2014-04-08



Craig Bohl had nothing left to prove at North Dakota State so he moved on to Wyoming, where he inherits an offense without its leader and a defense that struggled with efficiency in 2013. How quickly might he get things turned around in Laramie?



Confused? Check out the advanced-stats glossary here.

1. It's been a while since Craig Bohl lost

On Oct. 13, 2012, Craig Bohl's North Dakota State Bison lost at home to Indiana State, 17-14. On Nov. 12, 2011, they lost to Youngstown State, 27-24.

These are the only two losses Craig Bohl has suffered in the last 41 months.

North Dakota State went 43-2 from 2011 to 2013, suffering those two losses and rolling through the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) the rest of the way. The Bison won three consecutive FCS championships. They whipped Minnesota, 37-24, in 2011. They thumped Colorado State, 22-7, in 2012. And as you probably remember, they took down defending Big 12 champion Kansas State, 24-21, to start the 2013 season.

While we're at it, NDSU also beat Kansas in 2010 (6-3), Central Michigan and Minnesota in 2007, and Ball State in 2006. In total, NDSU went 6-3 against FBS teams under Bohl.

Wyoming pulled off an absolute coup landing Bohl as its new head coach. He is in no way a young up-and-comer -- then again, he's only 55; it's not like he's 70 or something -- but coaches this proven, this successful, usually don't land in Laramie. A defensive back for Tom Osborne's Nebraska Cornhuskers in the late-1970s, Bohl was an FBS defensive coordinator for nine years before taking over in Fargo in 2003. In his first year, NDSU improved from 2-8 to 8-3. They went 20-2 from 2006 through 2007 while transitioning to the FCS level from Division II. After a brief slump (9-13 in 2008-09), the Bison went 9-5 and reached the FCS quarterfinals in just their third year eligible for the postseason. And then they won three straight titles.

What Bohl built in Fargo was incredible. His Bison ranked 17th in the Sagarin rankings in 2013, ahead of Wisconsin, Arizona State and Louisville. They also ranked 35th in 2012 and 37th in 2011. For each of the last four seasons, they ranked ahead of Wyoming. But with no promotion-and-relegation system at play, he had taken NDSU as far as he could. One can understand why he felt it might be time for a new challenge.

Bohl is definitely inheriting a challenge. Wyoming has been a jump-off point for a lot of successful coaches through the years -- Joe Tiller, Dennis Erickson and Pat Dye, to name three. But the Cowboys have attended only three bowls since Tiller left for Purdue in 1996. They went 27-35 in five seasons under Dave Christensen. Their offense was pretty good over the last couple of years, but the main reason for that, quarterback Brett Smith, has left for the pros. Bohl won't inherit a blank slate, but it might take him some time to put the pieces together.

2. Wyoming needs a defense

Before he was one of the most successful head coaches in football, Bohl was a stout defensive coordinator. In 1989, he took over a Rice defense that had allowed 32.5 points per game the previous season, and in five years, his Owls allowed 28.5, 23.5, 26.1, 23.7, and 26.7. In 1994, he took over a Duke defense that had allowed 31.7 points per game the previous year, and he immediately lopped 8.3 points per game off of that average. Duke improved from 3-8 to 8-4 that season.

In 1995, Bohl returned to his alma mater, Nebraska, to serve as linebackers coach. In 2000, he took over as Frank Solich's defensive coordinator. Granted, his last defense (2002) slumped ("slumped") to 23.9 points per game, but he was successful enough in Lincoln to snare the NDSU head coaching job in 2003.

Here's one thing we know for sure: Wyoming needs help on defense. While Christensen was able to generate some offensive success at the end of his tenure in Laramie -- the Cowboys ranked 62nd and 77th, respectively, in Off. F/+ in 2012-13 -- the defense never came around. After ranking 84th in Def. F/+ in his first season (2009), Christensen's defenses never ranked higher than 98th from 2010 on.

Bohl's first defense will be quite experienced, and he will have a wealth of options for attacking from the edge of the front seven. But there is plenty of reason to question the depth and up-the-middle talent of this roster, and it will be interesting to see how long it takes Bohl and defensive coordinator Steve Stanard (Bohl's linebackers coach at NDSU and a former defensive coordinator at Tulane and Colorado State) to craft a quality unit.



