Skip to content
Chicago Tribune
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

After leading the nation in rushing in 1995, Iowa State’s Troy Davis had his tally–“2,010”–tattooed onto his left biceps.

One year later, he celebrated becoming the first player in NCAA history to break 2,000 yards in back-to-back seasons by having “2,085” and the words “Nuff said” tattooed onto his right biceps.

But Heisman Trophy voters had the last word. Davis, who took fifth in 1995, had to settle for being the runner-up to Florida’s Danny Wuerffel in ’96.

Davis was stung.

“How much more do I have to do to prove I’m the best?” he asked.

Northern Illinois’ Garrett Wolfe might ask that same question on the evening of Dec. 9, when the 72nd Heisman Trophy is awarded.

Although the 5-foot-7 Wolfe has more rushing yards after five games (1,181) than any player in Division I-A history, he still ranks third behind Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith and Oklahoma tailback Adrian Peterson on espn.com’s Heisman Watch, which is based on a panel of 15 “experts.”

That said, ranking third means Wolfe leads Notre Dame quarterback Brady Quinn, a Heisman darling from the moment he finished fourth last year. And Wolfe has a nice lead on fellow tailbacks Steve Slaton (West Virginia), Marshawn Lynch (Cal), Kenny Irons (Auburn) and Mike Hart (Michigan).

If he finishes third, Wolfe will earn a trip to New York for the presentation. The Heisman Trophy Trust typically invites four or five finalists, although last year only three (Reggie Bush, Vince Young and Matt Leinart) got the call.

“I don’t think my teammates would ever admit to it, but I think they really are pushing for me to go to New York,” Wolfe said. “I think they’re making a lot of sacrifices for me to be able to achieve that.”

His offensive line might have been trying a little too hard to help him Saturday at Ball State. Two of his touchdown runs–a 70-yard burst and a 45-yard dash–were called back because of holding.

But the line–which, by the way, features a true freshman guard and redshirt freshman center–did manage to clear holes that allowed Wolfe to rush for 353 yards and three touchdowns that stood up on 31 carries.

The 353 was the 13th highest single-game total in NCAA Division I-A history and it put Wolfe on pace for a 2,834-yard season, easily better than Barry Sanders’ 1988 regular-season rushing record of 2,628 yards, which was accomplished in 11 games.

The Huskies (3-2) have 12 regular-season games plus they hope to play in the Nov. 30 MAC championship game and a season-ending bowl.

ESPN will broadcast NIU’s Sunday night game at Miami of Ohio. And Heisman voters will look to an Oct. 28 game at Iowa to judge how Wolfe stacks up against a Big Ten defense–as if that’s still a question.

“Regardless of what happens against Iowa, people fail to realize that I had 285 all-purpose yards against the best team in the country,” said Wolfe, referring to his 171-yard-rushing, 114-yard-receiving effort at Ohio State in the season opener. “So I don’t think it gets any better than that as far as a measuring stick.”

And lest anyone forget, Wolfe ran for 148 yards and a touchdown on only 17 carries last year against Michigan–in the Big House.

No Mid-American Conference player has finished higher than fourth, which is where Marshall’s Randy Moss landed in 1997. The other top 10 finishes since then: Marshall quarterbacks Chad Pennington (fifth in 1999) and Byron Leftwich (sixth in 2002); and Miami of Ohio quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (ninth in 2003).

Moss, Pennington, Leftwich and Roethlisberger … did any of those four make it in the NFL?

So maybe Heisman voters will dismiss the argument that MAC players are inherently inferior to those from the Big Ten or Big 12. If that happens, Wolfe will be able to breathe the Big Apple’s air on Dec. 9.

“We’re all rooting for that,” Huskies tight end Brandon Davis said. “We want to see him there.”

– – –

CASE STUDY

The Marshall Plan

In 1993, San Diego State’s Marshall Faulk readied himself to make a statement. But he ran for only 53 yards in a 52-13 home loss to UCLA in a game that was televised by ESPN, a big deal back then.

A year earlier, Faulk had finished second in the Heisman voting to Miami QB Gino Torretta, an eventual seventh-round NFL draft pick.

Faulk was bitter that ESPN’s Lee Corso pushed for Torretta by publicizing his won-lost record (26-1 as a starter) at every turn.

“They did everything but spell out that Gino was going to win,” Faulk said at the time.

– – –

GAMES WORTH WATCHING

No. 9 LSU at No. 5 Florida

2:30 p.m., CBS

In a conference dominated by defense, this game has the SEC’s best quarterbacks–Chris Leak (Florida) and JaMarcus Russell (LSU).

No. 7 Texas vs. No. 14 Oklahoma

2:30 p.m., ABC

Yes, Texas smashed Oklahoma last season to end its five-game losing streak in the Red River Rivalry. But don’t forget, Sooners tailback Adrian Peterson carried just three times in the game.

Michigan State at No. 6 Michigan

3:30 p.m., ESPN

Should Michigan let Michigan State build a huge lead, just to see how the Spartans would handle it? Consider the entertainment value.

No. 13 Tennessee at No. 10 Georgia

6:45 p.m., ESPN

After sneaking by inferior teams, Georgia gets a tougher test this week. Problem: No Bulldog is ranked in the top nine in the SEC in any offensive category.