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We continue our college football top-10 lists by looking at running backs.

There’s plenty of talent in this group, including some breakout stars from last season and some players looking to shine even brighter in different roles or a new school. And we have a pair of teammates that make up a formidable duo in what should be a powerhouse backfield.

We polled our resident college football experts, asking them to rank their top 10 running backs entering the 2024 season. Points were assigned based on their votes: 10 points for first place, nine for second place and down to one point for 10th place.

Here are the results.

Also: Ranking the top 10 QBs

2023 stats: 1,732 yards rushing, 6.1 yards per rush, 21 rushing TDs, 39 receptions, 330 receiving yards, 1 receiving TD

Points: 98 (eight first-place votes)

Gordon, a 6-foot-1, 211-pound junior, exploded on the scene last season — a true breakout story. He rushed for 308 yards and two touchdowns as a freshman, then began last season with a total of just 19 carries in Oklahoma State’s first three games, including three carries for 12 yards in a 33-7 loss to South Alabama. The Cowboys retooled, centered the offense on the legs of Gordon, and magic happened. Gordon dashed off eight 100-yard games over his next nine, including a two-week stretch in October when he ran for 553 yards and six touchdowns in games against West Virginia and Cincinnati. He became Oklahoma State’s first Doak Walker Award winner, finishing the season with 1,732 yards and 21 TDs, including five against BYU, tying Barry Sanders’ school record.

With quarterback Alan Bowman returning for his seventh collegiate season, and a talented wide receiver corps including Rashod Owens and Brennan Presley returning, defenses will have to respect the passing game, which could bolster the chances of another big season for Gordon and OSU, which reached the Big 12 championship game last season. Gordon’s return has the Cowboys aiming for a College Football Playoff berth and Gordon eyeing a trip to the Heisman Trophy ceremony. — Dave Wilson


2023 stats: 926 yards rushing, 5.9 yards per rush, 11 rushing TDs, 19 receptions, 229 receiving yards, 10 receiving TDs

Points: 65 (one first-place vote)

Even though he wasn’t 100 percent a year ago, TreVeyon Henderson led Ohio State with 926 rushing yards and 11 touchdowns in just 10 games. He also struggled with injuries as a sophomore in 2022, when he broke a bone in his left foot and underwent surgery. But Henderson says he’s healthy now and ready to make his senior season the best one yet at Ohio State. As a freshman, he rushed for 1,248 yards and scored 19 touchdowns.

Henderson has it all — breakaway speed, acceleration through the hole and the ability to make defenders miss. The 5-foot-10, 212-pound speedster had the fifth-highest grade among Power 5 running backs last season, according to Pro Football Focus. With the Buckeyes’ addition of Ole Miss transfer Quinshon Judkins, Henderson won’t have to carry too heavy a load in the Ohio State backfield, meaning he should be even fresher and more equipped to rip off big plays in the second half. If Henderson can stay healthy, he’s as dynamic a player as there is in college football. — Chris Low


2023 stats: 1,158 yards rushing, 4.3 yards per rush, 15 rushing TDs, 22 receptions, 149 receiving yards, 2 receiving TDs

Points: 60 (one first-place vote)

After Judkins’ blistering freshman season at Ole Miss in 2022, the idea that he wouldn’t be the nation’s top running back as a junior seemed laughable. He earned SEC Freshman of the Year honors and was a first-team all-league selection that fall, while finishing as a semifinalist for the Doak Walker Award. His 1,567 rushing yards trailed only Herschel Walker as the most by a freshman in SEC history. Judkins followed with a strong sophomore season, leading the SEC with 15 rushing touchdowns, but several of his other numbers fell off a bit. He now finds himself in a different but fascinating situation entering his junior season.

