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	<div ="line" id="component_1222118"><h1>Vikings' draft pick of
 Toby Gerhart raises the specter of the unspoken NF-Elephant in the room</h1>Steve Aschburner
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<div ="_component left mp_main_wide with_credit with_caption" id="component_1222120">
<div ="caption_credit">REUTERS/Robert Galbraith</span>Stanford
 University running back Toby Gerhart is shown scoring a first quarter 
touchdown against the University of Southern California in 2008.</span></div></div>
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Toby Gerhart was born in March 1987 and has 
been rushing the football since he was in high school, which means he 
has been a white running back for at least eight years. 
The 
last white running back to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of 
Fame in Canton, Ohio? Washington's John Riggins, back in 1992. 
As
 the NFL draft approached this weekend, scouts from around the league 
had reservations about Gerhart because "¦ he was also an accomplished 
baseball player. Yeah, that's it. 
Whaaaa?</div><div ="richtext">
We began this post rather haphazardly to 
highlight an issue that is very much a part of Gerhart's story as 
the Minnesota Vikings' pick at No. 51 Friday night,
 yet doesn't get nearly the same scrutiny â€" more like microscopic 
biomolecular inspection â€" that most elements of most draftee's games 
receive. 
Instead, it gets dealt with sideways, cautiously, even 
self-consciously casual, although it has much to do with where and when 
Gerhart was drafted and even more so with the projections all the 
experts have for his career. 
Gerhart, if you didn't know by 
now, is white. Which is a rarity these days, akin to being a black 
Olympian in the butterfly or a fifty-something journalist with two job 
offers. It was backdrop heading into the draft â€" as much as his 
runner-up finish in the Heisman Trophy balloting or his 27 touchdowns 
and 1,871 yards gained last season at Stanford.
And it figures to
 be subtext to his pro career, good, bad or indifferent. Whether folks 
'fess up about that or not. 
Just when you thought Vikings coach
 Brad Childress was about to tackle the topic head on â€" "I know you guys
 [media] want to put him in a box because of"¦," Childress said in his 
post-pick news briefing â€" he veered away from it. Finishing his thought,
 the coach said: ""¦ what his weight is." Oh, right, because of what 
Gerhart's 
weight (231 pounds, by the way) is. Let's just say 
the real answer is contained therein, anagram style: w-h-i-t-e. 
Reporters
 had asked about Gerhart being a lead blocker for the Vikings, rather 
than a featured back. Code lives, apparently. 
Even the most 
innocent references to Gerhart and where he'll fit into the Vikings' 
pecking order can get a little awkward. Adrian Peterson's "shadow" in 
the Purple backfield? Ahem. What if the roles were reversed â€" would 
Peterson be referred to as Gerhart's shadow? People would be waiting for
 a Sammy Davis Jr. number to break out. 
More than 22 years have
 passed since Washington's Doug Williams, the MVP of Super Bowl XXII, 
allegedly was asked in the days leading up to that game: "How long have 
you been a black quarterback?" 
But that sort of stereotyping â€" 
even without any malice involved â€" still goes on. Where once it focused 
on black QBs, now the shock and skepticism is associated with white RBs 
or WRs. 
Gerhart told Yahoo! Sports that race came up as he 
prepped for, and was poked and prodded by curious teams, the NFL draft. 
Sure, they liked his size (6-0, 231), his 4.50 time in the 40-yard dash 
and the athleticism suggested by a 38-inch vertical leap. But there were
 little insinuations and, sometimes, blatant queries, all based on his 
unintentional challenge to, er, positional assumptions. 
"One 
team I interviewed with asked me about being a white running back," 
Gerhart told Yahoo! NFL writer Michael Silver. "They asked if it made me
 feel entitled, or like I felt I was a poster child for white running 
backs. I said, 'No, I'm just out there playing ball. I don't think about
 that.' I didn't really know what to say."
It also is curious 
that, when experts compare Gerhart's style as a back, names like 
Riggins, Tommy Vardell and Craig James come up in the conversation. All 
white running backs. It works that way in the NBA, where the young 
fellows who get compared in playing style to Larry Bird or John Stockton
 â€" lo and behold â€" almost always are Caucasian. Christian Laettner, 
during his stay with the Timberwolves, even lectured a local AP reporter
 for almost mindlessly, certainly harmlessly, linking him and Bird. 
In
 Minnesota, folks like to think they are beyond such superficial factors
 (though the Timberwolves, like Utah and Boston, share a reputation for 
wanting white players in the mix for fan appeal). As for Vikings fans, 
they are like NFL fans in most places â€" they care mostly about victories
 and defeats, cheering the guys who contribute to the former, 
criticizing those who seem responsible for the latter. 
But in 
the equivalent of another NFL lifetime, a fullback named Rick Fenney was
 cheered seemingly out of proportion to his on-field production, with 
Twin Cities sportswriter Patrick Reusse suggesting it was directly 
attributable to Fenney being white. 
And if we start hearing 
Bill Brown or Dave Osborn mentioned more often in 2010 than in recent 
seasons â€" in talks about Vikings rushers past and present and anywhere 
in the vicinity of Gerhart's name â€" we'll know that these things haven't
 quite gone color-blind.
http://www.minnpost.com/steveaschbu...ecter_of_the_unspoken_nf-elephant_in_the_room
Has this sportswriter been visiting Caste Football? 
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