Badger Countdown: Number 25 posts historic campaign in 2014

The best to ever wear number 25 in Madison

The 2023 college football season is right around the corner and the Badgers are now 25 days away from their season opener against Buffalo on Sept. 2. The number 25 was worn by an all-time great running back and he produced a legendary season in 2014.

Melvin Gordon was entering his second season as Wisconsin’s starting running back and he turned it up to another level. Gordon rushed for 2,587 yards and 29 touchdowns during his final campaign in Madison.

The rushing yards rank second only to Barry Sanders (1988) for the most ever in a college football season. Most notably, Gordon went crazy in the team’s tenth contest, turning 25 carries into an NCAA record 408 yards while adding four touchdowns at home versus Nebraska.

His record would only stand for one week with Samaje Perine (Oklahoma) breaking it against Kansas with a still-standing 427 rushing yards.

Gordon went on to finish second to Marcus Mariota in the Heisman Trophy voting and was selected 15th overall in the 2015 NFL Draft by the Chargers.

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Braelon Allen will look to join exclusive Wisconsin, college football company this season

Can Braelon Allen join a list of Wisconsin & CFB greats this season?

Here’s a nice bar-room trivia question as we await the start of the 2023 Wisconsin football season: Who was the last college running back to rush for more than 2000 yards in a season, and when?

The year is 2019, already four years ago. Lucky for whoever is answering, four players did it that year: Ohio State RB J.K. Dobbins (2003 yards), Navy quarterback Malcolm Perry (2017 yards), Oklahoma State RB Chuba Hubbard (2094 yards) and Wisconsin RB Jonathan Taylor (2003 yards).

So yes, Wisconsin has the last running back to break the 2000-yard mark, in a way. Taylor is also one of three Badgers to accomplish that feat, along with Melvin Gordon (2014) and Ron Dayne (1996, 1999).

Braelon Allen enters the 2023 season having rushed for 1268 and 1242 yards respectively in his first two seasons. He was not the feature back for the entirety of his freshman season in 2021 and a stagnant offense hampered his production in 2022.

If all aligns right this season, with Wisconsin’s new offense opening space up the middle, the offensive line returning to classic Wisconsin form and Allen staying healthy the entire year, 2000 yards should definitely enter the picture.

From Melvin Gordon to Austin Ekeler: Chargers are emblematic of running back market collapse

It’s been four years since Melvin Gordon’s 2019 holdout. Chargers’ running back Austin Ekeler and other players are still dissatisfied.

Four years ago this month, former Chargers running back Melvin Gordon announced that he would hold out from training camp without a contract extension. After an offseason of negotiations with Los Angeles, while his name was in the headlines, Gordon would miss the first four games of the 2019 season. In early September, Tom Telesco announced that the team tabled all negotiations until the 2020 offseason.

Without the services of Gordon, the Chargers had three running backs on their 2019 roster. Western Colorado’s Austin Ekeler was in line to have the top job in the running back room alongside Justin Jackson and Troymaine Pope.

In that first month of the season that Gordon missed, Ekeler planted his flag in Los Angeles. He had 490 scrimmage yards and six touchdowns in that four-game span. Gordon probably wouldn’t have ended up re-signing with the Chargers anyway, but Ekeler’s performance officially put the kibosh on any potential return.

After he racked up 1550 scrimmage yards and 11 touchdowns in that 2019 campaign, the Chargers rewarded Ekeler with a four-year, $24.5 million contract extension in the offseason. LA locked up a running back who was starting to enter his prime for four years. Telesco also got an average annual value discount relative to Gordon, who signed a two-year, $16 million deal with Denver that offseason.

Since that original Gordon holdout, things have gotten more challenging for running backs. Christian McCaffrey was the last running back who reset the market three years ago, while yearly wages at other positions have skyrocketed.

As a result of the 2021 collective bargaining agreement, players who want to hold out of training camp now due to a contractual situation also get an increased fine of $50,000 per day. The owners went out of their way to prevent a situation like Gordon’s.

Before McCaffrey’s extension, the top deal on the market was Ezekiel Elliott’s. In a way, Gordon and Elliott are linked from the 2019 offseason when their respective organizations chose different directions. Dallas eventually gave into their star running back’s infamous holdout in Cabo with a six-year, $90 million extension.

Elliott is now out of a job as he waits to see if a team will come calling during training camp. His original holdout gave rise to a fourth-round pick named Tony Pollard in Dallas’ 2019 training camp. Pollard was franchise tagged by the Cowboys this offseason and seems unlikely to reach a long-term deal anytime soon after the tag extension deadline passed.

ESPN’s Matt Miller received a lot of pushback from running backs like Ekeler and Tennessee’s Derrick Henry for what he tweeted as the tag deadline passed. But what he said is the modern reality for NFL front offices and ownership. Is it problematic from a labor standpoint? Probably. But it’s what every front office is thinking right now.

Telesco was, to some extent, on the cutting edge of this philosophy four years ago. What maybe wasn’t expected was that Gordon’s replacement in Ekeler would end up suffering the same fate just four years later. The market has further contracted because almost all 32 front offices align with Telesco’s original 2019 vision.

Don’t like our contract? We’ll replace you. And then we’ll replace the replacement when his time is up. Ekeler referred to the league’s view of running backs as “discardable widgets” in his response to Miller. And he’s right. Next year, whether it’s Isaiah Spiller or someone else, Los Angeles will have a new starting running back. The three to four-year cycle will continue without structural changes to the market.

The Chargers’ story over the last four years is the NFL’s story regarding running backs. There may not be a better example of a franchise that demonstrates the current failures of the market to pay running backs appropriately. The only difference between now and 2019 is that Telesco’s original philosophy has spread across the league. Every team is trying to hand the ball to their Ekeler instead of their Gordon until they “discard” both.

