2015-08-04



You don't even have to have high hopes for this new offense to see how a more consistent and more fortunate Florida could scare anybody.

Confused? Check out the advanced-stats glossary here.

1. Sensibility

It's been difficult to elaborate on Florida's hire of Jim McElwain as its new head coach. It just ... made sense. The former Colorado State coach has the pro-style credentials many ruling-class programs covet. He's got SEC experience (four seasons as Nick Saban's offensive coordinator at Alabama).

And he's a somewhat proven head coach. He inherited a Colorado State program that had gone 3-9 for three straight years, and he went 4-8, then 8-6, then 10-3.

TL;DR

Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports

Projected S&P+ ranking: 29

5-year recruiting ranking: 8

Biggest strength: The secondary might be the nation's best. If you face a third-and-long, just punt. It's better than an interception.

Biggest question mark: The most proven offensive lineman was starting for Fordham last year.

Biggest 2015 game: We'll say Tennessee (Sept. 26). That might tell us both whether Florida is playing for 6-6 or 9-3 and whether the Vols are a serious East threat.

In one sentence: A rebuilding offense will keep expectations down in Jim McElwain's first season, but the Gators' defense will make them a major wildcard.

All good things. His assistant hires made sense, too. You've got Doug Nussmeier, another former Saban coordinator, running the offense. Geoff Collins, former Mississippi State coordinator, takes over the D. Former Miami head coach Randy Shannon is aboard as associate head coach and linebackers coach.

The staff has experience, Florida recruiting ties, etc. Very little about this hire was sexy, but it was sensible. It will probably work.

Florida's last two head coach hires were sensible too. After taking a risk by hiring Ron Zook in 2002, athletic director Jeremy Foley has stuck to the script, and he's gone 1-for-2. Urban Meyer was prototypical mid-major success story, with four years of head coaching experience, 39 wins, and a top-five finish at Utah. Will Muschamp was the trendy defensive coordinator, once Texas' head coach in waiting, whose name had been connected to other power positions. The former won two national titles. The latter had Florida playing at a level below SEC average in three of four seasons.

This sensible hire has to clean up for the last one. What does that mean for Year 1?

A stellar defense, for starters. Defense was never much of a problem for Muschamp -- his four Gator defenses ranked 13th, first, fourth, and eighth in Def. S&P+. Collins inherits a front seven with proven playmakers (and dicey experience on the line, at least outside of the projected starting four) and an unimpeachable secondary. He was able to craft top-30 defenses at Mississippi State, and he should be able to do far more with this personnel.

On offense, there's a mess. Florida ranked 72nd in Off. S&P+ last fall, 83rd before that. There seem to be two schools of thought when it comes to a defensive coordinator making decisions about his team's offensive philosophy: one kind chooses the kind of offense that he would hate to defend, and others just want the offense to stay out of the way so the D can win.

Muschamp did win 11 games in 2012 with the latter approach, but he won just 11 in 2013-14 combined. The offense had little rhythm, confidence or explosiveness. The personnel seemed to understand that their existence frustrated Muschamp, that if he could figure out how to win with 60 minutes of defense, he would give it a shot.

The defense should assure Florida of a high floor. Even in the last two years, with sputtering offenses, the Gators still ranked 45th and 32nd in overall F/+. But it is too much to ask of the new staff to quickly turn around that grunting O. There is too much youth, no proven depth, and a patchwork line. That slaps a ceiling on the season.



