bighawkeyedaddy
Well-Known Member
We also must remember in order to have yards you have to have possession of the football, and with the defense we have ran scheme wise the other team had the ball a lot as well.
We also must remember in order to have yards you have to have possession of the football, and with the defense we have ran scheme wise the other team had the ball a lot as well.
that might impact yards but not ypc. our ypc sucks also.
that might impact yards but not ypc. our ypc sucks also.
We also must remember in order to have yards you have to have possession of the football, and with the defense we have ran scheme wise the other team had the ball a lot as well.
Very true. I just think it is a lot of of different factors. How does this 5 year stretch compare to the previous 5 years before that?
Is there a ranking for ypc? I'd be interested to know how we stack up in that regard.
Outside 2004 (The Sam Brownlee era) the previous five years we never averaged less than 4.2 ypc and our LOWEST season rushing total was 1,865, a figure we have surpased only twice in the last five years.
In the last five years we averaged 1,834 yards per season.
In the prvious five (again ommiting 2004) we averaged 2,183.
Iowa definitely hasn't been a dominant run team recently by any means but other teams in the 2011 B1G benefit pretty greatly from a running/mobile QB.
Top 4 rushing teams in the B1G had mobile QBs
Russel Wilson(WISC) had 79 carries for 338 yards.(4.28 YPC)
Denard Robinson(Michigan) 221 carries for 1176 yards (5.32 YPC)
Taylor Martinez(Neb) 189 carries for 874 yards (4.62 YPC)
Braxton Miller(OSU) 159 carries for 715 yards (4.50 YPC)
JVB had 78 carries for 61 yards.(.78 YPC)
Wisconsin had the least rushing yards from their QB but still got around 300 more yards out of their QB than Iowa did.
Has Iowa's rushing attack been lacking overall(sans 2008)? Yes, but not having a mobile QB contributes pretty heavily too.
Rushing stats in college FB are skewed by how they are figured. Sack yards go against rushing total, while in the NFL they go against the passing yards. Teams that have mobile QB's who run the ball a lot and hardly ever get sacked are going to rank more highly in team rushing stats.
The yards per carry for the running back is the number that should matter to Iowa. Having the overall rushing stats get depressed by sack yards doesn't give you a true look at how effective (or ineffective) Iowa has been at running the ball.
I think this is certainly part of the reason. There are a bunch of reasons for this. Running the ball in predictable situations, running into 8 and 9 man fronts. This definately lowers the ypc averages.
Throw injuries, attrition, and some holes up front every couple years and you've got yourself quite the analysis of the problem.
Iowa's YPC have been pretty bad. It is one thing I kept bringing up when people kept talking about the total yardage numbers for Coker, Robinson, and Wegher.
It is hard to run the ball effectively when everyone knows when and where you are going to run it.