Indiana high school football spent much of last fall watching one of its biggest rushing stories unfold. This fall, the spotlight may shift to the defensive side of the ball.
South Putnam senior linebacker Keenan Mowery-Shields enters the 2026 season with a chance to chase one of the most eye-catching career marks in the sport: the all-time tackles record.
The unofficial standard is 668 career tackles, held by Colter Doherty of Missouri from 2002 through 2005, and Mowery-Shields is already within striking distance with 598 career stops entering his senior year.
That kind of number is rare at any level, but especially at the high school level, where statistics can vary by school, classification and game flow.
Even so, Mowery-Shields has built enough of a résumé that the chase is now real. He has led the nation in tackles in each of the last two seasons, averaging 17.5 tackles per game during that stretch, while also piling up 58 tackles for loss over the past three campaigns.
The 6-foot-3, 240-pound senior has the size of a power college linebacker and the production of a player who simply finds the ball on every snap.
He is also a three-sport athlete, competing in football, wrestling and track, which adds to the kind of all-around athletic profile college coaches look for when they are searching for linebackers who can hold up physically and move laterally.
South Putnam has not had to hide his production. If anything, the challenge has been trying to keep opponents from running away from him.
When a defender posts that many tackles, it usually means two things at once: he is around the ball constantly, and opposing offenses spend entire games trying to account for him.
That combination is exactly why Mowery-Shields has become one of the most talked-about defensive players in the state.
A senior season with real history attached
Mowery-Shields is not chasing the tackles mark in a vacuum. Last fall, Indiana fans watched Knox senior running back Myles McLaughlin go after the national rushing record held by Derrick Henry, and that pursuit drew attention all season long.
McLaughlin ultimately broke the state rushing record, though he fell short of the national standard.
Now, another Indiana senior is set to generate the same kind of weekly conversation, only this time from the defensive side.
What makes Mowery-Shields’ run more interesting is that he does not fit the usual small-school stereotype some fans like to lean on in debates about talent.
He is big, productive and already drawing college attention. He is also doing it while playing at a school that does not have the kind of depth, size or resources found in some larger programs, which makes his production even more notable.
The college game is already watching. Mowery-Shields is considering multiple football opportunities, and that is not surprising given the way he has put together his career.
A linebacker with his frame, his numbers and his motor will always have a place somewhere, especially when he has already shown he can lead a defense and carry a heavy load week after week.
For South Putnam, the season ahead is about more than a record chase. It is also a chance to watch a player who has already become part of the school’s football identity finish his career with one final run at history.
If Mowery-Shields keeps producing at anything close to the pace he has already set, the tackles record could become one of the biggest storylines in Indiana high school football this fall.
And unlike so many records that feel out of reach, this one is close enough to make every game matter.
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