At 36 years old, Frank Gore is theexception to the rule.
The aberration.
The anomaly.
The deviation from the norm.
In a league that tends to chew up running backs and discard them the second they no longer seem useful, the 15-year veteran keeps chugging along. In his first year with the Bills, Gore continues to hit milestone after milestone all while helping the Bills off to a 4-1 start.
In Week 4, Gore topped 15,000 career yards rushing, inching closer to his childhood favorite, Barry Sanders, on the NFL’s all-time rushing list. Barring an unexpected injury, Gore will pass Sanders in a matter of weeks to become the third-highest rusher in NFL history.
So how does he keep doing it? Simple. He doesn’t dwell upon his age, or his mileage. And he doesn’t waste time thinking about his role or place in history.
At least not yet.
“As long as you love it and continue to think young, you can do it, you know,” Gore said. “I really don’t think about it.”
The Bills showed a tremendous amount of faith in Gore and rookie runner Devin Singletary at the start of the season when the team released LeSean McCoy. On one hand, the move came as a surprise given McCoy’s history in the league; McCoy has plenty of accomplishments in his own right, having surpassed 10,000 yards as a rusher himself. On the other hand, the move could have been considered inevitable; with a similar, no-nonsense approach — one that involves hitting the hole and dragging defenders for extra yardage after initial contact — Gore and Singletary seem tailor-made for a new approach in the running game.
So far, Gore has helped prove Buffalo right.
This story is from the November 3, 2019 edition of Bills Digest.
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This story is from the November 3, 2019 edition of Bills Digest.
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