2014 Schedule & Results

Record: 7-5 | Adj. Record: 10-2 | Final F/+ Rk: 32

Date

Opponent

Opp. F/+ Rk

Score

W-L

Percentile
Performance

Adj. Scoring
Margin

Win
Expectancy

6-Sep

Eastern Michigan

128

65-0

W

94%

36.7

100%

13-Sep

Kentucky

68

36-30

W

69%

11.7

82%

20-Sep

at Alabama

2

21-42

L

28%

-13.6

0%

4-Oct

at Tennessee

24

10-9

W

67%

10.2

63%

11-Oct

LSU

22

27-30

L

64%

8.4

52%

18-Oct

Missouri

20

13-42

L

21%

-18.7

2%

1-Nov

Georgia

4

38-20

W

96%

41.8

98%

8-Nov

at Vanderbilt

115

34-10

W

85%

24.3

100%

15-Nov

South Carolina

38

20-23

L

69%

11.4

77%

22-Nov

Eastern Kentucky

N/A

48-14

W

95%

39.2

100%

29-Nov

Florida State

15

19-24

L

81%

20.1

84%

3-Jan

vs. East Carolina

61

28-20

W

65%

8.8

43%

Category

Offense

Rk

Defense

Rk

S&P+

27.9

72

16.4

8

Points Per Game

29.9

59

22.0

25

2. Too little, too late

Our narrative is easy. Muschamp's tenure fell apart with 2013's 4-8, and it was all but certain he would lose his job following an unsuccessful rebound. We knew that was conceivable heading into last fall, and that's what happened.

Muschamp came close to staying afloat, however, perhaps closer than we realized in real time.

The Win Expectancy column above looks at key stats and says, "With these stats, you could have expected to win this game X percent of the time." With the box scores at hand, Florida had a 52 percent chance of beating LSU, a 77 percent chance of beating South Carolina, and an 84 percent chance of beating Playoff semifinalist Florida State. Odds would say they should have gone at least 2-1 in those three games. They went 0-3, finishing 7-4 in the regular season.

The Gators' slapstick performance against Missouri on Homecoming is said to have been the beginning of the end. It was an amazing performance in all the wrong ways. Florida turned the ball over six times and gave up a superfecta of return touchdowns -- kickoff, punt, fumble, interception -- and Missouri's offense actively tried to stay out of the way. The Tigers completed six passes for 20 yards, gained 119 total yards, and won by 29 points.

There was almost nothing Muschamp could do to rebound ... but he almost pulled it off. Florida responded by whipping Georgia and almost doing enough to beat South Carolina and FSU. Pull that off, and that's a five-game win streak. Muschamp possibly survives.

Average Percentile Performance (first 6 games): 57% (~top 55 | record: 3-3)

Average Percentile Performance (next 5 games): 85% (~top 20 | record: 3-2)

Florida did Missouri countless favors, both in the teams' Homecoming "battle" and in the win over UGA two weeks later. But if McElwain ends up turning UF back into a top-10 program, the more hapless moments of 2014 might be regarded fondly by Florida fans as well.

Without the return scores by Missouri, two blocked kicks by South Carolina in the final four minutes of regulation, and some impressive drive-finishing ineptitude against Florida State -- UF drove inside FSU's 40 eight times, scored one touchdown, attempted six field goals (missing two), and throwing a pick six (net points in eight trips: 12) -- Muschamp might still be the coach.

Offense

FIVE FACTORS -- OFFENSE

Raw Category

Rk

Opp. Adj. Category

Rk

EXPLOSIVENESS

IsoPPP

0.87

50

IsoPPP+

95.8

77

EFFICIENCY

Succ. Rt.

36.4%

112

Succ. Rt. +

93.1

96

FIELD POSITION

Def. Avg. FP

28.9

46

Def. FP+

101.0

53

FINISHING DRIVES

Pts. Per Trip in 40

4.4

74

Redzone S&P+

82.6

118

TURNOVERS

EXPECTED

18.6

ACTUAL

24

+5.4

Category

Yards/
Game Rk

S&P+ Rk

Success
Rt. Rk

PPP+ Rk

OVERALL

96

91

102

77

RUSHING

43

69

82

55

PASSING

106

98

120

77

Standard Downs

101

99

105

Passing Downs

49

104

22

Q1 Rk

106

1st Down Rk

70

Q2 Rk

81

2nd Down Rk

49

Q3 Rk

70

3rd Down Rk

54

Q4 Rk

36

3. A Doug Nussmeier offense

Florida fan HQ

Florida Gators blog Alligator Army

You get the impression that, before each game, Muschamp turned to his offense and said, "DON'T F*** THIS UP FOR ME."

A Gator offense, loaded with former four- and five-star recruits, should never start games as poorly, throw as inefficiently, or finish drives as horrifically. If nothing else, I assume this year's offense will improve in those areas. Progress, right?

