Maryland Preview (Updated with Links)

Lots of football across the country watch today. But, of course we are going to focus on the Wolfpack’s key Atlantic Division battle with the Maryland Terrapins.

Several of the writers here enjoy discussing meaningful stats or data analysis like the Rule of 24 and 50. (Combining facts along with making fun of the delusionally optimistic is another area that I enjoy writing about.) So it should come as no surprise when I tell you that I went looking to see if there was anything worth saying from the wonderful world of numbers about this weekend’s game against Maryland.

The only time I saw Maryland play this year was when they were getting waxed by West Virginia (and I soon lost interest). My only other data point came from talking to several UVa fans who were lamenting the 4th quarter collapse by the Hoos to the Terps this past weekend. I say all of this as a disclaimer and acknowledgement that there could easily be meaningful things about the Terps that I wasn’t able to find solely from their stats.

For those that missed the link to nearly every stat worth knowing, let me give it to you one last time. So starting at the source for all statistical knowledge and using my superior cut and paste skills:

– I moved the numbers from State and Maryland into one table
– Divided the stats into offense, defense, and special teams
– Threw in Sagarin rankings for kicks (and for Mr.O)
– And came up with this:

If any disinterested fan looked these numbers over, they would probably conclude that:

– Maryland has a very slight edge in most offensive and special team stats
– State has a very slight edge in most defensive stats
– The only significant difference between the two team’s stats lies in tackles for loss where State has a significant edge (43 TFL for -283 yards vs Maryland’s 29 TFL for -85 yards)

The ultimate conclusion from this disinterested fan would probably be that Saturday’s noon game would pit two average/below average teams in what should be a pretty even contest. Then of course they might throw in the oft-repeated phrase about the winner of the turnover battle probably winning the game. (BTW, this highly interested fan would also draw those same conclusions.)

State fans would probably scream that I should go to the trouble of throwing out the offensive stats from the first three games and only use the games that Evans has played in. However, once you realize that State’s offense, even with Evans, is not exactly running on high-octane…then you should also realize that any improvement in the numbers would not be enough to substantially change the opinions reached with the original table.

However, I did find one table that proved to be a source of encouragement as well as a source of amusement:

Items of Interest and Hilarity

– Maryland’s SOS is substantially lower than State’s. Thus providing hope to State fans that even though the key stats are roughly even with Maryland…that Maryland’s stats are somewhat inflated based on their weaker schedule. (Let me caution against rampant enthusiasm until after the final horn. State has proven over and over through the last few years to be capable of “givingâ€? the game away to far worse opponents than Maryland will pose this Saturday.)

– Miami sitting with a Sagarin ranking of 63 half way through the year has to make everyone outside the city limits of Miami laugh at least a little.

– Note that UNC’s “world-class SOS” actually ranks lower than State’s at the half-way point of the season. No matter how the final SOS numbers work out…State fans can always point out that having to play UNC worked against State’s SOS while increasing UNC’s.

– BJD95 has mentioned several times how weak the Coastal Division is this year. The Sagarin rankings illustrate this disparity quite well.

CONCLUSIONS

There’s nothing earth-shattering from me this week. State’s offense is no longer listed under “futile� or “one-dimensional� in the dictionary…and that’s a very good thing. However, the offense has a long way to go before defensive coordinators are going to lose vast quantities of sleep. Based on the last three games, I would tend to argue that opposing defensives should stay away from man coverage and make sure that the linebackers play close to the LOS to support the run and provide immediate pressure on passes behind the LOS.

It would be easy to argue that State never recovered from Andre Brown’s fumble at the end of the first half. However, that conclusion might be too simplistic. The fumble cost two points and loss of possession. A defense that has a tendency towards giving up long drives and big plays had alot to do with the backward slide at the end of the first half.

Bottom line: State’s defense still troubles me. But, let’s see how they perform against an offense that managed only 274 yards against MTSU and 275 yards against FIU.

About VaWolf82

Engineer living in Central Va. and senior curmudgeon amongst SFN authors One wife, two kids, one dog, four vehicles on insurance, and four phones on cell plan...looking forward to empty nest status. Graduated 1982

'06 Football General Stat of the Day

49 Responses to Maryland Preview (Updated with Links)

  1. choppack1 10/17/2006 at 10:54 PM #

    Good stuff VaWolf – looking at the last 3 games – probably the toughest on our schedule, we have made definitive step forward though…If you take the averages of our last 3 games here’s how we fair:

    Rushing Passing
    BC 141 179 320
    FSU 150 190 340
    WFU 134 200 334
    425 569 994
    Avg 141.67 189.67 331.33
    Rank 59 72 70

    Now, we’re not setting the world on fire – but we are looking much better. Even more encouraging is that our passing game is putting up better #s each week. When you look at these #s – one would think we should be a pick ’em at UMd (unless, of course, you consider our last road game and Evans’ concussion.)

