In the small subset of N.F.L. backs that approximate Henry’s dimensions, none produce like he does. Cookie Gilchrist, listed by Pro Football Reference as 6-foot-3 and 251 pounds, ran for 1,096 yards for Buffalo in 1962 in a 14-game American Football League season. Henry nearly doubled that total last season, when he rushed for 2,027 in 16 games.
Of his rushing yards, the vast majority have come after contact. Although advanced statistical sites seem to differ on the exact number, Pro Football Focus said that Henry had piled up 728 after being hit — 265 more than Taylor, who has the second-most this season.
Really, there’s hardly a statistic relevant to Henry that he isn’t commanding. Touches? By a lot (237). Yards from scrimmage? Check (1,091). Total touchdowns (10, tied with Rams receiver Cooper Kupp), all-purpose yardage (1,091), first downs (49). Yup, yup and yup.
Considering that the passing revolution has assailed N.F.L. annals over the last two decades, it figured that the league’s move to a 17-game schedule would hasten the demise of the single-season quarterbacking marks left standing. The extra game has also made attainable the running records that have stood for almost 40 years.
Henry has been a paragon of durability, missing only two of 88 career games before his foot injury, but also a beacon of late-season awesomeness: Across 2019 and 2020, according to Pro Football Reference, he averaged 4.2 yards per rush and 88.9 yards per game in September and October. His averages vaulted to 6 yards per rush and 136.6 per game over the rest of the season. With one more game added, those lofty rushing records stood as little chance as Henry’s tacklers.
Instead, Henry will miss the regular season months when he seems to get stronger. There will be no opportunities for him to stiff-arm the Patriots in the late-autumn New England chill (Week 12) or to flatten the Steelers in frosty Pittsburgh (Week 15) or batter the 49ers at home in prime-time (Week 16).