2013 Schedule & Results

Record: 5-7 | Adj. Record: 3-9 | Final F/+ Rk: 102

Date

Opponent

Opp. F/+ Rk

Score

W-L

Adj. Score

Adj. W-L

5-gm Adj. Avg.

31-Aug

at Nebraska

39

34-37

L

48.6 - 34.7

W

7-Sep

Idaho

116

42-10

W

28.8 - 25.6

W

14-Sep

Northern Colorado

N/A

35-7

W

18.7 - 31.8

L

21-Sep

at Air Force

113

28-17

W

34.3 - 33.2

W

28-Sep

at Texas State

107

21-42

L

21.9 - 44.2

L

-3.4

12-Oct

New Mexico

110

38-31

W

21.5 - 22.6

L

-6.5

19-Oct

Colorado State

66

22-52

L

26.3 - 33.3

L

-8.5

26-Oct

at San Jose State

74

44-51

L

35.1 - 39.9

L

-6.8

9-Nov

Fresno State

49

10-48

L

18.8 - 33.4

L

-10.0

16-Nov

at Boise State

45

7-48

L

16.1 - 26.8

L

-7.6

23-Nov

Hawaii

82

59-56

W

40.0 - 42.6

L

-7.9

30-Nov

at Utah State

32

7-35

L

13.1 - 21.8

L

-8.3

Category

Offense

Rk

Defense

Rk

Spec. Tms.

Rk

F/+

-4.0%

77

-10.3%

101

-5.6%

122

Points Per Game

28.9

68

36.2

110

Adj. Points Per Game

26.9

73

32.5

102

3. The offense fell apart

For all five of his seasons, Christensen put basically the same team on the field. Granted, both the offense and defense waxed and waned from year to year, but overall the Cowboys ranked 101st, 108th, 104th, 100th and 102nd in the F/+ rankings under Christensen. When the bounces went their way (in 2009 and 2011), they won enough close games to go bowling. When the breaks didn't happen, neither did the wins.

The 2013 season started in rather promising fashion. Wyoming nearly beat Nebraska and started the season 4-2. But despite a lack of significant injuries, the offensive production trailed off by the end of September. After averaging 7.2 or greater yards per play in three of their first four games, the Cowboys did so just twice in the final eight games. After scoring 34 points against Nebraska, they scored 24 against Fresno State, Boise State and Utah State, combined.

Adj. Points Per Game (first 4 games): Wyoming 32.6, Opponent 31.3 (plus-1.3)
Adj. Points Per Game (last 8 games): Opponent 33.1, Wyoming 24.1 (minus-9.0)

The defense made quite a few plays but allowed far more. Wyoming allowed at least 6.1 yards per play in seven games and at least 31 points in each of its last eight games (and at least 42 in six of the eight). It was up to the offense to carry the load, and that barely happened after Week 4.

Offense

FIVE FACTORS -- OFFENSE

Raw Category

Rk

Opp. Adj. Category

Rk

EXPLOSIVENESS

IsoPPP

1.22

31

IsoPPP+

103.0

46

EFFICIENCY

Succ. Rt.

43.2%

63

Succ. Rt. +

91.6

86

FIELD POSITION

Def. Avg. FP

32.1

106

Def. FP+

95.4

103

FINISHING DRIVES

Pts. Per Trip in 40

5.0

6

Redzone S&P+

99.2

66

TURNOVERS

EXPECTED

23.8

ACTUAL

24

+0.2

Category

Yards/
Game Rk

S&P+ Rk

Success
Rt. Rk

PPP+ Rk

OVERALL

22

82

87

78

RUSHING

41

52

99

59

PASSING

24

99

82

73

Standard Downs

78

91

43

Passing Downs

86

85

70

Q1 Rk

79

1st Down Rk

93

Q2 Rk

86

2nd Down Rk

86

Q3 Rk

99

3rd Down Rk

44

Q4 Rk

39

Quarterback

Note: players in bold below are 2014 returnees. Players in italics are questionable with injury/suspension.

Player

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

Rivals

Comp

Att

Yards

TD

INT

Comp
Rate

Sacks

Sack Rate

Yards/
Att.

Brett Smith

293

468

3375

29

11

62.6%

25

5.1%

6.5

Colby Kirkegaard (2012)

6'3, 205

Sr.