After his tenure with Alabama, Nussmeier spent last season trying to bail water out of Brady Hoke's sinking Michigan boat. He didn't have the playmakers, but a) Michigan had a top-50 offense in the first quarter, and b) the Wolverines had top-50 pass efficiency (and top-100 pass explosiveness, but we're focusing on the positives). And while they averaged just 3.9 points per scoring opportunity (100th in FBS), adjusting for opponent makes that look better, too.

Nussmeier is organized and decent. His system protects the quarterback to a degree; he aims for balance on standard downs and calls more runs than the national average on passing downs. His Michigan offense failed in "you don't have the guys" ways: fading after the first quarter, stinking on third downs and passing downs, etc.

With a young quarterback, younger skill-position guys and a mélange of a line, he might not have those guys this year either. But in key ways, Nussmeier's structure should lead to improvement.

Quarterback

Note: players in bold below are 2015 returnees. Players in italics are questionable with injury/suspension.

Player

Ht, Wt

2015
Year

Rivals

247 Comp.

Comp

Att

Yards

TD

INT

Comp
Rate

Sacks

Sack Rate

Yards/
Att.

Jeff Driskel

114

212

1140

9

10

53.8%

10

4.5%

4.8

Treon Harris

5'11, 195

So.

4 stars (6.0)

0.9417

55

111

1019

9

4

49.5%

7

5.9%

8.4

Will Grier

6'2, 201

RSFr.

4 stars (6.0)

0.9758

Running Back

Player

Pos.

Ht, Wt

2015
Year

Rivals

247 Comp.

Rushes

Yards

TD

Yards/
Carry

Hlt Yds/
Opp.

Opp.
Rate

Fumbles

Fum.
Lost

Matt Jones

RB

166

817

6

4.9

4.6

36.7%

3

1

Kelvin Taylor

RB

5'10, 205

Jr.

4 stars (6.0)

0.9896

116

565

6

4.9

5.8

33.6%

0

0

Treon Harris

QB

5'11, 195

So.

4 stars (6.0)

0.9417

68

364

3

5.4

4.4

47.1%

5

3

Jeff Driskel

QB

59

249

4

4.2

2.8

42.4%

2

2

Adam Lane

RB

5'7, 226

So.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8830

24

181

1

7.5

8.9

45.8%

1

1

Mack Brown

RB

22

95

0

4.3

11.0

18.2%

0

0

Brandon Powell

SLOT

5'9, 184

So.

4 stars (5.8)

0.8784

16

70

1

4.4

3.2

31.3%

0

0

Darius Masline

RB

7

25

0

3.6

4.7

28.6%

0

0

Hunter Joyer

FB

Mark Herndon

RB

5'9, 195

Sr.

NR

NR

Jordan Scarlett

RB

5'10, 198

Fr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.9442

Jordan Cronkrite

RB

5'11, 205

Fr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.9020

4. Now's your chance, Kelvin

Kelvin Taylor might have been the most encouraging piece of Florida's 2013, not because of what he accomplished (4.6 yards per carry over just 12 carries per game) but because of the future he represented. In his first sustained action that year, he rushed 22 times for 126 yards against LSU and Missouri, and for a half it looked like he might carry the limping Gators to an upset at South Carolina. It was easy to be excited.

In 2014, he didn't really become much. He got basically the same number of carries, surpassed on the depth chart by Matt Jones, and while he still showed ability in the open field, he rarely found it. He carried 25 times for 197 yards (7.9 per carry) and two scores in a brilliant performance against Georgia. He carried 91 times for just 368 yards (4.0) the rest of the year. In the final two games, he carried 17 times for 37 yards (2.2).

The bricolage line will have something to say about this, but if Florida's offense is going to succeed, it's going to be because Taylor overcame his sophomore slump. There are other interesting options; sophomore Adam Lane (whose name you might recognize for different reasons) rushed for 109 yards on 16 carries in the bowl win over ECU, and incoming freshman Jordan Scarlett was one of the nation's most-touted backs in the 2015 class. But Taylor has the size, speed, and pedigree (father: Fred Taylor, a former Gator and one of the NFL's more underrated backs) to be a star.

