NC State Football By The Numbers – Post GT Edition
Here are the season stats after the Georgia Tech game.
Team Statistics
Offense
Points Per Game: 30.8 (ACC Rank: 6, Nat’l Rank: 51)
High: 43
Low: 14
Rushing Yards: 107.0 (ACC Rank: 10, Nat’l Rank: 101)
Passing Yards: 261.6 (5, 39)
Total Offense: 368.6 (11, 83)
Defense
Points Per Game: 31.4 (ACC Rank: 12, Nat’l Rank: 94)
High: 45
Low: 13
Rushing Yards: 170.4 (ACC Rank: 10, Nat’l Rank: 87)
Passing Yards: 238.8 (9, 80)
Total Defense: 409.2 (11, 88)
Turnovers
Offense: 6 fumbles, 4 interceptions, 10 total
Defense: 5 fumbles, 8 interceptions, 13 total
Turnover Margin: +3
More Team ACC & National Rankings
Pass Efficiency Defense – ACC Rank: 7, Nat’l Rank: 61
Net Punting – 6, 49
Punt Returns – 2, 6
Kickoff Returns – 5, 50
Turnover Margin Per Game – 2, 24
Passing Efficiency – 6, 32
Sacks – 1, 10
Tackles For Loss – 5, 36
Sacks Allowed – 12, 111
Attendance
Total Attendance (169,131) – ACC Rank: 5, Nat’l Rank: 32
Average Attendance (56,377) – 4, 31
Percent of Capacity (97.9%) – 2, 28
Toughest Schedule (FBS Only)
Cumulative Opposition: 18-16 (.529) ACC Rank: 8, Nat’l Rank: 56
Future Opposition: 12-14 (.462) ACC Rank: 11, Nat’l Rank: 72
Past Opposition: 6-2 (.750) ACC Rank: 2, Nat’l Rank: 9
Individual Statistics
Rushing Leaders
James Washington: 67 carries, 300 yards, 4.5 avg, 4 TD
Curtis Underwood: 42 carries, 226 yards, 5.4 avg, 1 TD
Tony Creecy: 18 carries, 98 yards, 5.4 avg
Brandon Barnes: 3 carries, 10 yards, 3.3 avg
Receiving Leaders
T.J. Graham: 19 catches, 428 yards, 22.5 avg, 4 TD
Tobias Palmer: 15 catches, 176 yards, 11.7 avg, 1 TD
James Washington: 18 catches, 149 yards, 8.3 avg
Jay Smith: 11 catches, 111 yards, 10.1 avg, 1 TD
George Bryan: 9 catches, 95 yards, 10.6 avg, 1 TD
Passing
Mike Glennon: 104-157, 1242 yds, 12 TD, 4 Int, 66.2% Comp Pct, 152.8 rating
Tyler Brosius: 8-13, 66 yards, 1 TD, 0 Int, 61.5% Comp Pct, 129.6 rating
Tackle Leaders
Audie Cole: 50
Earl Wolff: 49
Brandan Bishop: 30
David Amerson: 29
Markus Kuhn: 26
Tackles For Loss Leaders
Audie Cole: 7.5
Darryl Cato-Bishop: 4.5
D.J. Green: 4
Markus Kuhn: 3.5
Brian Slay: 3
Art Norman: 3
Sacks Leaders
Darryl Cato-Bishop: 3
Brian Slay: 2.5
Audie Cole: 2.5
Art Norman: 2
Markus Kuhn: 1.5
Interceptions
David Amerson: 4
Brandan Bishop: 2
Earl Wolff: 1
D.J. Green: 1
Fumbles
Mike Glennon: 4 fumbles, 2 lost
Curtis Underwood: 2 fumbles, 2 lost
T.J. Graham: 4 fumbles, 1 lost
James Washington: 2 fumbles, 1 lost
Team: 1 fumble, 0 lost
Field Goals
Niklas Sade: 3 of 4, long of 45
Extra Points
Niklas Sade: 19 of 21
Punting
Wil Baumann: 20 punts, 39.1 avg, long of 50, 6 inside 20 yard line
J. Ellis Flint: 3 punts, 35.3 avg, long of 38, 0 inside 20 yard line
Kickoffs
Niklas Sade: 27 KO, 62.5 avg, 2 touchbacks
Kickoff Return Leaders
T.J. Graham: 23 returns, 23.7 avg
Tobias Palmer: 2 returns, 10.5 avg
C.J. Wilson: 1 return, 21.0 avg
Mario Carter: 1 returns, 10.0 avg
Punt Return Leaders
T.J. Graham: 5 returns, 20.2 avg, 1 TD
Rashard Smith: 1 return, 6.0 avg
Individual ACC & National Rankings (Nat’l Top 100)
Mike Glennon (Pass Efficiency) – ACC Rank: 6, Nat’l Rank: 28
Mike Glennon (Total Offense) – 6, 53
T.J. Graham (Receiving Yards Per Game) – 6, 45
David Amerson (Interceptions) – 1, 4
Brandan Bishop (Interceptions) – 7, 48
Wil Baumann (Punting) – 6, 64
T.J. Graham (Kickoff Returns) – 5, 51
Niklas Sade (Field Goals) – 10, 89
T.J. Graham (All Purpose Runners) – 1, 2
Brian Slay (Sacks) – 10, 61
Darryl Cato-Bishop (Sacks) – 12, 75
Audie Cole (Sacks) – 14, 93
Audie Cole (Tackles) – 4, 20
Earl Wolff (Tackles) – 5, 23
Audie Cole (Tackles For Loss) – 2, 18
Top 10 Active NCAA Career Leaders
C.J. Wilson:
Interception-TDs: 5
T.J. Graham:
Punt Returns: 6
Punt Return Yards: 9
Punt Return TDs: 3
Kickoff Returns: 4
Kickoff Return Yards: 5
Kickoff Return TDs: 9
Kickoff Returns Per Game: 8
Kickoff Return Yards Per Game: 10
13 Responses to “NC State Football By The Numbers – Post GT Edition”
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Glennon’s numbers are impressive.
