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Previewing Texas Tech vs. Ole Miss: Running Backs

RUNNING BACK

Player Ht/Wt Class Rush Att Rush Yds Rush Avg Rush TD Rec Rec Yds Rec Avg Rec TD
Baron Batch 5'11"/205 So. 111 742 6.75 7 43 442 10.28 1
Shannon Woods 5'11"/194 Sr. 135 670 4.96 12 31 330 10.56 2
Cordera Eason 5'10"/224 Jr. 137 644 4.70 3 9 73 8.11 2
Dexter McCluster 5'8"/165 Jr. 94 558 5.87 5 38 542 14.26 1
Brandon Bolden 5'11"/220 Fr. 87 434 4.99 4 8 94 11.75 1

Texas Tech

Cannot catch Baron Batch.

I earlier pointed to the fact that a big reason for this team's success was the improved play of Graham Harrell, but the play of Baron Batch and Shannon Woods has truly been the difference in this offense that much more efficient. I've been thinking about this all year, and I'm not sure that this is so much an original thought, but the rushing resurgence started with Baron Batch. Batch's play during the scout team and during the spring meant that Shannon Woods was either going to have to absolutely pick up his play or be left behind by a more talented runner. If Batch isn't pushing Woods during the spring, I'm not sure how effective Woods actually is. That's not to say that Woods' wouldn't be somewhat effective, but I think it was the competition between the two that really drove this team.

I'm pretty sure that's the definition of a man-crush.

As it was also mentioned yesterday, the blocking that Shannon Woods does, whether it's picking up a blitz or clearing the way for Batch is truly commendable. Woods is the type of guy that just likes hitting people, which makes me wonder if he was miscast as a running back, but he truly takes joy out of doing his job, which has been picking up blitzes more so than running the ball.

What stands out to me is the overall production from these two in terms of yards per rush and/or reception (i.e. touch). For the year, Batch averaged 7.68 yards per touch and Woods was on the record for 6.02 yards per touch. Consider those numbers for a minute. Each time they either ran the ball or caught a pass, both of these guys were getting 6 or 7 yards a play. No matter how you might measure the value of a player, gaining those types of yards each time you touch the ball is a testament to the offense in general, but it also says something about each of them.

Batch and Woods have accounted for 22 touchdowns on the year, which is a little less than 2 touchdowns a game from your running backs. Compared to last year, Aaron Crawford and Woods combined for 16 touchdowns for the year in 13 games.  The overall increase in production is really something.

Mississippi

You're so far behind, trying to tackle Cordera Eason.

There's no question that Cordera is the leader of the rushing attack, although as you will note from the statistics above, this is a not a one-man-show for the Rebels. As a team, the Rebels rush for 183 yards a game, however, 4 players average more than 25 yards a game, including the 3 players listed above. Cordera receives the bulk of the carries, over 11 a game, however he is not much of a receiving threat. I would guess that you'll probably see Cordera on 1st and 2nd downs, but Ole Miss will move to McCluster and Bolden on third downs and as a change of pace. Cordera is the least explosive of the running backs, but he's consistently getting the ball (19, 14, 14, 17, 11 carries in the last 5 games) each and every game.

As mentioned by TechGolf44, McCluster initially started as the Wild-Hog quarterback, but due to some fumbling problems, he was replaced by Bolden. McCluster is listed as a receiver, and at 5'8"/165, he appears to be a guy who Nutt just wants out on the field because he can be so explosive. Much like Cordera, McCluster is receiving a steady diet of rushes  (11, 14, 7, 14, and 9 over the past 5 games) each game and although he appears to be effective as a runner, he's even more effective in space catching the ball. McCluster is averaging 14.26 yards per reception and there's no doubt that McCluster is more effective with a little bit of open space rather than in and around the line of scrimmage.

Bolden received quite a few carries early, but those numbers have significantly decreased as of late. In August/September Bolden averaged 9.00 attempts per game, 7.00 in October, and 5.25 in November and I think those numbers would have been worse had Bolden not received 8 carries against Louisiana-Monroe in a 59-0 blow-out victory.

There's no doubt that Mississippi is a rushing team. The Rebels run the ball 60.48% of their plays, which has them ranked as the 31st team in the country in rushing. These guys can run and their quite effective at doing it. In fact Houston Nutt deserves a ton of credit for taking last year's 84th nationally ranked rushing offense and turning it into a very effective unit.

Conclusion:

I've promised myself that I'm not going to call any one of these matchups a push because that's just a chicken-S way of not putting yourself out there. The bottom line for me is how effective is each teams' set of runners, not just including rushing statistics. For the year, Woods and Batch averaged 6.82 yards per touch (2,184 total yards on 320 touches), while the combination of Cordera, McCluster and Bolden averaged 6.28 per touch (2,345 total yards on 373 touches). That's pretty damn close. If it was just about rushing the ball, Ole Miss wins it hands down, but if you add in all of those receiving yards that Woods and Batch gain on 53 less touches than Ole Miss and I've got to give a slight edge to the Red Raiders.