It appears redshirt freshman Will Grier is the favorite to win the starting quarterback job. The former blue-chipper is far from a diamond-in-the-rough type, but he was forgotten last year, redshirting as fellow freshman Treon Harris efforted in place of starter Jeff Driskel. Grier showed nice progress this spring and turned heads by going 8-for-11 for 136 yards in the spring game. He will make mistakes, and his decision-making will be too slow at times, but he will have bright moments as long as he's not constantly asked to make plays on second-and-9 or third-and-8.

(One asterisk: Oregon State quarterback Luke Del Rio transferred to Florida, and there's a tiny chance he's eligible. That almost certainly won't happen, so I haven't listed him.)

And he'll have Demarcus Robinson. Gator fans were high on the former blue-chipper heading into last year, and he backed up the faith with an enormous start. He almost single-handedly helped the Gators survive against Kentucky, catching 15 passes for 216 yards, and he caught five for 104 a few weeks later in the tight loss to LSU. But following every breakout, he disappeared.

After Robinson, who knows? Three other returning wideouts caught at least five passes, and all three are former four-star recruits. Sophomore tight end DeAndre Goolsby caught a touchdown from Grier in the spring game. The staff is reportedly high on four-star freshman Antonio Callaway. The potential is high, but no one outside of Robinson has proved much.

Receiving Corps

Player

Pos.

Ht, Wt

2015
Year

Rivals

247 Comp.

Targets

Catches

Yards

Catch Rate

Target
Rate

%SD

Yds/
Target

NEY

Real Yds/
Target

RYPR

Demarcus Robinson

WR

6'1, 204

Jr.

4 stars (6.0)

0.9640

95

53

810

55.8%

31.4%

51.6%

8.5

151

8.6

93.7

Quinton Dunbar

WR

42

21

353

50.0%

13.9%

54.8%

8.4

85

8.5

40.8

Clay Burton

TE

27

18

156

66.7%

8.9%

55.6%

5.8

-60

5.7

18.0

Ahmad Fulwood

WR

6'4, 208

Jr.

4 stars (5.9)

0.9494

25

12

199

48.0%

8.3%

60.0%

8.0

45

8.1

23.0

Latroy Pittman, Jr.

WR

6'0, 212

Sr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.8967

25

15

164

60.0%

8.3%

40.0%

6.6

-20

5.5

19.0

Brandon Powell

SLOT

5'9, 184

So.

4 stars (5.8)

0.8784

24

15

147

62.5%

7.9%

79.2%

6.1

-35

6.7

17.0

Matt Jones

RB

21

11

65

52.4%

6.9%

61.9%

3.1

-74

3.1

7.5

Tevin Westbrook

TE

11

8

81

72.7%

3.6%

63.6%

7.4

-14

7.2

9.4

Kelvin Taylor

RB

5'10, 205

Jr.

4 stars (6.0)

0.9896

7

2

-8

28.6%

2.3%

28.6%

-1.1

-38

-1.9

-0.9

Valdez Showers

SLOT

6'0, 193

Sr.

3 stars (5.7)

0.9053

5

2

31

40.0%

1.7%

20.0%

6.2

4

3.3

3.6

Andre Debose

WR

5

1

-3

20.0%

1.7%

100.0%

-0.6

-20

N/A

-0.3

Chris Thompson

WR

6'0, 171

Jr.

3 stars (5.6)

0.8544

3

2

17

66.7%

1.0%

33.3%

5.7

-7

3.6

2.0

C.J. Worton

WR

6'0, 195

So.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8756

3

2

12

66.7%

1.0%

33.3%

4.0

-12

2.5

1.4

Jake McGee

TE

6'6, 249

Sr.

2 stars (5.2)

0.7667

1

0

0

0.0%

0.3%

0.0%

0.0

-1

N/A

0.0

Alvin Bailey

SLOT

5'11, 192

So.

