In the 2006 season, he ran for the 13th most yards by a freshman in
NCAA history. He set school and
conference freshman rushing records with 1,388 yards on 276 carries (5.0 yards-per-carry) and 11 touchdowns. He also ranked 11th in the nation in rushing, the first among true freshmen running backs, 25th in all-purpose yards, second in conference rushing, seventh in all-purpose yards and eight in touchdowns scoring. He is also the school's first 1,000-yard rusher since 2002 and the second ranked single-season rusher. He helped the offense finish with over 2,000 yards rushing for the first time since 1987. He was named the team's offensive Player of the Week following his performances against
Florida,
UCF, and
Tulane. Also in 2006, he was named a Freshman
All-American by The
Sporting News. During his sophomore season, he rushed for 1,586 yards on 295 carries (5.4 yards-per-carry) and 15 touchdowns. He also had 29 receptions with 227 yards (7.8 yards-per-carry). He was awarded the Most Valuable Player award following the
2007 GMAC Bowl. He was a finalist for the
Conerly Trophy in 2006 and won the award in 2007. Also in 2007, he was named Conference USA Offensive Player of the Year by
CollegeFootballNews.com. He is a Second-team All-American by
Athlon Sports. Honored as the toughest running back to bring down by ''
Lindy's. Named #46 on Top 67 running backs in the nation by Phil Steele's''. In 2008, Fletcher saw his numbers hit a slight decline as he ran for 1,313 (6.0 yards-per-carry) on 219 carries, and 10 rushing touchdowns, both the lowest he has had in his three-year career as a Golden Eagle. He recorded 33 receptions with 248 yards and 1 touchdown. He ran for 1,015 yards in the
2009 season, including 78 yards in a season-ending loss in
2009 New Orleans Bowl versus the
Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders. He became only the ninth player in
NCAA FBS (Division I-A) history to reach 1,000 yards in all four seasons, finishing his college career with 5,302 yards. Fletcher passed
Herschel Walker (5,259) and
LaDainian Tomlinson (5,263) for eighth on the NCAA's career rushing list.
College statistics ==References==