
We respect his fearlessness in the face of being knocked over while hurdling.
Arizona State quarterback Manny Wilkins had a fine career. The redshirt senior was the starter for three years, ending his career with nearly 8,000 passing yards and more than 1,000 rushing yards. Good numbers.
But those numbers don’t capture the most unique thing about Wilkins’ playing style, because the NCAA doesn’t track QB HURDLE ATTEMPTS.
There is no question that if this sport did have a QB HURDLE ATTEMPTS statistic, Wilkins would be the modern-era leader.
Wilkins loves hurdling more than most people love any kind of physical activity, and my favorite thing about his hurdle obsession is how totally undeterred he is by the (several) times he’s tried it and gotten crushed. Here’s a history.
Wilkins started hurdling dudes in 2016, his first year atop the depth chart.
It began in the season opener against Northern Arizona:
It continued against this poor guy on Texas Tech:
.@MANNY_WILKINS5 DID IT AGAIN
— Pac-12 Network (@Pac12Network) September 11, 2016
MAMA, THERE GOES THAT HURDLIN' MAN #TTUvsASU#Pac12FBpic.twitter.com/nevjhbgL5X
And there was this clean beauty for a score against Washington State:
ICYMI: Manny Wilkins LEAPT to a great start for @FootballASUhttps://t.co/ZLABag9Yttpic.twitter.com/KQdbObtRKN
— Pac-12 Network (@Pac12Network) October 23, 2016
Wilkins continued his hurdlin’ in 2017 against Washington.
Manny Wilkins hurdle alert pic.twitter.com/9WsQrZtiyg
— Justin Toscano (@JustinCToscano) October 15, 2017
He also took to the skies and scored against UCLA.
Another Manny Leap vs UCLA in 2017 for a TD pic.twitter.com/76bt4F8kIz
— Jedi ASYule (@JediASU) December 16, 2018
As a senior in 2018 — perhaps trying to live out his college football days to the fullest — Wilkins kept trying hurdles. This is where the story turns.
At first, all was well against San Diego State:
Gotta love a good hurdle. Manny Wilkins decides to hit the Lamar Jackson-like jump instead of going out of bounds. And I respect that. #ASUvsSDSUpic.twitter.com/BCKfc4St9X
— Steve Helwick (@s_helwick) September 16, 2018
He tried a hurdle against USC, and it sort of worked, but it didn’t get him much extra yardage and led to him taking an ugly fall:
The pro comps for Manny Wilkins ability to hurdle defenders is going to be incredible. pic.twitter.com/QXVkHUJjgf
— Russell Brown (@RussNFLDraft) November 7, 2018
He made a valiant attempt against Arizona, which ended like this:
ASU's Manny Wilkins attempted to hurdle an Arizona defender and got wrecked pic.twitter.com/ZhxWGgJgxU
— CJ Fogler (@cjzero) November 24, 2018
And then, in the last game of Wilkins’ career, the Las Vegas Bowl against Fresno State, Wilkins tried his most ambitious hurdle yet, a double hurdle without a friendly angle. The result:
This is what believing in yourself looks like. pic.twitter.com/bXWmc3Isgp
— Tom Fornelli (@TomFornelli) December 15, 2018
To Wilkins, the physical (and perhaps spiritual) high of hurdling a defender makes it worth it to repeatedly get trucked while airborne.
Would I do it? Most likely not, but I have a bad vertical and am not as fearless as an elite athlete like Wilkins. He left the Vegas Bowl with a late injury (not during a hurdle), but I hope he heals up quickly and we get to watch him jump over chumps in the pros.