    Also – it appears that UMd is very weak against the run. I don’t know how much of that came vs. WVU, but UVA somehow hung up 26 on them. Again – this should favor us.

    A big question mark for us will be how Daniel and (possibly more importantly) the staff react to his concussion and the last drive vs. WFU. Evans now knows he can lose – and he also knows he got his bell rung. Our staff may seek to protect Evans through emphasizing the run – especially when you look at UMd paultry run D.

  2. BorntoHowl 10/17/2006 at 10:59 PM #

    Maryland scored a lot late against Va. Therefore, they are capable of mustering some offense. After the Turps score on their first drive, we should be able to take a lead probably by halftime. Then Trestman will pull the clamshell doors shut and wait out the game pacing the sideline calling plays that insures a zero when calculating 3rd down conversions. Run it on first down, pass incomplete on second, throw it to Ant on 3rd, who drops the ones right in his hands.

    I’m just getting a bad attitude after the game plans against BC and FSU were all about football. Play the game with passion like your job depended on it. We could have taken Wake going away, but chose not to. Find an offense then shut it down. I’m at a total loss whether the coaches want to play to win or play not to lose (where we in particular lose most of the time anyway).

  3. choppack1 10/17/2006 at 11:18 PM #

    born2howl – have you ever thought that the conservative philosophy on offense is more a reflection of the HC than the OC?

  4. class of 74 10/18/2006 at 7:44 AM #

    ^I think that’s probably true. We all are creatures of habit and the last 6 games of last season created this habit that carries over to this season IMHO.
    We certainly do not attack the whole field on offense that’s for sure.

    This game with Maryland should determine if Boise is in our team’s future travel plans.

  5. Jeff 10/18/2006 at 7:58 AM #

    Man, have I missed you!!!

    Great, great, great stuff!!!

    I hadn’t paid much attention to Maryland this year, so it was nice to get a little info on what to expect. They seem to be a little better than I expected.

    It is amazing that their SOS is so low even with West Virginia having been on their schedule. That really says something.

  6. BoKnowsNCS71 10/18/2006 at 8:00 AM #

    http://cfn.scout.com/2/579479.html

    MPC Computers Bowl
    Boise, ID
    Bronco Stadium
    December 28, 2006, ESPN
    WAC vs. ACC No. 8
    Bowl Projection: Nevada vs. NC State

  7. RickJ 10/18/2006 at 8:12 AM #

    “Let me caution against rampant enthusiasm until after the final horn. State has proven over and over through the last few years to be capable of “givingâ€? the game away to far worse opponents than Maryland will pose this Saturday.”

    My favorite sentence in a fine entry. I think we are a little better than Maryland but this game is a mystery to me. Maryland is a little slow on both sides of the ball but when Nate Morton can catch a pass 20 yards downfield and run another 30 into the endzone in an obvious passing situation – what difference does speed make?

    This is only our second road game of the year. Rivers was 0 – 4 versus the Terps while Davis & Stone were 2 – 0. Go figure.

  8. Wolf-n-Atl 10/18/2006 at 9:19 AM #

    How are GT & UM’s SOS so high when they played Notre Dame and Louisville respectively?

  9. cfpack03 10/18/2006 at 9:48 AM #

    ^ my assumption is b/c they’re in the Coastal div

  10. RAWFS 10/18/2006 at 9:50 AM #

    The bottom line is that State will hover around the .500 mark until they get more points production from their offense. Take a look at the -1.0 scoring differential (20.17 scored vs. 21.17 allowed) and you see why this is a struggling ballclub.

    Note than in 2002, State won 11 times and averaged 31.1 for and 18.9 against.

    While this team cannot be compared to the Rivers/TA/Cotchery offense of that year, the points differential in the Wolfpack favor is a clear indication of the team’s overall record.

  11. redfred2 10/18/2006 at 11:11 AM #

    I’ll be honest, I had five guys down for a fishing trip and did not see one second of the game. I’m still recovering from the weekend right now. But from everything I’ve read and heard I’m lead to believe that the offense is still set in a reactionary mode. Only try something ‘IF’ the opposing team is having success, if not just sit back and wait until they do. I am just wondering if the coaches think that could ever once put the pressure on the opposing team by opening it up early and then staying in a aggressive posture all game long? All of the weapons are there in the skilled positions.

  12. packbackr04 10/18/2006 at 11:39 AM #

    great pt red^^^ evans can only come back in so many 4th quarter drives

  13. RAWFS 10/18/2006 at 11:42 AM #

    Call it “lack of a killer instinct.”

    Seems like the brain trust doesn’t want to bury the opposition alive.

  14. choppack1 10/18/2006 at 11:45 AM #

    RAWFS – Let’s hold that jury out for now. We want for the kill vs. Akron (that didn’t turn out well.) Against Wake, FSU and BC, we really weren’t in the position to go for the kill. Hopefully, against 4 of our next, we may be in that position. Our next 2 games should tell us a lot.