The 5-11, 210-pound Judkins entered the transfer portal in early January and landed days later at Ohio State, part of the Buckeyes’ incredible winter personnel haul. The interesting part is that he joins Henderson, one spot higher in our rankings, to form the nation’s most accomplished backfield tandem. Judkins has 545 carries in his first two seasons but now must share the ball with Henderson. But after his yards-per-carry average dropped from 5.7 in 2022 to 4.3 last season, Judkins could benefit from being fresher when he touches the ball. — Adam Rittenberg


2023 stats: 1,504 yards rushing, 5.9 yards per rush, 15 rushing TDs, 29 receptions, 222 receiving yards, 1 receiving TD

Points: 57

North Carolina went into last season wanting to place a much bigger emphasis on running the ball. Mission accomplished behind Hampton, who had a breakout sophomore season en route to becoming a Doak Walker Award finalist, and earning Walter Camp first-team All-America honors. Hampton rushed for 1,504 yards — second on the school’s single-season list — with 15 rushing touchdowns, while adding 29 receptions for 222 yards and a touchdown. Hampton had seven 100-yard games and his total rushing yards ranked fifth in the FBS.

This season, the dynamic shifts a bit. With Drake Maye gone and an open quarterback competition set to begin this spring, Hampton is the most known commodity on the North Carolina offense. Conventional wisdom says defenses will stack the box to stop Hampton and force the new starting quarterback — projected to be transfer Max Johnson or Conner Harrell — to try to beat them. — Andrea Adelson


2023 stats: 1,541 yards rushing, 5.3 yards per rush, 10 rushing TDs, 29 receptions, 69 receiving yards, 0 receiving TDs

Points: 43

Brooks is back for a super-senior year, which is a big win for Texas Tech as the Red Raiders come off a season when Brooks rushed for 1,538 yards and 10 TDs and was a semifinalist for the Doak Walker Award despite gaining only a total of 110 yards in the season’s first two games. After that, though, the 5-10, 230-pound bruiser reeled off 95 or more yards in 11 straight games while becoming the only Power 5 back to force more than 70 missed tackles. Boyd did this despite a Tech offensive line that struggled and an offense that ranked 64th nationally last season.

There will be wholesale changes up front in 2024, with five O-linemen gone and transfers from Toledo, Memphis and Middle Tennessee joining the mix alongside new offensive line coach Clay McGuire, a Tech alum who worked for Mike Leach and Lincoln Riley. Boyd will be a focal point of the Red Raiders’ offense for a team hoping to jump back into Big 12 contention, and he’ll enter this season 1,167 yards shy of Byron Hanspard’s school record for career rushing yards. — Wilson


2023 stats: 1,347 yards rushing, 6.1 yards per rush, 14 rushing TDs, 43 receptions, 569 receiving yards, 5 receiving TDs

Points: 38

Breakout bowl performances aren’t always a portend of coming greatness. But they sometimes are exactly that. In the 2022 Frisco Bowl, Jeanty rushed for 178 yards and a touchdown in a 35-32 Boise State win over North Texas. He had served as a capable backup for George Holani that season, but he had designs on something bigger. In 2023, with Holani injured to start the season, Jeanty took the RB1 job and (literally) ran with it. Despite missing two games himself with injury, he rushed for 1,347 yards and 14 touchdowns while also serving as the Broncos’ No. 2 receiver in terms of both catches (43) and yards (569). He had at least 100 combined rushing and receiving yards in 10 of the 12 games he played.

Perhaps most impressively in the transfer portal era, Jeanty also returned. “Knowing the legacy I can leave behind and the impact that I can have to change people’s lives is important, and I appreciate the opportunity to do that for a program that changed my life by believing in me when no one else did,” he wrote in December. His return, plus the addition of former blue-chip quarterback Malachi Nelson, could give Boise one of the most dynamic offensive backfields in college football. — Bill Connelly


2023 stats: 497 yards rushing, 4.2 yards per rush, 5 rushing TDs, 30 receptions, 249 receiving yards, 0 receiving TDs

Points: 35

Edwards’ rapid rise to prominence in 2022 — when he rushed for 150 yards or more three times in the last six games of the regular season and nearly 1,000 total yards on just 140 carries — slowed a bit as Blake Corum returned from injury in 2023. Corum was the Wolverines’ reliable No. 1 back and produced a 1,245-yard, 27-touchdown season.

