NC State Football By The Numbers – Post FSU Edition
Here are the season stats after the FSU beatdown.
Team Statistics
Offense
Points Per Game: 27.5 (ACC Rank: 8, Nat’l Rank: 63)
High: 43
Low: 0
Rushing Yards: 105.9 (ACC Rank: 10, Nat’l Rank: 105)
Passing Yards: 239.1 (6, 53)
Total Offense: 345.0 (11, 91)
Defense
Points Per Game: 28.6 (ACC Rank: 11, Nat’l Rank: 82)
High: 45
Low: 13
Rushing Yards: 160.1 (ACC Rank: 7, Nat’l Rank: 66)
Passing Yards: 235.6 (8, 75)
Total Defense: 395.8 (9, 70)
Turnovers
Offense: 8 fumbles, 8 interceptions, 16 total
Defense: 7 fumbles, 16 interceptions, 23 total
Turnover Margin: +7
More Team National Rankings
Offense
Passing Efficiency – 49
Sacks Allowed – 98
Interceptions Thrown – 68
Fumbles Lost – 78
Turnovers Lost – 79
Tackles For Loss Allowed – 46
First Downs – 99
3rd Down Efficiency – 57
4th Down Efficiency – 74
Red Zone Efficiency – 80
Time Of Possession – 64
Defense
Pass Efficiency Defense – 47
Sacks – 24
Tackles For Loss – 54
Passes Intercepted – 2
Fumbles Recovered – 44
Turnovers Gained – 5
First Downs Allowed – 51
3rd Down Efficiency Defense – 72
4th Down Efficiency Defense – 10
Red Zone Efficiency Defense – 106
Special Teams
Net Punting – 78
Punt Returns – 7
Kickoff Returns – 60
Turnover Margin Per Game – 12
Attendance
Total Attendance (223,519) – ACC Rank: 9, Nat’l Rank: 45
Average Attendance (55,880) – 4, 32
Percent of Capacity (97.0%) – 3, 31
Toughest Schedule (FBS Only)
Cumulative Opposition: 35-32 (.521) ACC Rank: 9, Nat’l Rank: 54
Future Opposition: 14-16 (.467) ACC Rank: 10, Nat’l Rank: 70
Past Opposition: 21-16 (.568) ACC Rank: 5, Nat’l Rank: 30
Individual Statistics
Rushing Leaders
James Washington: 130 carries, 526 yards, 4.0 avg, 5 TD
Curtis Underwood: 42 carries, 226 yards, 5.4 avg, 1 TD
Tony Creecy: 53 carries, 214 yards, 4.0 avg
Brandon Barnes: 3 carries, 10 yards, 3.3 avg
Receiving Leaders
T.J. Graham: 28 catches, 531 yards, 19.0 avg, 4 TD
Tobias Palmer: 23 catches, 245 yards, 10.7 avg, 2 TD
James Washington: 26 catches, 225 yards, 8.7 avg
Jay Smith: 21 catches, 222 yards, 10.6 avg, 2 TD
Bryan Underwood: 10 catches, 207 yards, 20.7 avg, 2 TD
Passing
Mike Glennon: 163-263, 1847 yds, 19 TD, 8 Int, 62.0% Comp Pct, 138.73 rating
Tyler Brosius: 8-13, 66 yards, 1 TD, 0 Int, 61.5% Comp Pct, 129.57 rating
Tackle Leaders
Earl Wolff: 71
Audie Cole: 69
Brandan Bishop: 47
David Amerson: 42
Markus Kuhn: 37
Tackles For Loss Leaders
Audie Cole: 7.5
Markus Kuhn: 7
Terrell Manning: 5
D.J. Green: 5
Art Norman: 5
Sacks Leaders
Markus Kuhn: 3.5
Darryl Cato-Bishop: 3
Brian Slay: 2.5
Audie Cole: 2.5
Terrell Manning: 2.5
Interceptions
David Amerson: 8
Brandan Bishop: 4
Terrell Manning: 2
Earl Wolff: 1
D.J. Green: 1
Fumbles
T.J. Graham: 5 fumbles, 2 lost
Mike Glennon: 4 fumbles, 2 lost
Curtis Underwood: 2 fumbles, 2 lost
James Washington: 2 fumbles, 1 lost
Team: 2 fumble, 1 lost
Field Goals
Niklas Sade: 4 of 8, long of 45
Extra Points
Niklas Sade: 28 of 30
Punting
Wil Baumann: 39 punts, 38.1 avg, long of 62, 11 inside 20 yard line
J. Ellis Flint: 3 punts, 35.3 avg, long of 38, 0 inside 20 yard line
Kickoffs
Niklas Sade: 40 KO, 62.4 avg, 3 touchbacks, 3 out of bounds
Kickoff Return Leaders
T.J. Graham: 32 returns, 23.2 avg
Dean Haynes: 2 returns, 15.5 avg
Tobias Palmer: 2 returns, 10.5 avg
David Amerson: 1 return, 25.0 avg
C.J. Wilson: 1 return, 21.0 avg
Mario Carter: 1 returns, 10.0 avg
Punt Return Leaders
T.J. Graham: 9 returns, 16.6 avg, 1 TD