  15. choppack1 10/18/2006 at 11:46 AM #

    Is it me – or do I/we say that every week??

  16. westwolf 10/18/2006 at 12:00 PM #

    After six years of watching teams coached by Amato, the only I can predict is that no one has any idea what type of State team will show up for any given day.

    We lose to Akron…a laughably horrendous team…

    We beat FSU and BC, primarily by passing vertically and deep…

    Then lose to Wake without throwing one deep virtical pass for the entire game.

    Who knows what will happen at Umd, but if we lose, our bowl chnaces, and start to look pretty slim.

  17. RAWFS 10/18/2006 at 12:05 PM #

    Chop – I would agree with you….BUT…it really seems like to me we are content to live inside a shell that’s less than 10 yards from the line of scrimmage and work east and west looking for edges until we are forced to stratch the field.

    Against BC and FSU, we had to do just that.

    Against Wake in the second half, we had to do just that.

    Would you say it worked each time? I would.

    You know what I would like to see on Saturday? On the first play of the game, trips right, play action, max protect, with James, Dunlap and Bowen overloading the defense. Then chuck that sucker 25+ yards just to let UMD know that we can.

    But you know what Trestman will probably call? A tackle dive run that will be stopped for no gain.

    I’m certainly not saying throw long every play. Or even abandon the run. I AM saying, however, to not be so tight to the vest and by golly run a straight (non trick) play right off of the kick to make the DC on the other side worry about something they are not expecting.

    As it is Trestman is as predictable as my wife’s monthly two-day bad mood.

  18. brown pelican 10/18/2006 at 12:48 PM #

    evans strength in the passing game is his ability to adjust and deliver throws from straight line to mid line to high arc and all of the shades of grey in-between—as his confidence grows the game plan should grow to include opportunities for him to push the envelope and make those throws—also—his decision making is an obvious strong suit—hence—the chances taken by asking him to make some tougher throws are probably worth the gamble—still—if we can’t play defense and kick it well—we’ll lose more than we win—go pack—beat the terps

  19. choppack1 10/18/2006 at 1:23 PM #

    RAWFS – We haven’t really seen much vertical passing since Chow left.

    I really wonder how much of this is Chuck’s philosophy – not our OCs. This is the same coach who when leading at halftime will say – “If the D shuts them out, we win.” He’s also the coach who allegedly said in the 02 game at Chapel Hill – “If you pass it again, you’re fired” to Marty.

    I like the vertical passing game – and I wish we’d employ it more. I have no idea why we don’t. Am I wacko for assuming that there is some reason?

  20. SixPack 10/18/2006 at 1:39 PM #

    ““MPC Computers Bowl
    Boise, ID
    Bronco Stadium
    December 28, 2006, ESPN
    WAC vs. ACC No. 8
    Bowl Projection: Nevada vs. NC State�

    Talk about pre-mature assumptions (see above)……I’ll make one : We will find a way to lose four of the last 6 games and, except for maybe one of those losses, ineptness, poor coaching and just plain bad luck will be the culprit.

    Besides…who wants to play on that ugly freakin’ blue field anyway !”

    Oh yeah…forgot one additional point : In each of those games we lose the opposition will have at least one 99 yeard drive for a touchdown at a critical time during the game !

    OK…I’m through $#@&^%!!!!!!

  21. RAWFS 10/18/2006 at 2:39 PM #

    It would be fun to play the Wolf Pack and show those copycat sons-of-guns what WOLFPACK football is really all about.

  22. Pack Laddie 10/18/2006 at 2:44 PM #

    If it ends up Nevada vs NC State, it would be the Wolf Pack against the Wolfpack.

  23. RAWFS 10/18/2006 at 2:44 PM #

    Chop,

    Again, agreed, but Marty did throw the ball deep more than did Mazzone and Trestman. Trestman, at least, has thrown the ball deep from time to time, for example from the end zone against BC last year early in the game — it’s just that he rarely does so.

    Sometimes I wonder if Amato is so hard on his assistants that they are super-conservative and try to not lose as opposed to trying to win.

    Think about the most prolific offenses we’ve seen (w/o looking at stats) and they are Chow’s and Galbraith’s. I think a lot of that is due to the idea that NC State can explode at any time from anywhere. Those offenses were dangerous. At least that was the perception anyway.

    That’s why I say we stretch UMD out early and then utilize the spacing for our running game. Keep them off balance.

  24. VaWolf82 10/18/2006 at 4:31 PM #

    Personally, I’m sick of the horizontal passing game. After BC and FSU, I thought it had been retired….but I saw entirely too much of it against WF. If State never, ever threw another WR screen, it would be just fine with me.

    You attack man coverage one way and attack zone coverage a different way….but for goodness sakes, let’s attack instead of hoping the first guy on defense will miss a tackle.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. The ACC Basketblog - 10/18/2006

    The Daily Roundup

    We’re talking about the Pack v. Maryland on the Basketblog. Get over there!

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