
WKU run Tyrell Haydenning back went to Lexington Christian and grew up a UK basketball fan
Tyrell Hayden is a football player who draws inspiration from a basketball player.
While growing up in Mount Sterling, Ky., and attending Lexington Christian Academy, Hayden said he was always more of a University of Kentucky basketball fan than a UK football fan. His favorite player was Tayshaun Prince.
Prince never let his rail-thin physique prevent him from success. That’s something the compact Hayden always remembers, especially now that the tailback for Western Kentucky University (2-2) will face UK (3-0) at Commonwealth Stadium on Saturday night.
“What I like about Tayshaun is that he’s tall but he’s real skinny,” Hayden said. “He’s real light for the position he plays. He goes against people a lot bigger than he is. But somehow he finds a way to make plays on the court and make his team better. I feel like I’m in that situation. When people look at me they say, ‘I don’t see how this guy plays Division I college football.’ “
The 5-foot-10, 190-pound Hayden has been exceptional.
As a sophomore last season, he led WKU in rushing (205 carries for 1,134 yards, 10 touchdowns). He’s the team’s top rusher this season but is off to a slow start (42 carries, 131 yards, one TD).
Hayden, whose family now lives in Lexington, hopes he won’t be grounded in his return to Central Kentucky. There will be 50 friends and relatives cheering him on.
Hayden was a four-year starter at Lexington Christian. He completed his career with 80 TDs and more than 4,500 rushing yards but was recruited mostly by NCAA Division I-AA (currently called Football Championship Subdivision) and D-II schools.
His best Division I-A (Football Bowl Subdivision) offer was to join Eastern Michigan as a “grayshirt,” meaning he would not enroll as a full-time student until the spring semester of 2007. He was on the verge of going there until WKU jumped in.
He finished his freshman year third on the Hilltoppers with 315 rushing yards. Then Hayden, who grew up idolizing small tailbacks such as Warrick Dunn, followed with a sophomore season that included the ninth-most rushing yards in school history.
His breakout year has so far been followed by a junior slump. Last week, against Murray State, Hayden finished with eight carries for just 19 yards.
“It kind of reminds me of last year when I had a slow start,” he said. “By the third or fourth game, things picked up for our offense. We’re still putting points on the board. We’re running the ball. We’re just not running the ball like we want to.”
Western is in the second and final year of transitioning to the FBS, so its statistics don’t officially count in that subdivision’s national rankings. If they did, the Hilltoppers would rank 93rd out of 120 teams in rushing yards per game with 117.25, but that includes losses to BCS conference opponents Indiana and Alabama. Last season WKU averaged 247.2.
“I wouldn’t say (Hayden has) been struggling,” WKU coach David Elson said. “We’ve been rotating more. One thought I had after Saturday night’s game is that maybe we need to ride him a little bit more and get him in the groove a little bit more.”
Running room might be hard to find. UK is fifth in the FBS in rushing defense (50.3 yards per game) and held Middle Tennessee State to 31 on Sept. 13. But imagine what it would feel like for Hayden and his teammates to break out in the first meeting between these schools.
“It’s something that does feel special,” he said of playing the Wildcats. “Going into this game we are going to prepare like we are playing any other opponent. But maybe Saturday before the game I might feel some sort of special emotions about the opportunity I have and the opportunity as a team we have.”
Source: http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080924/SPORTS03/809240869