Starkville Daily News

Stanford runner earns New York trip with numbers

- By JOSH DUBOW Associated Press

STANFORD, Calif. — Bryce Love ran out of Christian McCaffrey's shadow the same way he sprinted away from opposing defenses — with breathtaki­ng speed that has carried him to New York as a Heisman Trophy finalist.

After spending two years as an understudy, Love applied the lessons he learned watching McCaffrey set records and put his own spin on it in a season just as spectacula­r in its own way as McCaffrey was on the way to a Heisman runner-up finish in 2015.

"I was always in awe by a lot of things that he was doing," Love said. "Obviously being the caliber of player he was it was good to sit back and learn the little things from him. How he approached everything, how he attacked everything was really amazing. How he prepared week in and week out, I was lucky to see the things he could do. I was lucky to learn from him."

Love delivered his own awe-inspiring performanc­es for Stanford to earn a trip to New York as a Heisman finalist alongside Oklahoma quarterbac­k Baker Mayfield and last year's winner, quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson of Louisville.

Love establishe­d himself as a candidate early by rushing for 564 yards in back-to-back wins over UCLA and Arizona State. He kept adding to those numbers and leads all Power 5 running backs in yards

also set an FBS record with 12 runs of at least 50 yards.

"It's awesome to have somebody back there who will take advantage of the little creases that you give him and be able to do something special with the ball," offensive lineman A.T. Hall said.

About the only thing that managed to slow Love down was a sprained ankle suffered Oct. 14 against Oregon that hampered him the rest of the season.

Love missed one game against Oregon State and then played through the pain for the final five games. He still topped the 100-yard mark in his final four contests, including three against teams that finished the regular season in the top 15 of the AP poll, and helped the Cardinal make the Pac-12 title game where they lost to USC.

"He's a tough human being, he loves to play the game, and he's outstandin­g at it," coach David Shaw said. "That being said, he's outrushed a lot of football teams on one and a half ankles . ... That's a combinatio­n of ability, toughness, heart, character, all those things rolled into one, and I have so much respect for who he is as a man as well as what he is as a football player."

Love showed flashes of his ability the previous two years when he backed up McCaffrey. He had just 163 offensive touches his first two

all but one of them on plays that went at least 45 yards. So when he took off after becoming the feature back for the Cardinal, the success he had came as little surprise.

"There's just an explosiven­ess you noticed from day one," said 49ers defensive lineman Solomon Thomas, who was at Stanford for Love's first two seasons. "You could see how quick he was and how fast he was. His speed is ridiculous. No one has speed like that. He has put it all together and the way he puts that first juke on someone is just awesome."

 ?? (Photo by Marcio Jose Sanchez, AP) ?? Stanford running back Bryce Love runs against Southern California during the first half of the Pac-12 Conference championsh­ip earlier this month.
(Photo by Marcio Jose Sanchez, AP) Stanford running back Bryce Love runs against Southern California during the first half of the Pac-12 Conference championsh­ip earlier this month.
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