3 stars (5.5)

16

26

123

0

1

61.5%

0

0.0%

4.7

Tommy Thornton

6'1, 205

So.

2 stars

3

4

15

0

0

75.0%

1

20.0%

1.2

Sam Stratton

5'11, 186

Sr.

2 stars (5.4)

Aaron Young

6'2, 208

So.

2 stars (5.3)

Austin Fort

6'4, 210

Fr.

2 stars (5.4)

Nick Smith

6'4, 212

Fr.

2 stars (5.4)

4. Brett Smith and Craig Bohl? This is going to be great! Oh.

In three seasons as Wyoming's starting quarterback, Brett Smith threw for 8,829 yards with a 62 percent completion rate and 76 touchdowns to 28 interceptions. He rushed for 1,529 yards (including sacks) and 20 touchdowns. He was a dynamic threat, someone capable of escaping pressure and making plays out of the pocket, both with his arms and legs. He never completed under 61 percent of his passes, his runs downfield were beautifully timed, and for a mobile quarterback his 5.1 percent sack rate was relatively low. He would have been the perfect quarterback to usher in the Bohl era, but he declared for the NFL Draft instead.

Smith is a potential late-round pick, so perhaps that ends up being the right decision. Regardless, it leaves Bohl and offensive coordinator Brent Vigen (Bohl's OC at NDSU) with a grab bag at quarterback. Seniors Colby Kirkegaard (Smith's backup in 2012 before redshirting in 2013) and Sam Stratton appear to be the most likely bets to start, but this could be a fluid situation well into the fall.

Running Back

Player

Pos.

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

Rivals

Rushes

Yards

TD

Yards/
Carry

Hlt Yds/
Carry

Opp.
Rate

Shaun Wick

RB

5'10, 204

Jr.

NR

166

979

9

5.9

5.8

41.0%

Brett Smith

QB

99

742

4

7.5

10.3

45.5%

Brandon Miller

RB

83

385

3

4.6

3.3

36.1%

D.J. May (2012)

RB

5'11, 196

So.

2 stars (5.3)

77

369

1

4.8

3.5

N/A

Tedder Easton

RB

45

311

5

6.9

9.9

35.6%

Omar Stover

RB

5'11, 198

So.

2 stars (5.4)

10

37

0

3.7

2.0

30.0%

Tommy Thornton

QB

6'1, 205

So.

2 stars

5

17

0

3.4

2.5

40.0%

Oscar Nevermann

RB

6'1, 210

So.

NR

Joshua Tapscott

RB

5'9, 200

RSFr.

2 stars (5.4)

Nico Evans

RB

5'9, 177

Fr.

2 stars (5.4)

Brian Hill

RB

6'1, 210

Fr.

2 stars (5.4)

Receiving Corps

Player

Pos.

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

Rivals

Targets

Catches

Yards

Catch Rate

Target
Rate

%SD

Yds/
Target

NEY

Real Yds/
Target

RYPR

Robert Herron

WR

111

72

927

64.9%

24.3%

56.2%

8.4

58

9.0

93.8

Dominic Rufran

WR

6'0, 188

Sr.

2 stars (5.4)

105

75

970

71.4%

23.0%

56.5%

9.2

107

8.1

98.2

Tanner Gentry

WR

6'2, 190

So.

2 stars (5.3)

70

39

376

55.7%

15.3%

56.9%

5.4

-133

4.8

38.1

Jalen Claiborne

WR

5'9, 175

Sr.

2 stars (5.4)

58

33

452

56.9%

12.7%

65.2%

7.8

26

7.9

45.7

Brandon Miller

RB

28

23

193

82.1%

6.1%

48.0%

6.9

-55

7.5

19.5

Shaun Wick

RB

5'10, 204

Jr.

NR

27

21

118

77.8%

5.9%

70.8%

4.4

-114

4.7

11.9

Jake Maulhardt

WR

6'6, 215

So.

NR

12

9

76

75.0%

2.6%

66.7%

6.3

-25

5.4

7.7

Trey Norman

WR

6'1, 175

Sr.

2 stars (5.4)

12

5

81

41.7%

2.6%

100.0%

6.8

4

5.4

8.2

Jarrod Darden

WR

11

6

49

54.5%

2.4%

45.5%

4.5

-30

4.3

5.0

Keenan Montgomery

WR

6'1, 180

Sr.

