The Oklahoman

Big 12 teams are content to run

- John Raby

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – The Big 12 is no longer considered a prolific passing league, replaced for now by a wave of ground attacks that are producing plenty of individual stars.

In every year except two from 2002 to 2018, the Big 12 had at least one quarterbac­k exceed 4,000 passing yards. In 2012, there were four of them.

It didn’t happen in the last two seasons. This year, no quarterbac­ks are among the top 25 in the nation in passing yards.

No one seems to miss those gunslinger days. Big 12 teams are now content with mostly handing the ball off – and carrying it far.

“It sure looks like a physical conference. Everybody plays a physical brand of football,” Texas coach Steve Sarkisian said. “I don’t think this is the Big 12 of old when you watch from afar. Teams believe in running the ball and stopping the run.

“The old adage of that’s where the game is won and lost at the line of scrimmage is kind of what it feels like.”

Numerous running backs have joined all-conference preseason picks Breece Hall of Iowa State and Bijan Robinson of Texas in grabbing early-season headlines.

Kansas State sophomore Deuce Vaughn leads the way with 371 yards, which is eighth nationally.

Two Baylor players are averaging more than 100 yards per game: Abram Smith (122) and Trestan Ebner (106). The running resurgence is becoming a team effort, too. Last weekend Texas ran for 427 yards, Baylor 307 and No. 25 Kansas State 269.

Bear attack

In three games Baylor has already surpassed last year’s team rushing total. The Bears didn’t have anyone rush for 100 yards in 2020. Jeff Grimes was hired from BYU as Baylor’s offensive coordinato­r in the offseason and the Bears already have six 100-yard efforts.

“Long way to go, but I like what we’ve done so far,” said Baylor coach Dave Aranda.

Behind Smith, Ebner and Taye McWilliams, Baylor is averaging 321 yards on the ground, which is fifth in the nation. McWilliams has a league-high 13 yards per carry.

Smith is the first Baylor running back with three consecutiv­e 100-yard games since 2015.

The Bears will face the league’s top rush defense Saturday against No. 14 Iowa State. The Cyclones also have Hall, a preseason Associated Press all-American who got off to a slow start with a pair of 69-yard games before rushing for 100 yards as Iowa State easily beat UNLV.

Deuce is wild

Vaughn has been the league’s top workhorse so far with 62 carries in three games. He needed just 13 games to surpass 1,000 career yards, one game faster than school career record-holder Darren Sproles. “It’s a humbling stat,” Vaughn said.

Kansas State coach Chris Klieman credits his big blockers as well as change-of-pace back Joe Ervin with helping to spring Vaughn for big gains. “He’s a special player. A special talent,” Klieman said.

Vaughn won’t be the running back with the highest one-game production so far on the field Saturday. That honor goes to Oklahoma State’s Jaylen Warren, a Utah State transfer who has helped the Cowboys soften the loss of all-American Chuba Hubbard to the NFL.

Warren carried 32 times for 218 yards – both Big 12 highs this season – in a win last week at Boise State.

Texas stampede

Bijan Robinson, Alabama transfer Keilon Robinson and Roschon Johnson ripped off TD runs of longer than 60 yards last week and Texas had six rushing TDs against Rice. The Longhorns are looking for more consistenc­y, though. Bijan Robinson, who is averaging about 100 yards per game, was limited to 69 and Texas had 252 total yards a week earlier in a loss at Arkansas.

Evans stands out

Keep an eye on TCU’s Zach Evans, who averaged 7.7 yards per carry as a freshman last year and ran for 190 yards in his last game Sept. 11 against California.

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