
Derrick Henry rushed for 363 yards and six touchdowns in his team's victory.
Photo by Gray Quetti
YULEE, Fla. - Derrick Henry ran.
Kelvin Taylor ran. And late in the fourth
quarter of Friday's blockbuster in a small town just 12 miles south of
the Georgia state line, so did the clock.
A fitting end to a battle between two of the top running backs in high school football history.
Henry, who commmitted to Alabama earlier in the day, finished with
362 rushing yards on 35 carries and had six touchdowns as Yulee (Fla.) defeated
Glades Day (Belle Glade, Fla.) 42-6 in a game televised nationally. It
was punctuated with a running clock due to the mercy rule.
Taylor, a University of Florida commit, and the state's all-time
rushing leader (10,805), was as good as advertised, rushing for 223
yards and a touchdown on 35 carries.
The big difference?
"Our defense," said Yulee coach Bobby Ramsay. "I know Derrick gets a
lot of recognition, but our defense is a tough group of guys. They did
an excellent job of containment."

Glades Day running back Kelvin Taylor
finished with 222 yards and one TD.
Photo by Gray Quetti
If the game was a question on whom the better back was – and that
question was brought up by fans throughout the night – then it certainly
tilted in favor of Henry, who now has 9,617 career rushing yards.
The Gators held Henry in check for roughly eight carries before the
dam broke on a delayed, underhanded pitch from quarterback Dalton Bradley to Henry. Glades Day had a line on wrapping him up in the
backfield, but missed at the chance. Henry paused briefly before
bulldozing his way to the left side of the field, swatting away Glades
Day defenders and going straight down the Gators sideline for 65 yards.
The carry pushed Henry to his 39th consecutive 100-yard rushing game,
tying him with Rushell Shell, a current freshman at Pittsburgh, for the
national record. Henry, who is averaging 348.6 yards per game, could break the
record next week against Fernandina Beach.
The score also gave Yulee (4-1) a lead that it never let go of. It
was also the beginning of a period of relief for Henry, who had been so
drained from recruiting talk and the buildup for Friday's game that he
was noticeably worn down.
"Yes, I'm done with everything," Henry said of an exhaustive day. "I
can spend time with my family, focus on my team. So much going on, so
much hype … I'm just glad everybody enjoyed it, and just glad we got a
win."
There was plenty more to come.
Following Taylor's jolt, a scoring run from the 7, to pull the Gators within 7-6, Henry took over.
He
hit Glades Day with touchdown runs of 37 and 30 yards. He added a
5-yard shot up the middle out of the Wildcat that was set up by a play
that symbolized the Gators' night – defender Brian Monts holding on to
Henry's jersey while the 6-foot-3, 241-pounder dragged him down the
field.
Glades Day coach Pete Walker said Henry was "like a big oak tree" in
the lead up to the game, and the Gators' struggles trying to bring him
down proved his point. Glades Day just couldn't tackle him.
Henry's fifth touchdown, a 19-yarder, was even better, bulldozing
three Gators players and then using his stiff-arm to push off another
handful before crashing into the end zone midway through the fourth
quarter.
Henry was coming off a game in which he set a Florida state record with 502 rushing yards. That gives him 865 yards and 12 touchdowns in his last two games - a good season for most.
"What can you say, it's Derrick, he's a great back," Ramsay said. "I
thought if we could get up a couple scores, take them out of [their
offense] that would really change things."
With Henry having another big night in a career full of them, Taylor
was having an atypical game in the biggest showcase of his career. He
had plenty of sizzle and pop, ripping off one big run after another,
often on a direct angle to the sideline and then turning back upfield.
Taylor was usually quick enough to make Yulee's first defenders miss,
but often wound up being corralled along the sideline.
Taylor entered the game as Florida's all-time rushing leader with 10,582
yards (that includes his eighth-grade season).
"I just wanted do the best I could to try to help my team win," Taylor said to the Palm Beach Post. "We just came up short."
The Hornets said they were content to give Taylor his yardage, they just wanted to keep him out of the end zone
"It's Kelvin Taylor, he's going to get his yards," said Yulee
defensive back Leotis Williams, who had an interception and broke up a
pass intended for Taylor inside the 5. "We kept containment. We made a
statement out there."
Justin Barney is a sportswriter for the Florida Times-Union
and Jacksonville.com.
He may be reached at justin.barney@jacksonville.com

Derrick Henry rushes for one of his six touchdowns in the game.
Photo by Gray Quetti