NR

7

5

102

71.4%

1.5%

100.0%

14.6

44

9.5

10.3

Tedder Easton

RB

6

3

4

50.0%

1.3%

100.0%

0.7

-38

0.6

0.4

Spencer Bruce

TE

5

3

23

60.0%

1.1%

80.0%

4.6

-15

4.7

2.3

Justin Berger

WR

6'2, 209

Sr.

NR

4

2

19

50.0%

0.9%

100.0%

4.8

-9

2.2

1.9

J.D. Krill

TE

6'6, 246

Sr.

3 stars (5.5)

Eric Nzeocha

TE

6'3, 208

So.

NR

Jacob Hollister

TE

6'4, 230

So.

2 stars (5.4)

Tyree Mayfield

TE

6'3, 212

Fr.

2 stars (5.4)

5. Wick and Rufran are keepers

Wyoming's offense wasn't particularly efficient in 2013, but the big plays were pretty big. Of the three players (not named Brett Smith) most responsible for those big plays -- running back Shaun Wick and receivers Robert Herron and Dominic Rufran -- Wick and Rufran return.

A two-year starting running back, Wick didn't necessarily prove a lot as a freshman beyond "He's better than anyone else we've got," but he broke out in 2013, especially early on (when the offense was actually viable). He rushed for 101 yards against Nebraska and another 197 combined against Idaho and Northern Colorado. He carried 17 times for 116 yards in a tight win over New Mexico and 17 times for 234 yards in a tight loss at San Jose State. Like Wyoming's production as a whole, Wick faded down the stretch, but he's a keeper.

We know the general style of play Bohl wants: a run-heavy, ball-control offense that sets the table for a dominating defense. If he stays healthy, Wick will have more than enough opportunities to cross the 1,000-yard mark that he approached in 2013. It's hard to say who else might get carries this fall -- sophomore D.J. May is next in line, followed by ... ? -- but he should be a strong No. 1, and he will be running behind a line that ranked in the top 50 in most line stats below and returns six players with starting experience (47 total starts).

Meanwhile, Rufran could excel in play-action situations. He combined fantastic efficiency (a 71 percent catch rate) with occasional explosiveness -- he caught eight passes for 117 yards against Air Force, seven for 135 against Colorado State, seven for 121 against Hawaii and four for 92 against Utah State -- last season. The rest of the receiving corps hasn't proven much, but there is decent experience.

Offensive Line

Category

Adj.
Line Yds

Std.
Downs
LY/carry

Pass.
Downs
LY/carry

Opp.
Rate

Power
Success
Rate

Stuff
Rate

Adj.
Sack Rate

Std.
Downs
Sack Rt.

Pass.
Downs
Sack Rt.

Team

104.4

3.18

3.45

40.1%

70.7%

16.6%

119.3

3.0%

7.1%

Rank

48

27

44

60

52

23

48

25

69

Player

Pos.

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

Rivals

Career Starts

Honors/Notes

Tyler Strong

LG

33

Jake Jones

RG

6'3, 295

Jr.

2 stars (5.4)

24

Connor Rains

RT

6'7, 318

Sr.

3 stars (5.6)

12

Walker Madden

LT

10

Albert Perez

C

6

Chase Roullier

LG

6'4, 293

So.

2 stars (5.3)

4

Rafe Kiely

C

6'3, 299

Jr.

2 stars (5.4)

4

Nathan Leddige

LT

6'5, 289

So.

2 stars

2

Austin Traphagan

OT

6'5, 308

Jr.

2 stars (5.4)

1

Josh Teeter

LG

Jacob English

LG

6'5, 292

So.

2 stars (5.3)

0

Sam Hardy

RG

6'3, 299

So.

2 stars (5.2)

0

Taylor Knestis

OL

6'5, 278

RSFr.

2 stars (5.4)

Kurtis Stirneman

RT

6'5, 270

RSFr.

2 stars (5.2)

Defense

FIVE FACTORS -- DEFENSE

Raw Category

Rk

Opp. Adj. Category

Rk

EXPLOSIVENESS

IsoPPP

1.13

54

IsoPPP+

98.9

65

EFFICIENCY

Succ. Rt.

