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Running a little analysis. This is all based on adding up individual numbers from ESPN. I only did a little bit of rounding and sometimes %s don't add exactly up.
2013 Total Yards (13 games): 5,098
2014 Total Yards (11 games): 5,176
How are we dividing these yards?
2013 Rushing - 3,916 yards:
* QB: 866 (22.1%)
* BB: 1,471 (37.6%)
* AB: 1,538 (39.3%)
* WR: 31 (0.8%)
* P: 10 (0.2%)
2014 Rushing - 3,617:
* QB: 1,031 (28.5%)
* BB: 1,313 (36.3%) [counted all of Days' yards as BB yards]
* AB: 1,167 (32.3%)
* WR: 96 (2.6%)
* P: 10 (0.2%)
We were an AB team last year. This year, we're a little more balanced across the board, with Laskey and Days leading the way for us. The most obvious difference is that the QB is taking much more of the load off the AB percentage this year. + Justin Thomas, - Robert Godhigh? Probably not that simple, but there's obviously something there. Thomas is leaps and bounds better running the ball than last year's starter. Godhigh is better than our best AB rusher this year (Tony Zenon has the most yards at 289 this year, v. 744 for Godhigh last year).
How about passing?
2013 Passing - 1,695
130 yards/ game, 12 passing TDs, 13 INT (one thrown by a WR)
Starter had a passer rating of 127.5
2014 passing - 1,559
141 yards/game, 16 passing TDs, 4 INT.
Starter has a passer rating of 161.2
Huge upgrade this season through the air, obviously.
Receivers:
2013 Receiving Yards - 1,695
ABs: 644 yards (38%)
WRs: 923 yards (54.4%)
BBs: 128 yards (7.5%)
2014 Receiving Yards - 1,559
ABs: 496 yards (32%)
WRs: 976 yards (62.6%)
BBs: 72 yards (4.6%)
QBs: 15 yards (1.0%)
The Godhigh factor, again? Partly. Percentages don't tell the whole story. We'll exceed 2013's numbers by a fair number this year and most of that will be because of Smelter's emergence. Our ABs haven't been bad catching the ball, we just have a really great option to the outside
AB rushing split, top five:
2013 - 1,538 yards:
1) Godhigh, 744 (48.4%)
2) Snoddy, 150 (9.8%)
3) Andrews, 140 (9.1%)
4) Hill, 119 (7.7%)
5) Bostic, 116 (7.5%)
2014 - 1,167 yards:
1) Zenon, 289 (25.8%)
2) Snoddy, 283 (24.3%)
3) Perkins, 272 (23.3%)
4) Hill, 134 (11.5%)
5) Bostic, 112 (9.6%)
Although it's safe to say Perkins would be near 350-400 yards if he hadn't missed time, you can really see here how much Godhigh meant to us last year. Now we're dividing things much more evenly.
2013 Total Yards (13 games): 5,098
2014 Total Yards (11 games): 5,176
How are we dividing these yards?
2013 Rushing - 3,916 yards:
* QB: 866 (22.1%)
* BB: 1,471 (37.6%)
* AB: 1,538 (39.3%)
* WR: 31 (0.8%)
* P: 10 (0.2%)
2014 Rushing - 3,617:
* QB: 1,031 (28.5%)
* BB: 1,313 (36.3%) [counted all of Days' yards as BB yards]
* AB: 1,167 (32.3%)
* WR: 96 (2.6%)
* P: 10 (0.2%)
We were an AB team last year. This year, we're a little more balanced across the board, with Laskey and Days leading the way for us. The most obvious difference is that the QB is taking much more of the load off the AB percentage this year. + Justin Thomas, - Robert Godhigh? Probably not that simple, but there's obviously something there. Thomas is leaps and bounds better running the ball than last year's starter. Godhigh is better than our best AB rusher this year (Tony Zenon has the most yards at 289 this year, v. 744 for Godhigh last year).
How about passing?
2013 Passing - 1,695
130 yards/ game, 12 passing TDs, 13 INT (one thrown by a WR)
Starter had a passer rating of 127.5
2014 passing - 1,559
141 yards/game, 16 passing TDs, 4 INT.
Starter has a passer rating of 161.2
Huge upgrade this season through the air, obviously.
Receivers:
2013 Receiving Yards - 1,695
ABs: 644 yards (38%)
WRs: 923 yards (54.4%)
BBs: 128 yards (7.5%)
2014 Receiving Yards - 1,559
ABs: 496 yards (32%)
WRs: 976 yards (62.6%)
BBs: 72 yards (4.6%)
QBs: 15 yards (1.0%)
The Godhigh factor, again? Partly. Percentages don't tell the whole story. We'll exceed 2013's numbers by a fair number this year and most of that will be because of Smelter's emergence. Our ABs haven't been bad catching the ball, we just have a really great option to the outside
AB rushing split, top five:
2013 - 1,538 yards:
1) Godhigh, 744 (48.4%)
2) Snoddy, 150 (9.8%)
3) Andrews, 140 (9.1%)
4) Hill, 119 (7.7%)
5) Bostic, 116 (7.5%)
2014 - 1,167 yards:
1) Zenon, 289 (25.8%)
2) Snoddy, 283 (24.3%)
3) Perkins, 272 (23.3%)
4) Hill, 134 (11.5%)
5) Bostic, 112 (9.6%)
Although it's safe to say Perkins would be near 350-400 yards if he hadn't missed time, you can really see here how much Godhigh meant to us last year. Now we're dividing things much more evenly.
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