Record-breaking events in track and field have a certain quality that makes them seem both inevitable in retrospect and utterly unexpected in the moment. That kind of momentum was something that Ahmad Hardy was familiar with. The Missouri running back, who broke the Mizzou single-season school record by rushing for 1,649 yards and 16 touchdowns in a single season, didn’t have a lot of hype behind him. He was doing it consistently, repeatedly, and with the silent accumulation of yards that most people didn’t notice until the total became unavoidable.
In college athletics, records typically fall in this manner. Not with an announcement at a press conference. Someone on the sidelines has to double-check the stat sheet after a Thursday afternoon run.
Hardy’s season average of 6.4 yards per carry sounds tidy and clinical until you consider what it means over 256 attempts. A player like that is hardly ever stopped at the line. In terms of rushing yards per game, he finished second in the country, placing him in the same league as running backs from schools with much larger recruiting footprints and more prominent national profiles than Missouri. The Tigers operate in the shadow of college football programs with more illustrious recent histories, which contributes to the perception that the Mizzou program doesn’t always receive the credit it deserves. It was more difficult to maintain that oversight during Hardy’s season.

It’s important to note that these records typically build up covertly over the course of the season. Hardy was working by October. He was in control by November. He had completely changed Missouri football’s perception of what a running back season can entail by the time the final numbers were tallied. In some respects, the record itself is less significant than this change in internal expectations.
Even in other sports, the parallels to recent college track achievements seem appropriate. Romell Glave achieved his first legal sub-10 time in the 100-meter final in Birmingham last weekend with a time of 9.98, which he had been aiming for for years. He later claimed that he was always aware of the quality. All he had to do was believe it. The texture of Hardy’s season is the same. Those watching practice in Columbia weren’t surprised by the talent. The moment it became visible to everyone else was the record.
The sustained nature of Hardy’s accomplishment makes it worthy of closer examination. Explosions in a single game are one thing. It takes dependability, health, offensive line continuity, and a kind of mental toughness that isn’t evident in highlight packages to finish second nationally in yards per game over the course of a college football season. Observing this from the sidelines, it’s difficult not to wonder how his season would be remembered if Missouri had made a more spectacular postseason run. Programs that set records during quiet years are typically remembered differently than those that set records during championship pushes.
Whether Hardy’s season will give him the draft attention it most likely merits is still up in the air. Running backs are difficult to evaluate in the modern NFL because, despite their exceptional individual performances, the position has been routinely undervalued at the draft level. In any era, Hardy’s numbers would have drawn attention. It’s still unclear if they draw enough attention in this one.
What he did is not up for debate. It’s in the books. The yards were actual. In a sport where everyone is searching for the next big running back from the SEC, there is one standing in Columbia, Missouri, who recently had one of the best seasons the program has ever seen, whether or not the national conversation took notice.