47.0%

103

Succ. Rt. +

87.5

106

FIELD POSITION

Off. Avg. FP

26.0

120

Off. FP+

89.7

125

FINISHING DRIVES

Pts. Per Trip in 40

4.6

97

Redzone S&P+

82.9

111

TURNOVERS

EXPECTED

20.0

ACTUAL

20.0

0.0

Category

Yards/
Game Rk

S&P+ Rk

Success
Rt. Rk

PPP+ Rk

OVERALL

113

103

106

107

RUSHING

109

81

73

100

PASSING

106

111

121

107

Standard Downs

108

109

90

Passing Downs

77

79

45

Q1 Rk

70

1st Down Rk

101

Q2 Rk

89

2nd Down Rk

84

Q3 Rk

113

3rd Down Rk

112

Q4 Rk

118

6. Experience? Check

North Dakota State became the Alabama of FCS, not only because of its overall success, but because of its defensive style. Like the Crimson Tide, the Bison didn't attack you so much as suffocate you. They logged 81 tackles for loss and defensed (intercepted or broke up) 72 passes in 2013. Those figures are above average, but considering NDSU played 15 games, they are not spectacular. The Bison still allowed only 256 yards and 11.3 points per game because they played smart and swarmed to the ball effectively.

If experience is key to playing smart, then that's a good sign for Bohl's first defense. Wyoming has all sorts of question marks, especially along the backbone of the defense (tackle, middle linebacker and safety), but the Cowboys do return four of their top six tacklers on the line, seven of nine in the secondary, and basically every linebacker. One figures Bohl will know what to do with a strong set of linebackers.

Defensive Line

Category

Adj.
Line Yds

Std.
Downs
LY/carry

Pass.
Downs
LY/carry

Opp.
Rate

Power
Success
Rate

Stuff
Rate

Adj.
Sack Rate

Std.
Downs
Sack Rt.

Pass.
Downs
Sack Rt.

Team

90.5

3.33

3.44

43.5%

70.2%

14.8%

93.7

4.2%

7.0%

Rank

102

109

78

107

84

114

71

70

59

Name

Pos

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

Rivals

GP

Tackles

% of Team

TFL

Sacks

Int

PBU

FF

FR

Eddie Yarbrough

DE

6'3, 257

Jr.

3 stars (5.7)

12

65.0

8.1%

12.0

6.5

0

1

2

2

Justin Bernthaler

DT

12

33.0

4.1%

7.5

4.5

0

0

1

0

Sonny Puletasi

DE

6'3, 251

Sr.

2 stars (5.4)

12

33.0

4.1%

10.0

4.5

0

3

0

0

Patrick Mertens

NT

6'5, 295

Sr.

NR

12

22.0

2.7%

5.0

2.0

0

0

1

0

Uso Olive

NT

6'1, 293

So.

2 stars (5.4)

11

19.0

2.4%

4.0

0.5

0

0

0

0

Siaosi Hala'api'api

DE

6'2, 248

Jr.

2 stars

10

8.5

1.1%

1.5

0.0

0

1

1

0

Troy Boyland

NT

6'2, 302

Sr.

2 stars (5.4)

Chase Appleby

DT

6'0, 289

So.

2 stars (5.4)

James Diamanti

DT

6'4, 296

RSFr.

2 stars (5.3)

Dalton Fields

NT

6'3, 265

RSFr.

2 stars (5.3)

Du'Ryan Ebbesen

NT

6'2, 288

RSFr.

NR

Daniel Vega

DT

6'4, 260

Fr.

2 stars (5.4)

Sidney Malauulu

DT

6'3, 280

Fr.

2 stars (5.4)

Linebackers

Name

Pos

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

Rivals

GP

Tackles

% of Team

TFL

Sacks

Int

PBU

FF

FR

Jordan Stanton

MLB

6'0, 246

Sr.

2 stars (5.2)

12

101.5

12.7%

10.0

2.0

2

0

0

0

Mark Nzeocha

SLB

6'3, 235

Sr.

3 stars (5.5)

12

82.5

10.3%

10.0

1.0

0

2

2

0

Lucas Wacha

WLB

6'1, 214

So.

2 stars

12

64.5

8.0%

2.0

1.0

0

1

1

0

Devyn Harris

WLB

6'3, 240

Sr.

2 stars (5.2)

12

38.5

4.8%

3.5

1.0

0

1

0

1

Malkaam Muhammad

SLB

6'0, 228

Jr.

