Daily Press

Patterson is running up wild numbers for Buffalo

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Playing under the radar for Buffalo, Jaret Patterson has put up rushing numbers that demand attention.

Patterson broke his own school record with 301 yards and four touchdowns in a 42-17 win at Bowling Green in the third of his team’s three straight mid-week Mid-American Conference games.

Granted, the first 300-yard rushing game in the nation came against the worst run defense in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n, but Patterson has produced consistent­ly against almost everybody.

The 5-foot-9, 195-pound Patterson has run for at least 100 yards in 13 of his 30 games. His 3,323 yards make him the second-leading career rusher among juniors, behind Oklahoma State’s Chuba Hubbard.

Patterson is Buffalo’s No. 2 all-time rusher, behind Branden Oliver, who had 4,049 yards from 2010-13.

Patterson is averaging 170.3 yards through three games and 7.2 yards per carry. His teammate, Norview High product Kevin Marks, is providing plenty of support by averaging 6.2 yards per rush, with 231 yards and a touchdown on 37 carries.

Going all the way

Auburn’s Smoke Monday and Florida Internatio­nal’s EJ Wilson Jr. had 100-yard runbacks.

Monday’s intercepti­on return came against Tennessee. He joined Texas State’s Jarron Morris as the only players with 100-yard pick-sixes this season.

Wilson took a kick back 100 yards against Western Kentucky. He’s the eighth kick returner to go 100 yards.

Premium pass-catchers

Pittsburgh’s DJ Turner and Purdue’s Rondale Moore each had 15 catches, tied for the second-most in a game this year — behind Tyler Snead’s 16 receptions for East Carolina against Tulsa on Oct. 30.

Turner, a senior who transferre­d from Maryland, finished with 184 yards and a touchdown against Virginia Tech while falling one catch short of the Pitt record set by Harry Orszulak in 1968. Larry Fitzgerald, the greatest Pitt receiver of all time, never had more than 12 in a game.

Moore, who changed his mind about opting out this season, made his long-awaited return from injury and had 116 yards on his career-high 15 catches against Minnesota.

Getting defensive

Northweste­rn continues to put up impressive defensive numbers. The 17-7 win over then-No. 10 Wisconsin marked the first time the 11th-ranked Wildcats held a top-10 opponent to seven points or fewer in 53 years.

They’re holding opponents to just 12.6 points, third-best among teams that have played at least five games, and they’ve shut out four of their five opponents in the second half. Wisconsin came into the game having put up 45 and 49 points in its first two games, respective­ly.

Run-stoppers

Indiana netted minus-1 yards on 16 rushes against Ohio State. The Hoosiers were playing from behind most of the game and all but abandoned the run.

Still, no Big Ten opponent had netted zero or negative yards on the ground against Ohio State since Northweste­rn ran 33 times for no yards in 2007. Indiana’s 16 rushing attempts were its fewest in at least 20 years.

National leaders

(Minimum of 4 games) Team offense: Scoring, Alabama, 49.4 ppg; rushing, Air Force, 336.5 ypg; passing, Florida, 377.6 ypg; total, Central Florida, 586.6 ypg.

Team defense: Scoring, Marshall, 10.1 ppg; rushing, Marshall, 65.3 ypg; passing, West Virginia, 161.5 ypg; total, Marshall, 259.7 ypg.

Individual: Rushing, Mohamed Ibrahim, Minnesota, 163.4 ypg; passing, Dillon Gabriel, UCF, 377.1 ypg; receiving, Romeo Doubs, Nevada, 155.6 ypg.

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