AZGrizFan said:Let's dig into the numbers, shall we?
MSU...scoring 32.5 ppg, but those #'s are bolstered by big scores against horrible teams...56 against Norfolk St., 42 against SUU, 45 against UNC, 49 against NAU...What happened when they face a "real D"? 21 against Sac St. 12 against UND (who had given up 55 to Idaho St., 35 to Weber and 38 to UNC :shock: ). 23 against Western Illinois --the same WIU that's 1-10 right now. UM, on the other hand, scores 30+/game, almost regardless of level of competition.
They give up just 125 ypg rushing. But those numbers are skewed by playing the two cellar-dwellers and giving up just 44 (UNC) and 50 (SUU). NAU rushed for 164 (5.5/carry), CP rushed for 251 (3.4/carry), UCD rushed for 157 (6.8/carry)....so crappy teams have found a way to develop a rush game against MSU. Griz, on the other hand, are incredibly balanced, running the ball 414 times (28 TD's and passing it 411 (26 TD's). Pick your poison, MSU.
They put up massive rush/game numbers, averaging 259.9/game. But that's skewed by 340 against NAU (the worst D in BSC), 451 against UNC (again, the worst D in BSC), 449 against Norfolk St (honestly, should those stats even COUNT?). Sac held them to 141 (3.4/carry), even WIU held them to 194 (4.5/carry)…Griz, on the other hand, have had just ONE FCS team sniff a 200 yard running day (ISU with 197). Outside that, we have five games < 100 yards given up, and 3 games < 70 yards given up rushing, and that's having played 5 of the top 7 rushing offenses in the conference--an AVERAGE of 83 ypg the last four contests.
MSU has outscored opponents in the first half 180-159. in the 2nd half their point differential 92-62. Griz, on the other hand, against a significantly tougher schedule, outscored opponents in the 1st half just 169-165, but in the 2nd half have outscored opponents 248-93 (largest margin in football, I believe).
Read into these what you will, but here's my take. MSU's stats have been piled up against absolutely horrid competition. Norfolk State? UNC? SUU? NAU? WIU? Holy CRAP is there a worse five teams on ANYBODY's schedule? I don't think so--but they looked like world beaters against them. Even against mediocre competition however (UND, CP, WIU, etc) they've struggled to put away teams. My predictions for Saturday:
* Game is close at halftime (potentially even with a small MSU lead that they jumped out to and hung on), 14-13 or 14-10, something like that
* Griz give up over 100 yards rushing in 1st half
* Griz score twice in 3rd quarter to pull away
* Griz shut down running game in 2nd half, < 75 yards given up
* MSU's passing game struggles, with at least 1 pick and < 50% completion ratio
Griz win going away, 42-21
hm.grwn.grizfan said:AZGrizFan said:Let's dig into the numbers, shall we?
MSU...scoring 32.5 ppg, but those #'s are bolstered by big scores against horrible teams...56 against Norfolk St., 42 against SUU, 45 against UNC, 49 against NAU...What happened when they face a "real D"? 21 against Sac St. 12 against UND (who had given up 55 to Idaho St., 35 to Weber and 38 to UNC :shock: ). 23 against Western Illinois --the same WIU that's 1-10 right now. UM, on the other hand, scores 30+/game, almost regardless of level of competition.
They give up just 125 ypg rushing. But those numbers are skewed by playing the two cellar-dwellers and giving up just 44 (UNC) and 50 (SUU). NAU rushed for 164 (5.5/carry), CP rushed for 251 (3.4/carry), UCD rushed for 157 (6.8/carry)....so crappy teams have found a way to develop a rush game against MSU. Griz, on the other hand, are incredibly balanced, running the ball 414 times (28 TD's and passing it 411 (26 TD's). Pick your poison, MSU.
They put up massive rush/game numbers, averaging 259.9/game. But that's skewed by 340 against NAU (the worst D in BSC), 451 against UNC (again, the worst D in BSC), 449 against Norfolk St (honestly, should those stats even COUNT?). Sac held them to 141 (3.4/carry), even WIU held them to 194 (4.5/carry)…Griz, on the other hand, have had just ONE FCS team sniff a 200 yard running day (ISU with 197). Outside that, we have five games < 100 yards given up, and 3 games < 70 yards given up rushing, and that's having played 5 of the top 7 rushing offenses in the conference--an AVERAGE of 83 ypg the last four contests.
