Montreal Alouettes All Time Records and Statistics - Rushing

Rushing

Most Rushing Yards – Career

  • 9649 – Mike Pringle – (1996–2002)
  • 5615 – George Dixon – (1959–65)
  • 3749 – Pat Abbruzzi – (1955–58)

Most Rushing Yards – Season (including all 1000 yard rushers)

  • 2065 – Mike Pringle – 1998
  • 1778 – Mike Pringle – 2000
  • 1775 – Mike Pringle – 1997
  • 1678 – David Green – 1979
  • 1656 – Mike Pringle – 1999
  • 1520 – George Dixon – 1962
  • 1378 – Brandon Whitaker – 2011
  • 1323 – Mike Pringle – 2001
  • 1270 – George Dixon – 1963
  • 1248 – Pat Abbruzzi – 1955
  • 1214 – Avon Cobourne – 2009
  • 1199 – Robert Edwards – 2005
  • 1155 – Robert Edwards – 2006
  • 1143 – Don Clark – 1961
  • 1134 – Steve Ferrughelli – 1974
  • 1083 – Dwaine Wilson –1984
  • 1075 – Andy Hopkins – 1976
  • 1062 – Pat Abbruzzi – 1956
  • 1037 – Dennis Duncan – 1969
  • 1024 – John Harvey – 1973
  • 1022 – Lawrence Phillips – 2002
  • 1007 – Don Lisbon – 1966

Most Rushing Yards – Game

  • 235 – George Dixon – versus Ottawa Rough Riders, September 2, 1963
  • 234 – Mike Pringle – versus Toronto Argonauts, October 17, 1998
  • 213 – Ike Brown – versus Hamilton Tiger-Cats, October 14, 1972
  • 212 – David Green – versus Toronto Argonauts, October 20, 1979

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Famous quotes containing the word rushing:

    The rushing Pequod, freighted with savages, laden with fire, and burning a corpse, and plunging into that blackness of darkness, seemed the material counterpart of her monomaniac commander’s soul.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)

    I was interested to see how a pioneer lived on this side of the country. His life is in some respects more adventurous than that of his brother in the West; for he contends with winter as well as the wilderness, and there is a greater interval of time at least between him and the army which is to follow. Here immigration is a tide which may ebb when it has swept away the pines; there it is not a tide, but an inundation, and roads and other improvements come steadily rushing after.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    The illimitable, silent, never-resting thing called Time, rolling, rushing on, swift, silent, like an all-embracing ocean- tide, on which we and all the universe swim like exhalations, like apparitions which are, and then are not: this is forever very literally a miracle; a thing to strike us dumb, for we have no word to speak about it.
    Thomas Carlyle (1795–1881)