I miss the days when all we had to do was score more than 23 points and we win.
Seems it’s feast or famin around here.
Glennon’s numbers are impressive considering it’s his first season starting. In fact, they’re not bad even for one who is a returning starter. I think our future at QB looks pretty good. I realize that his PT has been limited. But I’ve been impressed with what I’ve seen of Tyler Brosius, too.
Ah – you remember the “rule of 24″, huh, primacy?
RE: NC State’s stats…
Wah wah waaaaaah.
RE: Glennon’s Numbers…
This kid is the real deal and I feel really terrible that we aren’t able to take advantage of him more this season (poor O-line, defense that doesn’t make the effort worth it). Think about it, out of 100-and-some odd D1A football programs, Glennon as a first-season QB is 28th in the country. Sure does suck that we’ll only see him around one more year.
RE: Brosius…
~62% with 1TD throw in 13 attempts? Really not bad at all. I actually feel really good about NC State under-center for the next few years. A refreshing change of pace after the Davis-Stone-Evans-Beck years.
Wow…4 responses. The excitement surrounding our football program is off-the-charts. Sigh….
I’m going to remain optimistic, although it’s getting tougher each week.
The stats should see a nice bump this weekend.
The last MAC team we faced was here in 2006, when Akron beat us with a diving touchdown on the game’s final play. That Zips team went on to finish 5-7 overall; we finished 3-9.
I think every game we play this season, as long as this team plays the way it has so far, will be in doubt, especially the road games.
Ed…we’re up 13%.
Glennon is good enough to get the job done, in fact he’s very good. But when TOB made the decision to keep Archer as DC, that nullified Glennons effectiveness. Leading the team to 35 pts. in a game does jack-squat whan the defense gives up 45.
I know this was touched on a few comments ago, but I don’t know what else to say. It’s just so obvious and frustrating to me. I wish it was to TOB. You know……..so he would have at least tried someone new for this year to coach the D into a better unit.
When all the injured players come back, if thier absence really has made the D suck this bad and it’s not coaching as I suspect then I will gladly eat crow and apologize.
Good thing Sweezy’s going to be playing at mostly full strenght. That will really help the defense. (Also, good thing we have a bye next week. we REALLY need it.)
I guess everyone has finally realized that what has been discussed here for years was actually the TRUTH! Archer IS NOT ANY GOOD and TOB doesn’t care about our football program, that’s why he hired him. He’s here to RETIRE. TOB brought his friend from 20 years ago on as a coach.
They doctored up his wiki profile with a unx style spin to make him look like a winner. They did the exact same thing on gopack, everyone bought the lies hook, line, and sinker (except of course those that did their own homework) and now that people actually SEE the truth, it’s kinda quiet around here.
Don’t shoot the messenger, we tried to warn you a LONG time ago.
Hopefully we will win this weekend.
Guys, stats are misleading. Not saying Glennon is horrible, but how many scoring drives has he led in 1st half of games? No mobility whatsoever, & only looks at 1st option then checks off to RB, see Washington & his 8.3 avg yds per catch. TOB sealed his fate when he told RW thanks for the memories. Hopefully next coach will bring in a more exciting running game(something crazy like a pitch out once in a while). Too bad Fowler wasn’t fired same time Amato was or we could have Paul Johnson coaching here now. Don’t know who next coach will be but it will surely have to be an upgrade, after 5 yrs, 83rd in OFF & 88 in DEF & that is before the toughest part of the schedule.
61Packer, you beat me to it. Like the Akron game in Amato’s final season, it’s possible that this game could be very telling.
The O-Line and the entire defense make me want to cry.