Rashard Smith: 1 return, 6.0 avg
Individual ACC & National Rankings (Nat’l Top 100)
James Washington (Rushing) – ACC Rank: 11, Nat’l Rank: 90
Mike Glennon (Pass Efficiency) – 7, 46
Mike Glennon (Total Offense) – 8, 59
T.J. Graham (Receiving Yards Per Game) – 8, 70
David Amerson (Interceptions) – 1, 1
Brandan Bishop (Interceptions) – 2, 7
Terrell Manning (Interceptions) – 7, 66
Wil Baumann (Punting) – 8, 83
T.J. Graham (Kickoff Returns) – 4, 63
T.J. Graham (All Purpose Runners) – 2, 6
Earl Wolff (Tackles) – 7, 40
Audie Cole (Tackles) – 8, 52
Top 10 Active NCAA Career Leaders
C.J. Wilson:
Interception-TDs: 7
David Amerson:
Interceptions Per Game: 4
T.J. Graham:
Punt Returns: 6
Punt Return Yards: 8
Punt Return TDs: 3
Kickoff Returns: 3
Kickoff Return Yards: 5
Kickoff Return TDs: 9
Kickoff Returns Per Game: 9
12 Responses to “NC State Football By The Numbers – Post FSU Edition”
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1)DeeeeFENCE, DeeeeFENCE, DeeeeFENCE!
2)4th Down Efficiency Defense is STRONG. Wonder what first and second down efficiency looks like?
3)Who decision was it to keep Bryan Underwood off the field in the first six games of the year?????
4)Ranked 11th in the league in total offense. NICE.
Well, we better improve the run game, or else UNC’s going to just pin their ears back and make Glennon beat them, which he might do, but then again he might not.
If the O-Line doesn’t give Glennon more time than he had last week, he won’t survive. Time to once again grow a pair, guys… and the Tight Ends need to show up with their hands attached, too.
2 things stick out about these stats. Red Zone efficiency. Offense is 80th in the nation and defense is 106th. Those numbers stick out like sore thumbs.
George Bryan has fewer catches than Bryan Underwood.
Let that sink in.
Actually George Bryan has more catches than Bryan Underwood (13 to 10) but Underwood has more yards (207 to 130).
However howlie’s point still stands.
Doomed………..we’re doomed!
Rushing Yards: 105.9 (ACC Rank: 10, Nat’l Rank: 105)
Sacks Allowed – 98
This ain’t good (not that there was much good to be found in the numbers).
Hopefully this will be the last time we see TOB on the sidelines against UNC. Against them he has a great record, but other BCS teams he sucks, and we need a change. Beating UNC is not enough to save his job.
howlie, WV, you guys touched on something I was going to ask about: what has happened to our pre-season watch list tight end? Does he have some kind of nagging injury that’s keeping him outside the top 5 in receptions?
Or, is George Bryan just pulling a Brandon Costner?
I did some similar analysis on another site yesterday regarding the SL and HWSNBN offenses, defenses and MG’s history. What struck me when I looked at SL was how bad we were year in and year out in defense (10th or worse in the conference) and how mediocre to bad we were on offense (high water mark of 4th in the ACC, but must years around 10th). Really, that’s all one needed to know about his tenure — we stunk on offense, stunk on defense and thus stunk overall.
I mention that because the same thing strikes me as I look at these numbers. Outside of a few guys having great years in certain categories (e.g. Amerson on interceptions and Graham on return yards), we’re bad on offense, bad on defense and bad overall. There’s no way to really sugar coat it.
Well! What can I say???? Give the players ammo!!!!