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Since I pulled the Football Outsiders data, here are a couple of more charts
If you want to skip the rest--we got better in the run stats but got worse in the pass stats. There's progress, but not on the passing side that would make an RPO offense hum.
It's tough to separate a play where the running back or quarterback dodged 6 people in the backfield before making a 10-yard gain vs the line pushing for 10 yards and the RB following them the entire way--and these stats don't do that. But whether it was having great RBs or better blocking, we got better on the ground in 2021.
In terms of how many yards we got, we became more effective in the run in 2021, but less effective through the air.
In pass blocking, we weren't good before the previous three seasons, and we're still not good
If you want to skip the rest--we got better in the run stats but got worse in the pass stats. There's progress, but not on the passing side that would make an RPO offense hum.
- Opportunity Rate: The percentage of carries (when four yards are available) that gain at least four yards, i.e. the percentage of carries in which the line does its job, so to speak.
- Power Success Rate: This is the same as on the NFL side -- percentage of runs on third or fourth down, two yards or less to go, that achieved a first down or touchdown.
- Stuff Rate: Same as STUFFED on the NFL side -- percentage of carries by running backs that are stopped at or before the line of scrimmage.
It's tough to separate a play where the running back or quarterback dodged 6 people in the backfield before making a 10-yard gain vs the line pushing for 10 yards and the RB following them the entire way--and these stats don't do that. But whether it was having great RBs or better blocking, we got better on the ground in 2021.
In terms of how many yards we got, we became more effective in the run in 2021, but less effective through the air.
- Line Yards per Carry: For 2018, we are experimenting with a new definition for college line yardage based on film study and generalization. Instead of the ALY figure FO used for the NFL, this one is tighter: the line gets credit for rushing yardage between 0-3 yards (instead of 0-4) and 50% credit for yards 4-8 (instead of 5-10). Anything over 8 yards is quantified as a highlight opportunity, and credit goes to the runner. As with the pro definition, lost yardage still counts for 125%. (Garbage time is filtered out for all line yardage averages.)
- Standard Downs Line Yards per Carry: The raw, unadjusted per-carry line yardage for a team on standard downs (first down, second-and-7 or fewer, third-and-4 or fewer, fourth-and-4 or fewer).
- Passing Downs Line Yards per Carry: The same unadjusted averages for rushing on passing downs.
In pass blocking, we weren't good before the previous three seasons, and we're still not good
- Sack Rate: Unadjusted sack rate for all non-garbage time pass attempts.
- Standard Downs Sack Rate: Unadjusted sack rate for standard downs pass attempts.
- Passing Downs Sack Rate: Unadjusted sack rate for passing downs pass attempts.