116 3rd St SE
Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401
Home / Sports / Iowa State Cyclones
Cyclones put faith in young, dynamic backs
Kelli Sutterman / Admin
Apr. 16, 2011 12:01 am
AMES (AP) - In a scrimmage last week, Iowa State running back Shontrelle Johnson bounced outside for a run that initially appeared so hopeless, even Coach Paul Rhoads stopped watching.
A jubilant roar from the offense brought Rhoads' vision back to his speedy sophomore, who broke out of a tight scrum with a stiff-arm move, squirmed away from a pair of open-field tackles and sped to the end zone.
It was the kind of play that Rhoads, now in his third season at Iowa State, has wanted to see more of since he arrived in Ames.
Though Iowa State is about as young as it can be at tailback, Rhoads is optimistic that the inexperienced quartet of Johnson, Duran Hollis, James White and Jeff Woody can provide the explosiveness that has been lacking from the offense.
“Very excited about our running back position,” Rhoads said earlier this week. “The position is very dynamic right now. Shontrelle, Duran Hollis, James White all have the ability to make a lot of people miss on one given play.”
It's still tough to handicap the race to replace departed star Alexander Robinson, who graduated after rushing for 946 yards and nine touchdowns for the Cyclones (5-7) in 2010. Heading into today's spring game, it appears Johnson has distanced himself from the pack by the slightest of margins.
The 5-foot-9, 180-pounder out of Deland, Fla., split backup duties with Woody a year ago. He averaged 6.2 yards on just 35 carries in his first season at Iowa State, putting up 102 yards in a win over Texas Tech and adding a 33-yard TD run to help beat Kansas.
“That's pretty much my game: shifty, quick and being able to make guys miss,” Johnson said.
That's not Woody's game at all. The sophomore from nearby Pleasant Hill, Iowa, is a bruiser at 6-feet and 232 pounds. Though Iowa State runs a spread offense, the Cyclones will still need a go-to guy like Woody in short-yardage and goal-line situations.
“When you need the tough, necessary yards, then I'm kind of the guy that you need to go to,” he said.
James White, a sophomore with a nearly identical frame to Johnson, has all of 12 career yards to his name, though Rhoads singled him out.
Iowa State's Shontrelle Johnson, trying to avoid a tackle last season against Nebraska, has distanced himself from a talented group of running backs this spring.