2 stars (5.4)

11

4.0

0.5%

0.0

0.0

0

0

0

0

Nehemie Kankolongo

SLB

5'11, 212

Sr.

3 stars (5.6)

10

2.5

0.3%

0.0

0.0

0

0

1

0

Alex Borgs

LB

6'2, 232

Sr.

2 stars (5.4)

12

2.0

0.2%

0.0

0.0

0

0

0

0

Jeff Lark

LB

6'2, 213

Jr.

2 stars (5.4)

Lucas Wacha

LB

6'1, 214

So.

2 stars

Brandon Lukenbill

MLB

6'2, 224

So.

NR

Alex Bush

LB

6'2, 220

Fr.

2 stars (5.4)

7. Ends and linebackers? Check

Sometimes the team and individual don't match up logically. The Five Factors box above paints a picture of a team pretty decent at preventing big plays but far too prone to allowing efficient, five- to seven-yard gains. Defenses like these tend to follow the bend-don't-break route, racking up few big plays of their own.

Wyoming, on the other hand, made plenty of big plays, at least near the line of scrimmage. The Cowboys logged 75 tackles for loss in 12 games -- on a per-game basis, a healthy 48th in the country (and more than NDSU) -- mostly from four players: ends Eddie Yarbrough and Sonny Puletasi, and linebackers Jordan Stanton and Mark Nzeocha. All four of those players, three of who line up on the edge in the front seven, return, forming the basis for both a strong pass rush and decent run defense.

But even with an occasionally explosive front seven, Wyoming was terribly inefficient, especially against the pass. If the Cowboys weren't getting to the quarterback, they were allowing an easy completion. For the season, they allowed a ridiculous 68.9 percent completion rate, second-worst in the country. Wyoming basically turned every opposing quarterback into Fresno State's Derek Carr.

Secondary

Name

Pos

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

Rivals

GP

Tackles

% of Team

TFL

Sacks

Int

PBU

FF

FR

Marqueston Huff

FS

12

100.5

12.5%

3

0

2

6

1

0

Blair Burns

CB

5'10, 186

Sr.

2 stars (5.4)

12

49.5

6.2%

1

0

1

7

0

0

Tim Hayes

CB

5'9, 185

So.

2 stars (5.3)

11

33.5

4.2%

2

0

1

6

0

0

Chad Reese

FS

7

32.0

4.0%

0

0

0

0

0

0

DeAndre Jones

CB

6'0, 186

Sr.

2 stars (5.4)

12

32.0

4.0%

1

0

1

1

1

0

Darrenn White

SS

6'0, 192

Sr.

3 stars (5.5)

6

24.0

3.0%

0.5

0

0

1

2

0

Xavier Lewis

SS

6'0, 190

So.

2 stars (5.3)

12

13.5

1.7%

1

0

0

3

0

0

Jesse Sampson

FS

6'1, 196

Sr.

2 stars (5.3)

4

9.5

1.2%

1

0

1

1

0

0

Cortland Fort

CB

6'0, 185

So.

2 stars (5.2)

11

7.0

0.9%

0

0

1

1

0

0

Tyran Finley

CB

5'9, 177

Sr.

NR

1

3.5

0.4%

0

0

0

0

0

0

Jake Schiffner

SS

5'10, 181

Sr.

NR

Tim Kamana

FS

5'11, 190

RSFr.

2 stars

Cooper Wise

CB

5'9, 170

RSFr.

NR

8. Healthy backbone? Check back later

With the departure of the top two safeties, one has to worry about Wyoming's ability to continue preventing big plays. Any improvement in efficiency could be matched by regression in that regard. In addition, the top defensive tackle is gone, which leaves obvious questions about Wyoming's ability to keep blockers off of Stanton, Nzeocha and the other linebackers. Bohl inherited some strong play-makers on defense, but the questions still outweigh the answers for now, especially in pass defense.

Special Teams

Punter

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

Punts

Avg

TB

FC

I20

FC/I20
Ratio

Ethan Wood

6'3, 165

So.

69

42.0

8

4

17

30.4%

Kicker

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

Kickoffs

Avg

TB

OOB

TB%

Ethan Wood

6'3, 165

So.

40

61.3

21

2

52.5%

Justin Martin

5'11, 178

Jr.

25

60.2

12

2

48.0%

Place-Kicker

Ht, Wt

2014
Year

PAT</t

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