I wanted to take a look at some of our general defensive stats and then back out some of the big play TDs they’ve allowed. As we’ve seen in the first 4 games it’s the “big play” that can bite the defense. If our defense can continue to reduce these big plays this gives us a little glimpse of what could be. Hopefully as the team continues along and our secondary keeps improving these big plays can get cut back.
2015 defensive general stats:
Rush Total: 716
Rush YPG: 179
Pass Total: 733
Pass YPG: 183.2
Total Yards: 1449
Total YPG: 362.2
Points allowed: 100
Points per game: 25
NDSU game:
- 27 yard TD pass
- 19 yard TD run
- 44 yard pass
- 27 yard pass
- 33 yard run
CPSLO game:
- 60 yard TD run
- 36 yard TD pass
Liberty game:
- 72 yard TD pass
- 32 yard TD pass
- 40 yard TD run
- 43 yard pass
- 39 yard pass
NAU game:
- 57 yard TD pass
- 34 yard TD pass
- 29 yard pass
This season on the big plays the Grizzly defense has allowed:
- 440 passing yards and 6 TDs (60% of passing yards allowed and 75% of pass TDs)
- 152 rushing yards and 3 TDs (17% of rushing yards allowed and 60% of rushing TDs)
The passing big plays really caught me. The Grizzly pass defense is showing improvement but obviously this shows a weak spot. Consider that 440 yards and 6 TDs comes on just 11 plays. The pass defense has defended 94 passes this season. So on 12% of the snaps they’ve played they’ve allowed 75% of the passing TDs and 60% of the total yards. You can spin this two ways. Obviously it’s not good that such a small percentage of plays is giving up so many points. On the other hand you’ve got a pretty clear point that shows what needs the most improvement, additionally on 88% of all passing downs our defense is doing it's damn job. The NAU game big plays could argue the lack of Harris and Ramussen had an effect – recall the longer TD was against Sanders who was playing in Rasmussen’s stead and the 2nd TD with Nelson in single coverage seemed like a spot where a safety should have been helping (middle of the field). Excuses aside though the numbers are the numbers.
Now consider this – if the Grizzly defense would’ve allowed half as many big plays / scores in the first four games, here’s how the stats would’ve adjusted:
Rush total: 640 yards
Rush YPG: 160 YPG
Pass total: 513 yards
Pass YPG: 128.3 YPG
Total yards 1153 yards
Total YPG: 230.6 YPG
Points allowed: 65
Points per game: 13
And without a doubt we’d be 4-0.
Now is this the defenses “fault” we’re 2-2? Good Lord no – we’ve all watched the games, we know there’s improvements needed from every position. We’re down our starting QB, our D-line is beat up, and we’re in a quandary at center after losing our all-conference center before the season even started.
You guys know me, I lean to the positive side of things. Gregorak’s defenses generally improve, statistically as the seasons go on. Add in we’re leaning on some new guys and some revised depth – as experience builds, hopefully so will prevention of big plays.
If the Griz can cut back the big plays to just a handful per game then they'll be in a great position to win a lot more games this season - even if the offense can only score in the mid/upper 20's. The challenge is we've got the top 3 offenses yet to play this year, MSU, EWU, and PSU. On the good side we've also got the 8th, 10th, 11th, and 12th ranked offenses too.
2015 defensive general stats:
Rush Total: 716
Rush YPG: 179
Pass Total: 733
Pass YPG: 183.2
Total Yards: 1449
Total YPG: 362.2
Points allowed: 100
Points per game: 25
NDSU game:
- 27 yard TD pass
- 19 yard TD run
- 44 yard pass
- 27 yard pass
- 33 yard run
CPSLO game:
- 60 yard TD run
- 36 yard TD pass
Liberty game:
- 72 yard TD pass
- 32 yard TD pass
- 40 yard TD run
- 43 yard pass
- 39 yard pass
NAU game:
- 57 yard TD pass
- 34 yard TD pass
- 29 yard pass
This season on the big plays the Grizzly defense has allowed:
- 440 passing yards and 6 TDs (60% of passing yards allowed and 75% of pass TDs)
- 152 rushing yards and 3 TDs (17% of rushing yards allowed and 60% of rushing TDs)
The passing big plays really caught me. The Grizzly pass defense is showing improvement but obviously this shows a weak spot. Consider that 440 yards and 6 TDs comes on just 11 plays. The pass defense has defended 94 passes this season. So on 12% of the snaps they’ve played they’ve allowed 75% of the passing TDs and 60% of the total yards. You can spin this two ways. Obviously it’s not good that such a small percentage of plays is giving up so many points. On the other hand you’ve got a pretty clear point that shows what needs the most improvement, additionally on 88% of all passing downs our defense is doing it's damn job. The NAU game big plays could argue the lack of Harris and Ramussen had an effect – recall the longer TD was against Sanders who was playing in Rasmussen’s stead and the 2nd TD with Nelson in single coverage seemed like a spot where a safety should have been helping (middle of the field). Excuses aside though the numbers are the numbers.
Now consider this – if the Grizzly defense would’ve allowed half as many big plays / scores in the first four games, here’s how the stats would’ve adjusted:
Rush total: 640 yards
Rush YPG: 160 YPG
Pass total: 513 yards
Pass YPG: 128.3 YPG
Total yards 1153 yards
Total YPG: 230.6 YPG
Points allowed: 65
Points per game: 13
And without a doubt we’d be 4-0.
Now is this the defenses “fault” we’re 2-2? Good Lord no – we’ve all watched the games, we know there’s improvements needed from every position. We’re down our starting QB, our D-line is beat up, and we’re in a quandary at center after losing our all-conference center before the season even started.
You guys know me, I lean to the positive side of things. Gregorak’s defenses generally improve, statistically as the seasons go on. Add in we’re leaning on some new guys and some revised depth – as experience builds, hopefully so will prevention of big plays.
If the Griz can cut back the big plays to just a handful per game then they'll be in a great position to win a lot more games this season - even if the offense can only score in the mid/upper 20's. The challenge is we've got the top 3 offenses yet to play this year, MSU, EWU, and PSU. On the good side we've also got the 8th, 10th, 11th, and 12th ranked offenses too.