MSU has outscored opponents in the first half 180-159. in the 2nd half their point differential 92-62. Griz, on the other hand, against a significantly tougher schedule, outscored opponents in the 1st half just 169-165, but in the 2nd half have outscored opponents 248-93 (largest margin in football, I believe).
Read into these what you will, but here's my take. MSU's stats have been piled up against absolutely horrid competition. Norfolk State? UNC? SUU? NAU? WIU? Holy CRAP is there a worse five teams on ANYBODY's schedule? I don't think so--but they looked like world beaters against them. Even against mediocre competition however (UND, CP, WIU, etc) they've struggled to put away teams. My predictions for Saturday:
* Game is close at halftime (potentially even with a small MSU lead that they jumped out to and hung on), 14-13 or 14-10, something like that
* Griz give up over 100 yards rushing in 1st half
* Griz score twice in 3rd quarter to pull away
* Griz shut down running game in 2nd half, < 75 yards given up
* MSU's passing game struggles, with at least 1 pick and < 50% completion ratio
Griz win going away, 42-21
Where in the hell are the graphs to go with the stats?
I seem to recall a similar, stat-heavy post by you prior to the SuckSt game.AZGrizFan said:Let's dig into the numbers, shall we?
MSU...scoring 32.5 ppg, but those #'s are bolstered by big scores against horrible teams...56 against Norfolk St., 42 against SUU, 45 against UNC, 49 against NAU...What happened when they face a "real D"? 21 against Sac St. 12 against UND (who had given up 55 to Idaho St., 35 to Weber and 38 to UNC :shock: ). 23 against Western Illinois --the same WIU that's 1-10 right now. UM, on the other hand, scores 30+/game, almost regardless of level of competition.
They give up just 125 ypg rushing. But those numbers are skewed by playing the two cellar-dwellers and giving up just 44 (UNC) and 50 (SUU). NAU rushed for 164 (5.5/carry), CP rushed for 251 (3.4/carry), UCD rushed for 157 (6.8/carry)....so crappy teams have found a way to develop a rush game against MSU. Griz, on the other hand, are incredibly balanced, running the ball 414 times (28 TD's and passing it 411 (26 TD's). Pick your poison, MSU.
They put up massive rush/game numbers, averaging 259.9/game. But that's skewed by 340 against NAU (the worst D in BSC), 451 against UNC (again, the worst D in BSC), 449 against Norfolk St (honestly, should those stats even COUNT?). Sac held them to 141 (3.4/carry), even WIU held them to 194 (4.5/carry)…Griz, on the other hand, have had just ONE FCS team sniff a 200 yard running day (ISU with 197). Outside that, we have five games < 100 yards given up, and 3 games < 70 yards given up rushing, and that's having played 5 of the top 7 rushing offenses in the conference--an AVERAGE of 83 ypg the last four contests.
MSU has outscored opponents in the first half 180-159. in the 2nd half their point differential 92-62. Griz, on the other hand, against a significantly tougher schedule, outscored opponents in the 1st half just 169-165, but in the 2nd half have outscored opponents 248-93 (largest margin in football, I believe).
Read into these what you will, but here's my take. MSU's stats have been piled up against absolutely horrid competition. Norfolk State? UNC? SUU? NAU? WIU? Holy CRAP is there a worse five teams on ANYBODY's schedule? I don't think so--but they looked like world beaters against them. Even against mediocre competition however (UND, CP, WIU, etc) they've struggled to put away teams. My predictions for Saturday:
* Game is close at halftime (potentially even with a small MSU lead that they jumped out to and hung on), 14-13 or 14-10, something like that
* Griz give up over 100 yards rushing in 1st half
* Griz score twice in 3rd quarter to pull away
* Griz shut down running game in 2nd half, < 75 yards given up
* MSU's passing game struggles, with at least 1 pick and < 50% completion ratio
Griz win going away, 42-21
garizzalies said:I seem to recall a similar, stat-heavy post by you prior to the SuckSt game.AZGrizFan said:Let's dig into the numbers, shall we?
