USA TODAY US Edition

Jackson revels in contact, carries

Running back is workhorse at Northweste­rn

- Nicole Auerbach @NicoleAuer­bach USA TODAY Sports

Justin Jackson likes purple — it’s kind of a requiremen­t for a Northweste­rn football player, for obvious reasons — but not purple jerseys.

A purple jersey is what a Wildcats quarterbac­k wears at practice; it signifies no contact. For a running back who craves contact and carries, it is not ideal. Even for a running back who, over the last three seasons, has more combined carries and catches than any other player in a Power Five conference. Jackson isn’t one to take it easy, even when it makes total sense to try to do so.

“He doesn’t like it at all,” says Northweste­rn coach Pat Fitzgerald, chuckling. “I mean, he’s already taken enough hits. We don’t need to compound that with what we’re doing in practice. Now, when we do pass pressure (situations), we’ll do that live. He’ll do all that stuff, and there will be contact in that, but carrying the ball and all that, no.”

Jackson was required to wear the purple jersey at practice early last season, and it’s something that’s continued as he prepares for this fall, his senior season. Jackson understand­s why he’s doing this — the running back who played last season at 5-11, 190 pounds does not have the same build nor necessaril­y durability as the big, bruising, by-com- mittee backs he often sees on opposing sidelines.

“The coaches know the workload I’m probably going to get during the year, and they’re just trying to make sure that I’m healthy,” Jackson says. “It sucks when you’re doing it, because you want to be out there practicing and competing and everything. You kind of feel like you’re sitting on the sideline. I hate it so much, but then you look back on it in hindsight, and it’s probably the right decision.”

It’s right for the obvious reasons, the wear and tear of a college football season. But it’s especially right considerin­g Jackson’s size and frame.

“I can’t even believe I played my freshman year; I was probably only 185 pounds, and that’s crazy,” Jackson says. “It is amazing that I didn’t get seriously injured at least that year.”

Jackson, who will be among a handful of standout players participat­ing Tuesday at the Big Ten media days in Chicago, says he’s put on about 15 or so pounds since arriving on Northweste­rn’s campus — he’s up to 200 — and that has helped him absorb hits and deliver them.

Besides, part of what turns a good running back into a great one is avoiding such hits in general — something Jackson has always been naturally good at doing.

“He has a really, really uncanny ability or unique ability not to get hit,” Fitzgerald says. “Very rarely do you see him just get flush hit. He’s able to get skinny, so to speak, and really plays behind his pads well. He’s really able to contort himself where he doesn’t really ever get lit up, and I think that’s really helped.”

Says Jackson: “When you’re younger, you kind of have those blinders on. You don’t see a lot of what’s happening around you, but as you get older, you open your vision up a little bit.”

Jackson says his body can’t really feel the difference between a 25-carry game and a 35-carry game, though he knows “the miles add up” as a running back. He tries to prepare his body dur- ing fall camp the best he can — create a “callus” of sorts, as he puts it — to be ready for the first game of the season. Beyond that, he’s learned how to better take care of his body before games and during recovery afterward.

It’s all part of a larger education Jackson has received here, one that will eventually end, alongside an exceptiona­l football career, with a degree in economics and minors in business and French. Jackson, who also is on the football team’s leadership council and an athletics department­wide student-athlete group geared toward diversity and inclusion, comes across as one of the most well-rounded college athletes imaginable.

And he is, with a particular perspectiv­e and appreciati­on for what he gets to experience at Northweste­rn and each Saturday on Big Ten football fields. He likes to talk about personal growth and living in the moment. Jackson, whose mother died of breast cancer when he was 3, uses that awful experience to highlight something positive: a closeness with his extended family that might never have existed without the loss of his mother.

“It definitely was like a wakeup call, my aunts always tell me,” Jackson says. “Now, everyone goes to my grandma’s house like every Sunday or Saturday or whatever and just kind of makes that commitment to really cherish each other, cherish life and really come together as a family.

“It’s definitely bitterswee­t. It’s a silver lining, but … there’s definitely something you can take from everything. I wish I would’ve had more time, but life doesn’t always work like that.”

“Her memory definitely lives on — through us.”

 ?? WILLIAM HAUSER, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Justin Jackson, left, has had at least 245 carries in each of his three seasons at Northweste­rn.
WILLIAM HAUSER, USA TODAY SPORTS Justin Jackson, left, has had at least 245 carries in each of his three seasons at Northweste­rn.

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