing touchdowns. All those totals were in 11 games and didn’t include his dominant Holiday Bowl performanc­e in a blowout win over Wyoming. Back then, bowl stats weren’t included in season totals. If that 222-yard, five-touchdown effort was added, his numbers would have ballooned to 2,850 yards and 42 rushing scores.

“For me, it was something that came out of nowhere in my own mind and in the minds of many football fans,” Sanders said. “It was something that was totally unexpected.”

Sanders was quiet and humble, yet the 5-foot-8 native of Wichita, Kansas, had talent that couldn’t be ignored, a jaw-dropping and ankle-breaking combinatio­n of power, speed and elusivenes­s that helped him run for at least two touchdowns in every game that season. In seven games, he ran for at least four.

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