MSU...scoring 32.5 ppg, but those #'s are bolstered by big scores against horrible teams...56 against Norfolk St., 42 against SUU, 45 against UNC, 49 against NAU...What happened when they face a "real D"? 21 against Sac St. 12 against UND (who had given up 55 to Idaho St., 35 to Weber and 38 to UNC :shock: ). 23 against Western Illinois --the same WIU that's 1-10 right now. UM, on the other hand, scores 30+/game, almost regardless of level of competition.
They give up just 125 ypg rushing. But those numbers are skewed by playing the two cellar-dwellers and giving up just 44 (UNC) and 50 (SUU). NAU rushed for 164 (5.5/carry), CP rushed for 251 (3.4/carry), UCD rushed for 157 (6.8/carry)....so crappy teams have found a way to develop a rush game against MSU. Griz, on the other hand, are incredibly balanced, running the ball 414 times (28 TD's and passing it 411 (26 TD's). Pick your poison, MSU.
They put up massive rush/game numbers, averaging 259.9/game. But that's skewed by 340 against NAU (the worst D in BSC), 451 against UNC (again, the worst D in BSC), 449 against Norfolk St (honestly, should those stats even COUNT?). Sac held them to 141 (3.4/carry), even WIU held them to 194 (4.5/carry)…Griz, on the other hand, have had just ONE FCS team sniff a 200 yard running day (ISU with 197). Outside that, we have five games < 100 yards given up, and 3 games < 70 yards given up rushing, and that's having played 5 of the top 7 rushing offenses in the conference--an AVERAGE of 83 ypg the last four contests.
MSU has outscored opponents in the first half 180-159. in the 2nd half their point differential 92-62. Griz, on the other hand, against a significantly tougher schedule, outscored opponents in the 1st half just 169-165, but in the 2nd half have outscored opponents 248-93 (largest margin in football, I believe).
Read into these what you will, but here's my take. MSU's stats have been piled up against absolutely horrid competition. Norfolk State? UNC? SUU? NAU? WIU? Holy CRAP is there a worse five teams on ANYBODY's schedule? I don't think so--but they looked like world beaters against them. Even against mediocre competition however (UND, CP, WIU, etc) they've struggled to put away teams. My predictions for Saturday:
* Game is close at halftime (potentially even with a small MSU lead that they jumped out to and hung on), 14-13 or 14-10, something like that
* Griz give up over 100 yards rushing in 1st half
* Griz score twice in 3rd quarter to pull away
* Griz shut down running game in 2nd half, < 75 yards given up
* MSU's passing game struggles, with at least 1 pick and < 50% completion ratio
Griz win going away, 42-21
Stats don’t mean shit, especially in this game. Just like vs. SuckSt, whichever team wants it more, will win
11. Hold on to the DAMN ballEverettGriz said:I see ten keys to a GRIZ victory:
1. Stop the run
2. Limit penalties
3. Stop the run
4. Stop the run
5. Stop the run
6. Stop the run
7. Stop the run
8. Stop the run
9. Stop the run
10. Stop the run
Grisly Fan said:11. Hold on to the DAMN ballEverettGriz said:I see ten keys to a GRIZ victory:
1. Stop the run
2. Limit penalties
3. Stop the run
4. Stop the run
5. Stop the run
6. Stop the run
7. Stop the run
8. Stop the run
9. Stop the run
10. Stop the run
I'm with you that stats can be misleading, for sure, but the stats running up to the Sac game are not like the stats going into this game. We know a lot more about every team now than we did in week 6-7.garizzalies said:I seem to recall a similar, stat-heavy post by you prior to the SuckSt game.AZGrizFan said:Let's dig into the numbers, shall we?
