Offenses running into tougher FBS defenses
Rushing stats going down for third straight year
MADISON, Wis. — Across the country, college football teams once again are discovering that establishing a rushing attack is even tougher than it was the year before.
The average yards per carry for Bowl Subdivision teams is on pace to dip for a third consecutive season. FBS teams are gaining 4.35 yards per rush, down from 4.41 in 2020, 4.46 in 2019 and 4.51 in
2018.
Nowhere is this trend more apparent than at No. 20 Wisconsin (No. 18 College Football Playoff ), which has a chance to produce statistically the best season of any FBS run defense in more than a decade.
“The No. 1 thing when you’re playing against a team is you’ve got to stop the run,” Wisconsin linebacker Leo Chenal said. “You don’t want to give them any momentum. You don’t want to give them an easy 5 yards, 4 yards.”
Wisconsin (6-3, 4-2 Big Ten) has won five straight games thanks largely to a defense that allows 54.7 yards rushing per game — 26 fewer than any other FBS team — and 1.9 yards per carry.
The last FBS team to finish a season allowing fewer than 55 yards rushing per game is the 2008 Texas Christian squad that yielded 47.1 per game. TCU also gave up 1.7 yards per carry that year, making it the most recent FBS team to end a season allowing fewer than 2 yards per rush.
Alabama allowed 2.01 yards per carry during its 2016 national championship season.
“We’re an experienced defense,” Wisconsin nose tackle Keeanu Benton said. “We didn’t lose many people last year. We’ve been playing with a lot of the same people for two to three years now.”
As tough as Wisconsin has been, it’s an outlier among Power Five teams.
Yards per carry are up from last year in three of the Power Five leagues, thanks in part to the fact that teams from those leagues are playing more nonconference games against Group of Five or Championship Subdivision foes than they did in the pandemic-impacted 2020 season.
The Atlantic Coast Conference has gone from 4.42 to 4.62 yards per rush, the Big 12 has moved from 4.33 to 4.71, and the Southeastern Conference has soared from 4.26 to 4.72. Yards per rush are relatively unchanged in the Big Ten (4.20 to 4.19) and have dipped in the Pac-12 (4.68 to 4.57).
Average yards per carry are up from
2019 — the last non-pandemic season — in every Power Five league but the Big Ten and SEC.
The big drops have come in the Group of Five, where every league’s yards per rush is down from last year’s season-ending average.
Those averages should increase slightly late in the year now that those Group of Five teams are primarily playing conference games with fewer matchups against Power Five programs. By that same logic, Power Five averages could drop over the next couple of weeks.
Even so, it’s noteworthy that Conference USA teams are gaining just 3.99 yards per carry and Mountain West teams are mustering just 3.97. No FBS league has finished a season averaging fewer than 4 yards per carry since American Athletic Conference teams gained 3.93 yards per rush in 2014.
“With the extra year of eligibility with the COVID situation, everybody is more mature,” said Brent Brennan, the coach at Mountain West school San Jose State. “You’ve got guys who are stronger, older, have played more football. You’re not having to fit and fill with younger, less experienced players as much as you would in a normal season.”
Group of Five teams figured to benefit most from the NCAA granting an extra year of eligibility because those leagues had fewer players who would leave school early to enter the NFL draft. While the extra year should have helped teams at every position, longtime Air Force coach Troy Calhoun noted that defenses benefited most.
Fifteen of the 16 players who earned first-team or second-team all-mountain West honors as defensive linemen or linebackers last season are back with their teams this year.
“They’re bigger bodies, they’re older bodies, they’ve been in their system longer so the run fits are more exact … and the open-field tackling’s a little better also,” Calhoun said. “So you just don’t see nearly as many big gains.”
Ricky Rahne, the coach at Conference USA program Old Dominion, believes teams have figured out better ways to defend RPOS (run-pass options) now that they’ve had more time to deal with them.
“Teams have said to themselves, ‘We’re not going to let you just run the ball or just RPO us to death. If you’re going to move the ball, we’re going to make you dropback pass and do some of those things,’” Rahne said. “Some teams have been able to do that.”