Edwards, however, still had his bright moments as he tallied almost 500 yards and five touchdowns, including a 41-yard score in the national championship game. Edwards said afterward that he played most of the season with a partially torn patellar tendon. Now, with Corum off to the NFL and Edwards returning for his junior season, the stage is set for him to become one of the most electric and productive backs in the nation. — Paolo Uggetti


2023 stats: 753 yards rushing, 5.7 yards per rush, 8 rushing TDs, 21 receptions, 172 receiving yards, 1 receiving TD

Points: 31

In one of the biggest offseason transfer portal moves, Etienne moved on from Florida to rival Georgia, immediately giving the Bulldogs a game-changer at running back as they look to make another run at a national championship. Etienne was highly productive at Florida, but he was never the featured back as he split time with Montrell Johnson Jr. In two seasons with the Gators, Etienne had 249 total carries for 1,472 yards with 14 touchdowns. He was used more extensively as a pass-catcher in 2023, with 21 catches for 172 yards and one touchdown.

At Georgia, he has the opportunity to be the featured back in a proven system that values running the ball. The Bulldogs lost their top two leading rushers in Daijun Edwards and Kendall Milton, creating an opening for Etienne. Though Georgia shares the ball among its running backs, Etienne explained in a recent interview on teammate Tate Ratledge‘s podcast “Real Talk Player Podcast,” “I could stay, be running back 2 on a losing team or go somewhere and you know, possibly [be] running back 1 and win a natty.” — Adelson


2023 stats: 1,305 yards rushing, 5.3 yards per rush, 12 rushing TDs, 26 receptions, 196 receiving yards, 2 receiving TDs

Points: 26

Perhaps it’s because he played for a team that went 6-7, but Ott was one of the most underrated running backs in the country last season. After a strong freshman year (897 yards, 8 touchdowns), Ott broke out in his second season at Cal. Ott averaged more than 18 carries per game and totaled 1,305 yards and 12 touchdowns.

Ott was undoubtedly the Golden Bears’ best player; in fact, four of Cal’s wins came when Ott had more than 150 rushing yards — a feat he accomplished five times during the 2023 season. Ott’s decision to come back to Berkeley for one more year is a boon for the Bears, who should improve on their 2023 campaign. Improvement isn’t always linear in college football, but after a productive sophomore season, the sky is the limit for Ott in his third season. — Uggetti


2023 stats: 1,280 yards rushing, 6.3 yards per rush, 16 rushing TDs, 25 receptions, 217 receiving yards, 1 receiving TD

Points: 24

Let’s do some whittling. There were 45 thousand-yard rushers in the FBS in 2023. Of those, only nine averaged at least 3.0 yards before contact and at least 3.0 yards after contact, displaying both the quickness to properly hit the holes as they open and the strength to require multiple tacklers to bring them down. Of those nine, only six possessed both the burst and finesse required to average at least 6.2 yards per carry both inside and outside the tackles. And of those, only one also caught at least 25 passes: Devin Neal.

Say hello to maybe the single most well-rounded running back in college football. Like quarterback Jalon Daniels, Neal was instrumental in Kansas’ program-changing upset of Texas late in 2021 (he had 169 combined rushing and receiving yards and four touchdowns that night), and he’s been responsible for much of the Jayhawks’ success since. He has rushed for at least 100 yards in a game 12 times and at least 1,000 yards in a season twice. He has forced at least four missed tackles in a single game 15 times. We’ll see what changes new offensive coordinator Jeff Grimes has in store for the KU attack, but as long as he continues to feed No. 4, things will probably go pretty well. — Connelly

Also receiving votes: Damien Martinez, Oregon State (21); Kaytron Allen, Penn State (17); Nicholas Singleton, Penn State (14); Raheim Sanders, South Carolina (7); RJ Harvey, UCF (5); Marcus Carroll, Missouri (4); Peny Boone, Louisville (4); Darius Taylor, Minnesota (1)

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Johnston nets 2 as Stars move within 1 win of WCF

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Johnston nets 2 as Stars move within 1 win of WCF

DENVER — Wyatt Johnston scored twice on the eve of his birthday as the Dallas Stars pushed Colorado to the brink of elimination Monday night with a 5-1 victory.