MSU...scoring 32.5 ppg, but those #'s are bolstered by big scores against horrible teams...56 against Norfolk St., 42 against SUU, 45 against UNC, 49 against NAU...What happened when they face a "real D"? 21 against Sac St. 12 against UND (who had given up 55 to Idaho St., 35 to Weber and 38 to UNC :shock: ). 23 against Western Illinois --the same WIU that's 1-10 right now. UM, on the other hand, scores 30+/game, almost regardless of level of competition.
They give up just 125 ypg rushing. But those numbers are skewed by playing the two cellar-dwellers and giving up just 44 (UNC) and 50 (SUU). NAU rushed for 164 (5.5/carry), CP rushed for 251 (3.4/carry), UCD rushed for 157 (6.8/carry)....so crappy teams have found a way to develop a rush game against MSU. Griz, on the other hand, are incredibly balanced, running the ball 414 times (28 TD's and passing it 411 (26 TD's). Pick your poison, MSU.
They put up massive rush/game numbers, averaging 259.9/game. But that's skewed by 340 against NAU (the worst D in BSC), 451 against UNC (again, the worst D in BSC), 449 against Norfolk St (honestly, should those stats even COUNT?). Sac held them to 141 (3.4/carry), even WIU held them to 194 (4.5/carry)…Griz, on the other hand, have had just ONE FCS team sniff a 200 yard running day (ISU with 197). Outside that, we have five games < 100 yards given up, and 3 games < 70 yards given up rushing, and that's having played 5 of the top 7 rushing offenses in the conference--an AVERAGE of 83 ypg the last four contests.
MSU has outscored opponents in the first half 180-159. in the 2nd half their point differential 92-62. Griz, on the other hand, against a significantly tougher schedule, outscored opponents in the 1st half just 169-165, but in the 2nd half have outscored opponents 248-93 (largest margin in football, I believe).
Read into these what you will, but here's my take. MSU's stats have been piled up against absolutely horrid competition. Norfolk State? UNC? SUU? NAU? WIU? Holy CRAP is there a worse five teams on ANYBODY's schedule? I don't think so--but they looked like world beaters against them. Even against mediocre competition however (UND, CP, WIU, etc) they've struggled to put away teams. My predictions for Saturday:
* Game is close at halftime (potentially even with a small MSU lead that they jumped out to and hung on), 14-13 or 14-10, something like that
* Griz give up over 100 yards rushing in 1st half
* Griz score twice in 3rd quarter to pull away
* Griz shut down running game in 2nd half, < 75 yards given up
* MSU's passing game struggles, with at least 1 pick and < 50% completion ratio
Griz win going away, 42-21
Stats don’t mean shit, especially in this game. Just like vs. SuckSt, whichever team wants it more, will win
uofmman1122 said:I'm with you that stats can be misleading, for sure, but the stats running up to the Sac game are not like the stats going into this game. We know a lot more about every team now than we did in week 6-7.garizzalies said:I seem to recall a similar, stat-heavy post by you prior to the SuckSt game.AZGrizFan said:Let's dig into the numbers, shall we?
MSU...scoring 32.5 ppg, but those #'s are bolstered by big scores against horrible teams...56 against Norfolk St., 42 against SUU, 45 against UNC, 49 against NAU...What happened when they face a "real D"? 21 against Sac St. 12 against UND (who had given up 55 to Idaho St., 35 to Weber and 38 to UNC :shock: ). 23 against Western Illinois --the same WIU that's 1-10 right now. UM, on the other hand, scores 30+/game, almost regardless of level of competition.
They give up just 125 ypg rushing. But those numbers are skewed by playing the two cellar-dwellers and giving up just 44 (UNC) and 50 (SUU). NAU rushed for 164 (5.5/carry), CP rushed for 251 (3.4/carry), UCD rushed for 157 (6.8/carry)....so crappy teams have found a way to develop a rush game against MSU. Griz, on the other hand, are incredibly balanced, running the ball 414 times (28 TD's and passing it 411 (26 TD's). Pick your poison, MSU.
