The SEC has had 48 players rush for 1,000 yards in a single season 60 times in the past decade. That makes for a wide variety of body types, from the bruising bone-crusher to the limber little guy.

If we tally the height and weight of those four dozen athletes, we find that the average measures in at 5-10, 219 pounds.

Of course, when doing any averages, there are extremes on both ends of the height/weight spectrum.

Here is a look at the biggest and smallest SEC 1,000-yard rushers in the past decade.

BIGGEST

Derrick Henry (6-3, 242 pounds): If size has a direct correlation to success, then it should be no surprise that Henry won the Heisman Award in 2015 with an SEC record 2,219 yards, 28 touchdowns and a slew of Alabama records. The Crimson Tide running back checks in at 6-3, 242 pounds, making him the heaviest 1,000-yard rusher out of the SEC in the past 10 years.

Jalen Hurd (6-4, 240 pounds): Running backs traditionally aren’t the tallest players in the backfield. But Hurd disproves that theory. The Tennessee running back is the conference’s tallest 1,000-yard rusher in the past decade at 6-4. He might make that the tallest rusher to rush for 1,000 or more yards in consecutive years if he can capitalize on his 1,288-yard sophomore campaign.

Jeremy Hill (6-2 235), Anthony Dixon (6-1, 235), Tra Carson (6-0, 235): Hill used his hulking frame and 1,401-yard sophomore season to vault himself into a second-round draft pick by the Cincinnati Bengals in the 2014 season. At 235 pounds, Hill was one of the heaviest running backs in the SEC dating to 2006. Only Dixon of Mississippi State and Texas A&M’s Carson  tipped the scale at that same girth and managed 1,000 yards on the ground. Dixon did it twice.

T.J. Yeldon (6-2 221): Derrick Henry wasn’t Alabama’s only big 1,000-yard rusher to bulldoze his way through Tuscaloosa in the last decade. Yeldon posted back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons as arguably the biggest back in SEC during the 2012 (1,108 yards) and 2013 (1,235 yards) seasons. He missed by 21 yards of three-peating the feat during his junior year before going pro.

Keep an eye on: Bo Scarbrough. Alabama’s next big thing is listed at 6-2, 230.

SMALLEST

Dexter McCluster (5-9 170 pounds): McCluster was about as lithe as 1,000-yard rushers get. The Ole Miss alum was the lightest SEC player to rush for more than 1,000 in the past decade, scampering for 1,169 yards for the Rebels during the 2009 season. McCluster spent his days out of the backfield, as well as lining up wide at receiver, a trend he continued into his pro career during six seasons and counting with the Kansas City Chiefs and Tennessee Titans.

Michael Smith (5-7, 174 pounds): Smith’s career at Arkansas basically boils down to his spectacular 2008 season in which he rushed for 1,072 yards, finishing a mere percentage points behind Knowshon Moreno (107.2 YPG) for tops in the SEC.

Smith was easily the shortest conference player to crest the 1,000 yard plateau in the past decade. He closed his career with 2,018 yards and 16 touchdowns, but might be best known for his 176 yards and 63-yard, game-winning rushing score in the fourth quarter to upset No. 20 Auburn.

Kendial Lawrence (5-9, 195 pounds), Henry Josey (5-10, 195 pounds), Russell Hansbrough (5-9, 195 pounds): Missouri might want to add a McDonalds in its training facility and instill a mandatory and daily two Big Mac rule for its running backs.

The SEC has had eight 1,000-yard rushers in the past decade weigh less than 200 pounds. Among them are these three Missouri running backs in three successive seasons.

All 195 pounds of Lawrence (1,025 yards in 2012), Josey (1,166 yards in 2013) and Hansbrough (1,084 yards in 2014) crested the 1,000-yard mark.

Lawrence and Josey didn’t quite measure up in the NFL and are both now playing in the Canadian Football League.

After an injury-riddled senior campaign, Hansbrough finished his final season in Columbia with 436 yards and touchdown and could very well wind up joining his former teammates in the CFL, if his body allows.