Previous Matchups:

Quarterback  ::

Matchup

Advantage

Quarterback

Running Back

Poll
Who do you favor in this matchup of running backs?
Texas Tech
173 votes
Mississippi
108 votes

281 votes | Poll has closed

0 recs  |  Comment 13 comments |

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Comments

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great assesment Seth

You seem to hit this right on the head. In the SEC running comes first and Nutt does as good of job of anyone in the country of putting the players in the best position to succeed. He doesn’t run just one system but fits the offense to the players. Having said that he primarily wants to run the football. So stopping the run will be paramount for Tech. Ole Miss has some very good players on the O-line but again not better than what we have already seen. Batch is the real reason I think that we have run so well this year and I’m glad we will hopefully have him for 2 more years. Wreck’em Tech
Keep Leach

by techgolf44 on Dec 11, 2008 1:41 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

Another edition of GOLD, Seth

You just can’t find real sports analysis anywhere else. I can’t imagine how much work goes into it. Liked it so much, I’m gonna read it again.

Go Tech! Beat OooLD’ Mrs.

by Plano Jeff on Dec 11, 2008 4:55 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

What a joke......

First McCluster runs the Wild Rebel 80 percent of the time. Bolden 20 percent. It has been that way since game one. McCluster is a primary receiver. When he is wended, Bolden runs the Wild Reb.

We run five tailbacks that could play for any SEC team. Easton, McCluster, Bolden, and the two Davis kids.

Using yards per game is rediculous. Ole Miss play is the big defense SEC and Tech plays in the no defense Big 12. In four of our last five bowl games we have played Oklahoma State, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Tech. We won them all. And…. we weren’t even in the top four or five in the SEC in any of those years. In our last three games we have given up one touchdown and that was to LSU. Oh yeah, we scored 135 points in those three games.

Put Texas Tech in the SEC and they wouldn’t be any better that 8-4. This game will be won in the trenches and it will be won by Ole Miss.

by Rebelistic on Dec 15, 2008 1:42 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

SEC....

What is it about SEC fans that they think that conference is better that the Big 12? Just look at the BCS top 10. 4 Big 12 teams. SEC has two legitimate squads. Florida and Bama. Thats it. All the other teams were doormats.

by I-town_Techfan on Dec 15, 2008 10:57 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

Simple

When we get into bowl games of equaly ranked teams, we dominate. By this I mean a one or two SEC against a one or two Big 12.

I realize that a Big 12 one or two should be better than an SEC 4 or 5. Oklahoma has lost four of its last five bowl games. Ole Miss has won four of its last five bowl games. All against Big 12 teams. (Oklahoma State, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Texas Tech).

The Big 12 defensive numbers suck. Ask Ohio State about playing the SEC for a national championship. The SEC is not one deminsional like the Big 12.

Oh yeah, how many of the Big 12 great quarterbacks are starters in the NFL?

by Rebelistic on Dec 17, 2008 1:48 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

Your last bowl game

was in 2004! How does that mean anything?

by djollie111 on Dec 17, 2008 6:00 PM CST up reply actions   0 recs

Still in the past I see.

In Big 12, you got guys like Harrell, Reesing, Colt McCoy, Daniel and Bradford. And there’s real draft talk on all of these guys. I’ll even throw Josh Freeman in there. And how many QB’s does the hot SEC have this year of being talked about in the draft? Tebow. Thats all Ive heard. And your SEC QB’s in the NFL right now aren’t exactly tearing it up. Redskins, Broncos, Raiders and Bears have SEC quarterbacks to thank for their impressive sessions. Only one SEC QB is in the top 10 teams in the NFL. But maybe the two Manning sisters can pull something out. Who knows. Give the Big12 more years since they’ve only been in around for about 12.

by I-town_Techfan on Dec 22, 2008 7:59 PM CST up reply actions   0 recs

I meant..

impressive seasons. But maybe I need a session. O_o

by I-town_Techfan on Dec 22, 2008 8:08 PM CST up reply actions   0 recs

JANUARY 2004. It will be 5 years between bowl games! You don’t have the same players or the same coaches.

by djollie111 on Dec 17, 2008 6:03 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

Run Game

Well in my opinion the run game stats are hard to compare.

You use your pass to set up your run and we use the run to set up our passing.

By doing that it makes defenses set up differently. Teams will be more willing to set up to take out our run game while they will be playing back to eliminate your pass.

So while you are getting more yards per back (barely) we will have a harder time running the ball because defenses would be playing more towards stopping the run. Where as with you guys the D will most likely be trying to stop the passing game which gives your backs a few extra steps.

Just my opinion.

by HottyToddy on Dec 19, 2008 2:27 PM CST reply actions   0 recs

I really wish I could figure out some metric to figure out running efficiency.

That’s really what I was going for here, as well as how efficient the running backs are at catching passes. Yes, each team sets up the run differently, and ultimately, the Big 12 is a more offense oriented conference whereas the SEC is more defense oriented.

The nice thing is that we’ll get to see how each team’s strengths compare.

Go Raiders . . .
Double-T Nation

by Seth C on Dec 21, 2008 10:24 AM CST up reply actions   0 recs

And I used the

word “figure” one too many times.

Go Raiders . . .
Double-T Nation

by Seth C on Dec 21, 2008 10:25 AM CST up reply actions   0 recs

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