They put up massive rush/game numbers, averaging 259.9/game. But that's skewed by 340 against NAU (the worst D in BSC), 451 against UNC (again, the worst D in BSC), 449 against Norfolk St (honestly, should those stats even COUNT?). Sac held them to 141 (3.4/carry), even WIU held them to 194 (4.5/carry)…Griz, on the other hand, have had just ONE FCS team sniff a 200 yard running day (ISU with 197). Outside that, we have five games < 100 yards given up, and 3 games < 70 yards given up rushing, and that's having played 5 of the top 7 rushing offenses in the conference--an AVERAGE of 83 ypg the last four contests.
MSU has outscored opponents in the first half 180-159. in the 2nd half their point differential 92-62. Griz, on the other hand, against a significantly tougher schedule, outscored opponents in the 1st half just 169-165, but in the 2nd half have outscored opponents 248-93 (largest margin in football, I believe).
Read into these what you will, but here's my take. MSU's stats have been piled up against absolutely horrid competition. Norfolk State? UNC? SUU? NAU? WIU? Holy CRAP is there a worse five teams on ANYBODY's schedule? I don't think so--but they looked like world beaters against them. Even against mediocre competition however (UND, CP, WIU, etc) they've struggled to put away teams. My predictions for Saturday:
* Game is close at halftime (potentially even with a small MSU lead that they jumped out to and hung on), 14-13 or 14-10, something like that
* Griz give up over 100 yards rushing in 1st half
* Griz score twice in 3rd quarter to pull away
* Griz shut down running game in 2nd half, < 75 yards given up
* MSU's passing game struggles, with at least 1 pick and < 50% completion ratio
Griz win going away, 42-21
Stats don’t mean shit, especially in this game. Just like vs. SuckSt, whichever team wants it more, will win
The truth is, the cats have statistically the best running game in the conference, but they've played (if you count UND as a conference team) the 3rd (which they lost to), 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 13th, and 14th ranked run defenses in the conference to get there. The Griz are #2.
Anything can happen, but I feel like we match up really well against their strength. If MSU has to pass to win this game, it will probably be very, very good for us.
PlayerRep said:Grisly Fan said:11. Hold on to the DAMN ballEverettGriz said:I see ten keys to a GRIZ victory:
1. Stop the run
2. Limit penalties
3. Stop the run
4. Stop the run
5. Stop the run
6. Stop the run
7. Stop the run
8. Stop the run
9. Stop the run
10. Stop the run
12. No turnovers (meaning both no fumbles and no interceptions as well no ST screw ups). I know 11 was probably meant to say that.
PlayerRep said:I wonder if the Cats would put Anderson at QB if they get behind or the starter isn't doing well? I suppose that would be impacted by whether he has practiced at QB.
PlayerRep said:I wonder if the Cats would put Anderson at QB if they get behind or the starter isn't doing well? I suppose that would be impacted by whether he has practiced at QB.
PlayerRep said:I wonder if the Cats would put Anderson at QB if they get behind or the starter isn't doing well? I suppose that would be impacted by whether he has practiced at QB.
MSU Quarterbacks practice?PlayerRep said:I wonder if the Cats would put Anderson at QB if they get behind or the starter isn't doing well? I suppose that would be impacted by whether he has practiced at QB.
wbtfg said:PlayerRep said:I wonder if the Cats would put Anderson at QB if they get behind or the starter isn't doing well? I suppose that would be impacted by whether he has practiced at QB.
Andersen will take snaps at QB regardless of how the game is going. Travis Jonsen will also take a number of snaps at QB. I could see a world where either one of them plays over 50% of snaps at QB.
It will be interesting to see what MSU/Choate/Miller's offensive game plan will be. Is there some semblance of run/pass balance or will we lean heavily on the Wildcat/Option/+1 run game?
PlayerRep said:I wonder if the Cats would put Anderson at QB if they get behind or the starter isn't doing well? I suppose that would be impacted by whether he has practiced at QB.
SoldierGriz said:When Griz get 1st and goal from the five, I predict:
- Ostmo up the gut for 2.
- Ostmo up the gut for TD.
- Wait, time out cats - No TD.
- Eastwood up the gut for TD.
FTC.
-
Ha. Team Bus probably left Eastwood in Phillipsburgh.