WATCH: CFB Report shares highlight reel from legendary game

With Badger fans already on the edge of their seats ahead of the 2023 season, the College Football Report got them even more fired up Friday.

With Badger fans already on the edge of their seats ahead of the 2023 season, the College Football Report got them even more fired up Friday. They tweeted out a highlight reel from Wisconsin’s 70-31 Big Ten Championship victory over Nebraska.

In that contest, three legendary running backs (Montee Ball, James White, Melvin Gordon) produced some insane stat lines, as seen below. All three of the athletes went on to the NFL, two of which, White (3x) and Gordon (2023) have won Super Bowls.

Ball-carriers like these guys have made it hard to ignore Wisconsin as the potential “running back university” and stars like Jonathan Taylor and Braelon Allen have followed in their footsteps in recent years.

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Former Wisconsin legend signs one-year deal with the Baltimore Ravens

A new home for the Wisconsin great:

Former Wisconsin legend Melvin Gordon has a new NFL home. The nine-year veteran signed a one-year deal with the Baltimore Ravens earlier today.

The deal is worth $3.1 million and is pending his physical with the team. The Ravens are Gordon’s third NFL stop, after spending five years with the Chargers and three with the Broncos.

The former Badger has totaled 6462 yards during his pro career on 1567 carries. The numbers include 4.1 yards per carry, 2467 receiving yards and 69 combined touchdowns. He earned Pro Bowl honors during the 2016 and 2018 campaigns.

Gordon now joins a Ravens backfield led by former Ohio State running back J.K. Dobbins. He will likely battle with Gus Edwards and Justice Hill for carries in specialty situations.

Badger Countdown: Badger RB ends career with 45 rushing scores

The college football season is on the horizon and the Badgers are now 45 days away from their 2023 opener against Buffalo on Sept. 2.

The college football season is on the horizon and the Badgers are now 45 days away from their 2023 opener against Buffalo on Sept. 2. Luke Fickell and his coaching staff are on the cusp of their first full season at the helm, but a Wisconsin legend gives the number 45 significant meaning.

Spending the 2010-2013 seasons with the Badgers, running back James White became one of the best at his position in program history. Over his four campaigns, White tallied a total of 4,015 rushing yards and 45 rushing touchdowns while also reeling in 73 catches for 670 yards and three scores.

He appeared in all three of the Badgers’ Rose Bowl losses from 2011-2013, operating alongside Wisconsin’s all-time leading touchdown scorer Montee Ball (84) for White’s first three years in Madison.

White’s 45 rushing TDs rank tied four fourth all-time (Melvin Gordon) and his 4,015 rushing yards are the sixth highest in Wisconsin football history.

The running back was selected in fourth round (130th overall) in the 2014 NFL Draft by the New England Patriots and he spent nine seasons with the team before retiring after the 2021 campaign, winning three Super Bowls in his time there.

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Badger Countdown: Wideout records 3(46) all-purpose yards in Rose Bowl

The 2023 CFB season is on the horizon and Luke Fickell and his Badgers are now 46 days away from their opener versus Buffalo on Sept. 2.

The 2023 college football season is on the horizon and Luke Fickell and his Badgers are now 46 days away from their opener versus Buffalo on Sept. 2. As we count down, former Wisconsin wide receiver Jared Abbrederis gives the number 46 a special meaning.

During his second season with the Badgers, Abbrederis became a household name in Madison and across the state of Wisconsin, recording 55 catches for 933 yards and eight scores over 14 games in 2011.

The final contest of the year is where he put on a show, compiling 346 all-purpose yards in the Badgers’ 45-38 loss to the Oregon Ducks in the 2012 Rose Bowl.

Abbrederis caught four passes for 119 yards and a touchdown, but his special-teams production was just as impressive. He returned a total of six kickoffs for 201 yards, including a 60-yarder, which good for an average of 25.1 yards per attempt. He also added 26 more yards on three punt returns.

At the time, the 346 yards were second only to Ron Dayne’s 347 he produced against Hawaii in 1996 and it currently stands as the third highest total in program history with Melvin Gordon’s 408-yard performance versus Nebraska (2014) on top.

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Wisconsin is the only school in FBS history to have running backs do this

Wisconsin is the only school in FBS history to have running backs do this

Wisconsin is running back university, and while other schools have had success at the position here and there, few have had the sustained excellence of the Badgers’ running back room.

Our friend Ben Stevens of SportsGrid recently pointed out that Wisconsin is the only FBS program in history to have a pair of players be in the top ten for most rushing yards in a single season. Those two players were two of Wisconsin’s best running backs of all time in Melvin Gordon and Jonathan Taylor.

Taylor did it recently in 2018, while Gordon used his 408 rushing yards against Nebraska to vault himself to the top of the list in 2014.

Wisconsin boasts two of the NCAA’s leading rushers from the last 10 years

It’s surprising there isn’t more on this list…

There is often debate during the college football offseason about which program is the true “Running Back U.” Whether Wisconsin holds that title or not, the program’s production at that position is undeniable.

Take away just at the college level. Recently we’ve seen Jonathan Taylor, Melvin Gordon, Corey Clement, Alec Ingold and others make significant impacts in the NFL. I’m sure there is hope around Madison, Wisconsin that Braelon Allen will be next to join that list.

Two of those players, Taylor and Gordon, I’d go as far as to call borderline-generational talents at the college level. Gordon ended his college career with nearly 4200 yards in his final two seasons, while Taylor was the sport’s best for a three-year span that saw him scamper for 6174 yards.

Thinking of the careers of those two had brought me back into the record books. Here’s who led the NCAA in rushing in each of the past 10 seasons: