In several of my weekly local football reports over the past two seasons, I have been regularly touting the feats of Houston Cougar running back, Anthony Alridge. Alridge is the most exciting UH running back since the consensus All-American Chuck Weatherspoon back in the Run ‘N Shoot days of the early 1990’s.
Alridge is listed as 5’9″ tall and 175 lbs, but my bet is that he is closer to 5’7″ and 160 lbs wringing wet. After toiling in relative obscurity as a slot receiver for his first couple of years at Houston, Cougars head coach Art Briles began to use Alridge as a RB midway through last season and the results have been astonishing. Combining blinding sprinter’s speed, incredible shiftiness and surprising power for a player his size, Alridge quickly became one of the nation’s top running backs. During the Cougars 2006 championship season, Alridge rushed for 959 rushing yards on only 95 attempts, resulting in an NCAA Division 1-A leading rushing average of 10.1 yards per attempt.
Alridge has picked up this season where he left off last season. As noted here yesterday, he was extraordinary in Houston’s win over Rice last Saturday, scoring 4 touchdowns while rushing for 205 yards on 24 carries, including 111 yards and 2 TD’s in the 4th quarter alone. ESPN ranked Alridge’s incredible 50-yard TD run that put away Saturday’s game as No. 4 on its top-10 Plays of last Saturdey. Here is the Barry Sanders-type run:
Even after that performance, the video below reflects that the effervescent Alridge still had enough energy after the game to do a pretty darn good job of directing the Spirit of Houston Marching Band, much to the delight of the band members: