Texarkana Gazette

Memphis’ record-setting Henderson eyes title

- By Steve Megargee

Memphis’ Darrell Henderson has bigger goals to accomplish, so he doesn’t have time to waste celebratin­g his American Athletic Conference record or his status as the nation’s second-leading rusher.

Henderson wants to win an AAC championsh­ip.

Memphis (8-4) carries a four-game winning streak into Saturday’s AAC championsh­ip game against No. 7 Central Florida (11-0, No. 8 College Football Playoff ). The Knights have won 24 straight games over the last two years but will be playing this week without injured star quarterbac­k McKenzie Milton.

The Tigers’ opportunit­y to claim a conference title comes one week after Henderson set the AAC’s single-season rushing record.

“It felt good, but I had to flush that because we’ve got a (chance at a) bigger accomplish­ment this week,” Henderson said. “We’ve got to go play for the conference championsh­ip, so I’m just focused on my team right now. This championsh­ip is more important right now.”

This game represents a second chance for Henderson, whose potential go-ahead 32-yard touchdown run was nullified by a holding penalty in the fourth quarter of a 31-30 loss to UCF last month. Even without that touchdown, Henderson still rushed for 199 yards in that game.

“We’ve just got to play relentless and make sure we finish this game,” Henderson said. “We just had too many turnovers and too many mistakes (last time).”

Henderson is the biggest reason why Memphis is back in the conference championsh­ip game one year after losing quarterbac­k Riley Ferguson and Chicago Bears rookie receiver Anthony Miller, who had formed one of the nation’s most dynamic passing combinatio­ns.

Memphis has utilized a more run-oriented offense this year while leaning heavily on Henderson, who had rushed for 1,154 yards last season despite sitting out a Liberty Bowl loss to Iowa State with a hamstring injury. Memphis coach Mike Norvell says Henderson gained about 15 pounds in the offseason to prepare for the increased workload.

The 5-foot-9 junior from Batesville, Mississipp­i has responded by rushing for 1,699 yards and 19 touchdowns while averaging 8.6 yards per carry. He has gained at least 40 yards on 13 separate plays from scrimmage (10 runs, three catches) to lead all FBS players.

Wisconsin’s Jonathan Taylor is the only FBS player with more yards rushing than Henderson this season. Florida Atlantic’s Devin Singletary is the only FBS player with more touchdown runs. Henderson is one of three finalists for the Doak Walker Award given annually to college football’s top running back.

“He’s got great vision and the ability to make you miss, and he’s got enough power to run through you as well,” UCF coach Josh Heupel said. “He’s electric when he gets into space and can turn a 5-yard gain into a big one real quick.”

 ?? AP Photo/John Raoux ?? ■ In this Dec. 2, 2017, file photo, Memphis running back Darrell Henderson (8) runs past Central Florida defensive back Tre Neal (23) for a 30-yard touchdown during the first half of the American Athletic Conference championsh­ip in Orlando, Fla. Memphis carries a four-game winning streak into Saturday’s American Athletic Conference championsh­ip game against No. 7 Central Florida.
AP Photo/John Raoux ■ In this Dec. 2, 2017, file photo, Memphis running back Darrell Henderson (8) runs past Central Florida defensive back Tre Neal (23) for a 30-yard touchdown during the first half of the American Athletic Conference championsh­ip in Orlando, Fla. Memphis carries a four-game winning streak into Saturday’s American Athletic Conference championsh­ip game against No. 7 Central Florida.

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