How Do You Stop a 400-lb Running Back?

Tony Picard

Tony Picard is a 6’4″, 400-pound Native American high school running back from the Yakama Indian Nation in Washington State.

I guess that makes him a real Washington REDSKIN!

At 6’4”, (190 centimeters) and 400 lb (181 kilograms), Tony Picard, a senior at the White Swan High School in Yakima, Washington, is not only the biggest running back in high-school football, but probably the biggest in the history of pro football, as well.

Just like the famous William “Refrigerator” Perry, who played for the Chicago Bears during the 80′s and 90′s and is known as one of the biggest players to ever play pro football (6’2” and 335 lbs.), Tony “The Tone” Picard started out as an offensive lineman, but after his coach noticed his unusual speed, he was reinvented as an unlikely running back. His qualities for the position became evident at a football camp a couple of years ago, during a game of basketball. “He was so agile and making shots from way out there,” White Swans coach, Andrew Bush, recalls. “I said ‘I’ve got to use this somehow.’” He gave Picard just two instructions: average 4 yards per carry and don’t fumble. In the first 10 games of this season, the Tone has averaged 5 yards per carry. “Most teams will sacrifice five guys to stop him: four linemen and a middle linebacker. That leaves three guys on each side to stop the rest of our team,” the coach says. “Everything else opens up: our outside running, our play action, and our entire passing game. We average about 450 yards as a team offensively.”

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Kenyan High School High Jump

Meanwhile, at a high school track meet in the Rift Valley of Kenya in a town just miles from Obama’s birth place…

Track and field events are where the best of the best can show off their stuff. In the town of Mosoriot in the Rift Valley of Kenya these high school student do exactly that. Competing barefoot and with very simple equipment, these two athletes show off some amazing high jump skills, at one point achieving heights of over two meters. You have to see it to believe it!

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