Frank Empson / The Tennessean
BATON ROUGE – Charles Alexander, the first 4,000-yard rusher in Southeastern Conference history and a two-time Heisman Trophy finalist, will have his LSU jersey retired, the school announced on Wednesday.

The LSU Athletic Hall of Fame Committee unanimously approved Alexander’s jersey retirement. His jersey will be retired at an LSU football game this fall.

‘I’m truly humbled by this,” Alexander said. “Playing at LSU those four years I never dreamed that one day my jersey would be retired and be on display in Tiger Stadium. To get that phone call telling me that my jersey was going to be retired is something I will never forget. I wasn’t expecting the call, but it’s truly an honor and one of my proudest moments.”

The No. 4 worn by Alexander will join the No. 20 worn by Billy Cannon, the No. 37 worn by Tommy Casanova and the No. 21 worn by Jerry Stovall as retired jerseys in the LSU football program. All four numbers are displayed on the façade in the south end zone of Tiger Stadium.

Affectionately known by LSU fans as “Alexander the Great”, Alexander has been enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame (2012) along with LSU Sports Hall of Fame (1989) and the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame (1993). He’s also a member of LSU football’s Team of the Century.

Alexander, a native of Galveston, Texas, will become the 15th LSU athlete or coach to have his/her jersey retired, joining Cannon and Casanova; women’s basketball players Seimone Augustus and Sylvia Fowles; men’s basketball players Bob Pettit, Pete Maravich, Rudy Macklin, Shaquille O’Neal, and Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf; baseball coach Skip Bertman and baseball players Ben McDonald, Eddy Furniss and Todd Walker.

Alexander, a two-time first-team All-America in 1977 and 1978, capped his LSU career holding 27 school records. He rushed for 4,035 yards and 40 touchdowns during his career, both program records at the time. He still ranks No. 3 in LSU history in both career rushing yard and touchdowns. Alexander finished ninth in Heisman Trophy balloting in 1977 followed by a fifth-place showing as a senior in 1978.

Alexander remains LSU’s all-time leader in several categories including rushing attempts in a game (43 vs. Wyoming, 1977), rushing attempts in a season (311 in 1977), and consecutive 100-yard games (9 from 1977-78).

A two-time first-team All-SEC selection, Alexander earned conference most valuable player honors in 1977 when he rushed for 1,686 yards and 17 touchdowns, both school records at the time. He followed that with 1,172 yards and 14 TDs as a senior in 1978, becoming the first player in SEC history to break the 4,000-yard mark for career rushing yards. Alexander remains the ninth-leading rusher in SEC history.

Alexander rushed for 200-yards in a game twice during his career and topped the 100-yard mark 20 times. He set LSU’s single-game rushing record with 237 yards on 31 carries in a 56-17 win over Oregon on Oct. 22, 1977. His other 200-yard game came against Wyoming on Nov. 26, 1977 when he tallied 231 yards on a school-record 43 carries in a 66-7 win over the Cowboys.

During his final two seasons at LSU, Alexander rushed for at least one touchdown in 20 of 24 games, including a then school-record four against Oregon and three against both Wyoming and Vanderbilt in 1977.

In his first season at LSU in 1975, Alexander earned SEC Freshman of the Year honors after rushing for 301 yards and a pair of touchdowns.

Following his LSU career, Alexander was selected in the first round with the 12th overall pick in the 1979 NFL Draft by the Cincinnati Bengals. He played seven seasons in the NFL, appearing in Super Bowl XVI with the Bengals. Alexander appeared in 102 regular-season games for the Bengals, rushing for 2,645 yards and 13 TDs over that span.

After his rookie season with the Bengals, Alexander returned to campus to finish his degree, graduating in 1980 with a degree in sociology.

Following his retirement from football after the 1985 season, Alexander spent four years as an advisor in LSU’s Academic Center for Student-Athletes, and then he worked for six years as a development officer for the Tiger Athletic Foundation. Alexander currently works in the oil and gas industry in Houston, while also creating and founding “C’mon Man” Cajun seasoning. Alexander’s “C’mon Man” Cajun seasoning, fish fry, crawfish, shrimp and crab boil and hot sauce can be found in stores throughout Louisiana and Texas.

(Release via LSU Athletics)
Filed Under: LSU Football
Originally published on TigerDroppings.com
29 Comments
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Sleepy_Tiger6 days
Retiring all these numbers, LSU was gonna run out of jerseys. At that rate, we can’t retire every good players number. Yes, he’s deserving, but I see others next up: Kevin Falk. What about Joe Burrow and Jayden Daniels?
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Still remember the bumper sticks from back then "Alexander 4 Heisman".
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TigerZeke6211 days
The first number that current recruits look for is the one following a $
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wesman2111 days
VERY deserving. Although I think Faulk should've been retired before him.
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navy11 days
I don’t recall Mahmoud Abdul-Rouf …. but Chris Jackson was pretty fricken awesome.
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LSU82Cajun11 days
Charles ‘the Great’ Alexander says remember the ‘Hogs’
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BlackPot12 days
So not someone who graduated last year?
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LSU82Cajun11 days
Or this year & was mediocre at best
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tigertotiger12 days
It’s about time #4 Forever LSU
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CharlesLSU12 days
Charlie is everything that is great about lsu football. He was an elite player, but became a mentor to so many while working with Tommy in the ACA.

He helped me on numerous occasions when he didn’t have to.

Love that guy!!!!
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FlagLake12 days
Next up, Kevin Faulk.
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Barbellthor12 days
Small correction. Derrious Guice holds the single game rushing record.
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FlagLake12 days
At the time it was the record. I think that is what they were trying to say.
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LSU82Cajun12 days
About time! The man who carried LSU football for 3 years & kept Cholly Mac his job is waaaaaaay past having his number retired. 45 years past. What the fu*k is wrong with LSU retiring #’s. Dorsey next up in the year 2047
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Javi00712 days
I wish I could repay Alexander the Great for all the joy he gave me watching him play when I was a student, but my bank balance is several figures short.
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LSUFanMizeWay12 days
Charlie Alexander, Cholly Mac wore him out, seemed like he was always good for 30-35 carries, and once he got loose no one was going to run him down.
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cypresstiger12 days
That was the era of hit the line with the big back over and over. See Ohio State, U Texas, etc etc etc.
It wasn't that Cholly Mac wore him out because... Cholly Mac.
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cbree8812 days
Time to bring Billy Cannon’s #20 out of retirement and start letting players wear it again. Not letting players wear certain numbers is stupid and retarded.
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Tiger Prawn12 days
Yep, I’m not a fan of retiring numbers in college. Nowadays you have some recruits where the availability of a certain number is actually something they consider in their decision. Especially for numbers in the single digits or teens
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cajunmud12 days
Yeah...maybe just a Ring of Honor but keep the # available.
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superwolf12 days
Sorry, I can't stand laughing at that high school stadium w/ no one there, Vandy's awful uniforms & that shiote for shiote carpet on top of concrete some of those schools used.
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Long overdue
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CajunBullet12 days
"Alexander the Great"! It is past time to have Charles's Jersey, #4, retired!
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And Joe Burrow and Jaden Daniels? What's the delay? Why not place those names on the stadium asap?
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TigerReb712 days
Because LSU aint Colorado
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ATCTx12 days
Well deserved. Charlie and Bert Jones were the two most dominant Tigers of the 1970s.
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cypresstiger12 days
Tommy Casanova, 2x consensus All American, cover of Sports Illustrated
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ATCTx11 days
Casanova is already in the ring. His dominance is understood and already acknowledged. I guess I should have added "besides Casanova who is already in".
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