Carlos Kelly and Tobias Thomas were teammates for an arena football team in Topeka, Kan., in the early 2000s, and Kelly remembers little Ky Thomas, Tobias' son, wanting the football in his hands at an early age.
"He was maybe 4 or 5 years old, and during practice he'd jump the wall and run on the field trying to get the ball,'' Kelly said. "… He wanted to be on that field so bad.''
Fast forward to 2021, and Ky Thomas isn't so little anymore. He's a 5-11, 205-pound redshirt freshman running back for the Gophers, and he's making an impact for a team that's using a backfield committee after losing its top two runners to injuries.
"He's always been a super-competitive kid,'' said Kelly, who coached Thomas in youth football and as a position coach at Topeka High School.
That competitive nature is working out well for the Gophers (5-2, 3-1 Big Ten). Entering Saturday's game at Northwestern (3-4, 1-3), Thomas ranks second among Minnesota's healthy running backs with 228 rushing yards and two touchdowns on 35 carries. He's coming off a career-best 139 yards on 21 carries in the Gophers' 34-16 victory over Maryland last week.
That production doesn't necessarily mean Thomas will carry the bulk of the load against the Wildcats. The backfield committee also includes redshirt junior Bryce Williams, who rushed for 127 yards the previous week against Nebraska, and true freshman Mar'Keise Irving, who carried 15 times for 105 yards against the Terrapins. All three visited the end zone last week.
Offensive coordinator Mike Sanford Jr. and running backs coach Kenni Burns have the duties of mixing and matching the trio, trying to find a blend that will keep the Gophers running game humming behind a veteran offensive line. It's worked to the tune of 326 rushing yards against Maryland and 182 vs. Nebraska.
"When we script our openers, we want to get all three guys involved in the opening 12 plays,'' Sanford said. "… We've been very intentional in getting all three runners involved early in the game. Then, it's a little bit of, you want to feed the hot hand, but you also want to keep the other guys involved.''