Johnston had shorthanded and power-play goals for the Stars, who grabbed a 3-1 lead in the second-round, best-of-seven series. Dallas can close it out at home in Game 5 on Wednesday.

Miro Heiskanen and Evgenii Dadonov also scored, while Sam Steel added a late empty-net goal. Jake Oettinger made 24 saves.

About an hour before the game, the National Hockey League and National Hockey League Players’ Association announced that Nichushkin was suspended for at least six months without pay. He was placed in stage 3 of the league’s player assistance program. It’s the second time this season Nichushkin has been in the program.

A Colorado lineup missing Nichushkin, the team’s leading goal scorer (nine) in this playoff run, struggled early to get on track and was outshot by a 16-2 margin in the first period. Casey Mittelstadt scored Colorado’s lone goal.

“We talked about (how) we’d been the best road team all year because regardless of the building or the lineup for the other team, who’s in, who’s out, we approach the game the same way,” Dallas coach Peter DeBoer said, “and took care of business.”

Colorado’s defense was unable to prevent Johnston and the Stars from building a 3-0 lead in the second period, and because of the hot start in the first, Dallas maintained its streak of not trailing in regulation at any point during the series. And the Stars have outscored the Avalanche 6-0 in the opening period alone.

Johnston, who turns 21 on Tuesday, scored his 10th and 11th career playoff goals. He became the eighth player in NHL history to reach double-digit postseason goals at age 20 or younger, according to league research.

Johnston took advantage of a Cale Makar turnover late in the first period and scored a shorthanded goal to give the Stars a 1-0 lead. It’s the second shorthanded goal of the series for Dallas.

“That was our worst game of the series,” Colorado coach Jared Bednar said after the loss, adding that it “atrocious.”

It wasn’t all good news for the road team, though. The Stars saw forward Roope Hintz leave the game after suffering an upper-body injury in the opening period. In his postgame news conference, DeBoer said he’d have more injury information on Hintz on Tuesday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Rangers drop 2 in row, to ‘see what we’re made of’

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Rangers drop 2 in row, to 'see what we're made of'

NEW YORK — New York Rangers captain Jacob Trouba said their failure to close out the Carolina Hurricanes at home in Game 5 presents an important character test for his team.

“I don’t think we thought this was going to be a cakewalk,” Trouba said after the Rangers’ 4-1 loss on Monday night, which narrowed New York’s series lead to 3-2. “We’ve lost two games [in a row]. We’re facing a little adversity. We’ll see what we’re made of going down to Carolina for Game 6.”

The Rangers entered the third period with a 1-0 lead thanks to Trouba’s short-handed goal in the second frame. But the desperate Hurricanes took over the game by scoring three goals in 6:23.

Jordan Staal evened the score with his first goal of the playoffs. Just 3:06 later, Evgeny Kuznetsov netted his fourth of the postseason to give Carolina the lead. Jordan Martinook added a critical third goal before Martin Necas sealed the win with an empty-netter.

“It kind of snowballed quick on us. This was a bad period,” Trouba said. “It’s different than a regular season, where you feel bad all night and tomorrow you wake up and you’re upset. You got to turn the page quick.”

His teammate, Vincent Trocheck, didn’t see the third period the same way.

“I don’t know if I’m going to say something snowballed tonight,” he said. “They scored a couple goals in the third. It’s a seven-game series against a team that was three points behind us in the regular season. We knew it wasn’t going to be easy.”

Coach Peter Laviolette also didn’t believe the third period was the reason New York dropped Game 5.

“It was more than the third period. We weren’t sharp. We gave up way too many chances in the first period and then it died off after that,” he said.

The Rangers’ power play, which scored 10 goals in five games during a recent stretch against Washington and Carolina, went scoreless for a third straight game, the unit’s longest dry spell since March.

Meanwhile, Carolina scored three goals at even strength against New York goaltender Igor Shesterkin, marking the first time Shesterkin allowed three goals in the third period of a playoff game.

Hurricanes captain Staal said the team is starting to feel like itself again.

