High School Football Rushing Props

Not everyone\’s built to blaze into new territory. For every Louis and Clark tWe need to give props out to the running backs in high school football. Pretty much every play, they\’re taking a serious beating when they carry the ball, the whole defense including the line and those nasty linebackers have a target on his head. It\’s not an easy job but it\’s the job that drives most prep football scoring. Most people will just give you a pat on the back as if that makes up for the getting your arms and legs mauled at the bottom of the pile-up. At prepSportFantasy.com, we go a step further and with our high school football Props. Let\’s first take a look a look at what the Props are for our football players in the system.

On the player profile page, towards the right side, you\’ll see the list of displayed probes right below the Badge of choice. There\’s usually the top three earned Props shown right away with an ability to scroll or click to the full list of available and/or earned badges. These Props are graphic representations of achievements in a given sport. They are broken out by categories such as passing, rushing, and interceptions and according to sport. The Props generally increase in value within a given category and of course, some are nearly impossible to get. Let\’s look at the Rushing Props in more detail.

Rushing Props is generally, broken into three main categories all based on yardage. There\’s number of yards rushed in a game, number of yards rushed in a season, and the circus stat…number of yards rushed in one run. The all have different values and tag lines reflecting the nature and/or difficulty of obtaining that particular rushing Prop. Every run starts with a few steps so we even have the very small achievements to start the ball rolling. Let\’s look at some examples of the coveted (and not coveted) Rushing Props.

A quick shootout to a breakout running game by a high school player is captured in the yards in a single game category. It starts out with 10 yards (named \”Barefoot\”) and goes by increments to 300 yards in a single high school football game (named \”Breakin\’ Records\”). Showing a little more running consistently is captured in the Yards for Season Football Prop. This starts at 100 yards in a season (named \”Novice\”) and ends with 3500 yards in a season (named \”Division 1 Comin\’\”). Finally, we have what the crowd lives for….longest run. This starts with a 10 yard run (named \”Backwards??\”) and ends with 100 yards (the maximum and named \”Lappin\’ It\”). Of course are many different Props, values, and levels in between the minimum and maximums listed above all with distinct titles and values.

As you obtain the various levels, you can then add the prop to your Player Profile for all the world to see. Some will be pretty commonplace across a given football position (let\’s hope a running back is running 10 yards in a game) while others will be nearly impossible except for a select few. If you want those…well…run a little harder.

Author Bio: Dennis Jarvis writes about the world of Prep Sports including high school sports such as high school football, basketball, and baseball.

Category: Sports
Keywords: high school rushing, high school football, prep football, high school sports, prep sports

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