Texarkana Gazette

Going for it: Fourth-down heroics fuel football scoring surge

- By Ralph D. Russo

Major college football teams are on a record scoring pace this season and a more aggressive approach on fourth down is helping to fuel the surge.

College football schedule

Through eight weeks of the season, FBS teams are averaging 30.23 points per game, up almost a point and a half from last season and just ahead of the record 30.0 set in 2016.

While last year’s dip in scoring to a sixyear low seemed related to teams moving away from up-tempo offense , the cause for this season’s uptick appears to be—at least in part—tied to fourth-down decisions. Often guided by analytics, teams are going for it on fourth down more frequently and turning more scoring opportunit­ies into touchdowns.

“You know we’re big into analytics and have some different analysts look into that every week,” LSU coach Ed Orgeron said. “We study it during the week. We practice it. There’s some recommenda­tions that they give. Sometimes it’s very aggressive. Sometimes it’s too aggressive.”

Orgeron and LSU went on fourth-and-short four times in a victory against Georgia earlier this month; for the season, the Tigers have attempted nine fourth-down conversion­s in eight games, just one less than in 13 games last season.

Duke coach David Cutcliffe said more teams are catching on to an approach he has used for years.

“There are a lot of companies out there, analytic companies, that have aggressive­ly pursued clients,” Cutcliffe said. “I think a lot of people are listening to them, looking at the math, figuring it out. So I think it is a matter of the cat’s out of the bag.”

Scoring slipped to 28.8 last season, the lowest since 2011, stopping a string of six consecutiv­e seasons where the average increased. Offenses were just as effective last year, but not playing as fast. Plays per game, like scoring, reached a six-year low (69.9) and possession­s per game dropped to 24.39, continuing a downward trend since 2015.

Plays per game have risen to 70.8 on average in 2018, but possession­s have stayed steady, according to Championsh­ip Analytics Inc., a company that provides dozens of Division I schools a weekly statistica­l analysis of their upcoming game.

CAI uses points per possession to measure offensive efficiency. According to CAI, points per possession are up nearly 5 percent from last season, 2.34 compared to 2.23 in 2017. Oklahoma leads the country in points per possession at 4.16. While scoring has increased significan­tly, yards per play is up less than 1 percent, 5.76 last season to 5.79 this year.

“Teams have found other ways to improve their scoring rates without a drastic change in their ability to move the ball on a per play basis,” said Rob Ash, a former Montana State head coach and spokesman for CAI.

One of the ways is playing more offense on fourth down. According to CAI, FBS teams went for it on fourth down 19.3 percent of the time in 2017 and converted 51.8 percent of those attempts.

This season, teams have gone for it 21 percent of the time on fourth down and have converted 54.6 percent.

Army is college football’s current king of fourth down. The Black Knights have gone for it 48 percent of the time and converted 88 percent (22 for 25). Only Air Force (17 for 27) and Florida Atlantic (26 for 13) have attempted more fourth-down conversion­s than Army.

In the red zone, an opponent’s 20-yard line and in, the numbers are even better across the country.

According to research done by Bill Connolly, a writer for SB Nation whose S&P+ metric uses play-by-play data to rank FBS teams , there have been 355 fourth-down conversion attempts in the red zone this season. Teams are converting at a rate 61.4 percent. Last season, teams converted 57.6 percent of their fourth-down conversion attempts in the red zone. The number of attempts is also on pace to surpass last season’s total of 519.

FBS teams overall are scoring touchdowns in the red zone at a greater rate this season (63.6 percent) than last (61.9), according to CAI.

 ?? AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki ?? ■ Army quarterbac­k Kelvin Hopkins Jr., center, celebrates with teammates Calen Holt (22) and Camden Harrison, right, after scoring against Oklahoma on Sept. 22 in Norman, Okla. Major college football teams are on a record scoring pace, and a more aggressive approach on fourth down is helping to fuel the surge. Army is the king of fourth down. The Black Knights have gone for it 48 percent of the time and converted 88 percent (22 for 25).
AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki ■ Army quarterbac­k Kelvin Hopkins Jr., center, celebrates with teammates Calen Holt (22) and Camden Harrison, right, after scoring against Oklahoma on Sept. 22 in Norman, Okla. Major college football teams are on a record scoring pace, and a more aggressive approach on fourth down is helping to fuel the surge. Army is the king of fourth down. The Black Knights have gone for it 48 percent of the time and converted 88 percent (22 for 25).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States