“Yeah, obviously wins help. But we really believe we had some good games [to start the series], but we had some mistakes, especially with the special teams, and that’s gotten a lot better,” he said. “I think our 5-on-5 game has been really good and it’s coming together more and more.

“Wins are nice. We’ve got to just keep fighting.”

Staal has played in 146 playoff games during his NHL career and has seen how hard it is to finish an opponent.

“Game 5s are tough, especially when you’re at home. You don’t want to go back on the road and you want to close it out,” he said. “But we gave it all we got, we found a way to get a win and we’re going to have to do it all over again.”

Trouba took an optimistic approach to the Game 5 loss: Since the Rangers won the first three games of the series, there was some margin for error.

“Obviously we want to close out series, but we put ourselves in a position that we get a couple cracks at it,” he said. “We played good games in Carolina. We know we can play in that building, and we’ll go down there and bring a better game.”

Game 6 is Thursday night in Raleigh.

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Canes score 4 in 3rd to beat Rangers, stay alive

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Canes score 4 in 3rd to beat Rangers, stay alive

NEW YORK — Jordan Staal and Evgeny Kuznetsov scored 3:06 apart in the third period, and the Carolina Hurricanes got four goals in the third for a 4-1 win over the New York Rangers in Game 5 of the second-round playoff series on Monday night, staving off elimination for the second straight game.

Jordan Martinook and Martin Necas also scored in the Hurricanes’ big third period, and Frederik Andersen — starting for the fourth time in five games in this series and ninth time in 10 games in the postseason — had 20 saves.

Jacob Trouba scored a short-handed goal and Igor Shesterkin stopped 24 shots for New York, which has lost two straight after taking a 3-0 series lead.

Game 6 is Thursday night in Raleigh, North Carolina.

The Hurricanes won despite going 0 for 3 on the power play to fall to 1 for 20 in this series while giving up a short-handed goal for the second time.

Staal tied it 1-1 at 3:33 as he got a pass from Dmitry Orlov, skated around one Rangers defender in the left circle, came in on Shesterkin and beat him with a backhanded shot that went around the leg of the sprawled goalie. It was Orlov’s first goal of the playoffs.

Kuznetsov then gave the Hurricanes the lead as he knocked in the rebound of Brady Skjei‘s shot from the right side for his fourth of the postseason.

Martinook made it 3-1 just before the midpoint of the period. Necas sent a centering pass from the end boards, and the puck went off Jack Drury‘s stick to Martinook, and he quickly sent a shot that beat Shesterkin.

The Rangers pulled Shesterkin for an extra skater with 3:44 to go, but Necas sent a long shot that went into the empty net 15 seconds later.

The Rangers got a power play when Orlov was called for roughing at 3:47 of the second period. Shortly after the penalty expired, New York’s Jack Roslovic was whistled for tripping, putting Carolina’s struggling power play on the advantage. However, it was the Rangers who broke through.

Trouba blocked a shot by Sebastian Aho, skated up the ice on 2-on-1 rush and fired a shot from the right circle that beat Andersen at 6:23. It was his first goal of the playoffs and the Rangers’ fourth short-handed tally.

The Hurricanes got another power play at the midpoint of the period, but didn’t get a shot on goal during the advantage. Shesterkin then denied Drury’s point-blank try with 6 minutes to go in the second.

Carolina had a 10-9 advantage on shots on goal in a scoreless and fast-paced first period. Both teams had chances and the goalies had to make several nice saves.

Shesterkin had a skate save on Staal about 2 1/2 minutes in and then had a pad save on another try by Staal at 8:41. He also turned aside Jake Guenzel’s breakaway attempt with about 3 minutes remaining.

Andersen had a right pad save on Chris Kreider in close with about 6 minutes to in the period.

New York got the first power play of the game when Kuznetsov was sent off for slashing with 1:55 left in the first. However, the Rangers managed just one shot on goal during the advantage.

Rangers rookie sensation Matt Rempe was back in the starting lineup after sitting out Games 3 and 4. Filip Chytil played in his place in Game 3 and Jonny Brodzinski in Game 4.

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