4 stars (6.0)

0.9225

DeAndre Goolsby

TE

6'4, 243

So.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8656

Moral Stephens

TE

6'3, 240

RSFr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.8759

Ryan Sousa

WR

6'0, 195

RSFr.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8687

Antonio Callaway

WR

5'11, 198

Fr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.8869

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

100

2.59

3.56

37.4%

73.5%

19.4%

113.8

2.9%

6.8%

Rank

74

108

39

83

24

69

48

23

51

Player

Pos.

Ht, Wt

2015
Year

Rivals

247 Comp.

Career Starts

Honors/Notes

Chaz Green

RT

30

Max Garcia

C

24

D.J. Humphries

LT

19

Tyler Moore

RG

14

Trenton Brown

RG

11

Trip Thurman

LG

6'5, 313

Sr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.8876

10

Roderick Johnson

RT

3

David Sharpe

LT

6'6, 355

So.

4 stars (5.8)

0.9434

0

Antonio Riles

OL

6'4, 322

So.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8753

0

Cameron Dillard

C

6'4, 308

So.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8712

0

Travaris Dorsey

OL

6'2, 318

RSFr.

3 stars (5.6)

0.8600

Andrew Mike

OL

6'6, 302

RSFr.

3 stars (5.6)

0.8767

Kavaris Harkless

OL

6'5, 300

RSFr.

3 stars (5.6)

0.8491

Mason Halter
(Fordham)

OL

6'6, 295

Sr.

NR

NR

33

Martez Ivey

OL

6'5, 302

Fr.

5 stars (6.1)

0.9990

Tyler Jordan

OL

6'4, 292

Fr.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8795

5. Starting from scratch

The Florida line improved dramatically last year. It was a complete disaster in 2013, ranking 102nd in Adj. Line Yards and 100th in Adj. Sack Rate. Those numbers improved to a mediocre 74th and 48th, respectively. The run game wasn't efficient enough, which was on both the line and the backs, but improvement is improvement.

Of course, that doesn't matter now, as 2015's line will be almost brand new. Guard Trip Thurman started 10 games last year ... and the rest of the returnees combined for zero.

So line coach Mike Summers, a Muschamp holdover, will be making potpourri. Thurman is a senior, as is three-year starting Fordham tackle Mason Halter, who is making a slight leap up in competition (Patriot League to SEC) as a senior transfer.

After that: a smattering of sophomores, redshirt freshmen and freshmen. Some come incredibly regarded, of course -- it would be a surprise if blue-chip freshman Martez Ivey didn't start from day one -- but the primary goal has to be finding the right mix of talent for 2016 and beyond. There will be errors up front.

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Defense

FIVE FACTORS -- DEFENSE

Raw Category

Rk

Opp. Adj. Category

Rk

EXPLOSIVENESS

IsoPPP

0.72

4

IsoPPP+

129.8

8

EFFICIENCY

Succ. Rt.

37.9%

24

Succ. Rt. +

116.5

20

FIELD POSITION

Off. Avg. FP

33.7

9

Off. FP+

110.1

2

FINISHING DRIVES

Pts. Per Trip in 40

3.8

20

Redzone S&P+

119.2

18

TURNOVERS

EXPECTED

31.3

ACTUAL

30.0

-1.3

Category

Yards/
Game Rk

S&P+ Rk

Success
Rt. Rk

PPP+ Rk

OVERALL

15

10

16

8

RUSHING

13

14

27

4

PASSING

42

15

10

22

Standard Downs

10

15

8

Passing Downs

21

21

22

Q1 Rk

39

1st Down Rk

6

Q2 Rk

5

2nd Down Rk

9

Q3 Rk

15

3rd Down Rk

8

Q4 Rk

4

6. A Geoff Collins defense

Collins' Mississippi State defenses attempted to render you one-dimensional by stopping the run, then tee off on you on passing downs. His 2014 unit was unapologetically aggressive, excellent on passing downs despite giving up some big scrambles and draws.

The Bulldogs got hands on both the quarterback and his passes, and opponents still felt the best way to attack was through the air. Opponents threw 3 percent more frequently than the national average on standard downs and almost 5 percent more frequently on passing downs.

It will be interesting to see what happens to those rates this year. Despite Florida having one of the nation's most efficient pass defenses, opponents elected to throw on the Gators. But while they have some turnover to deal with in the front seven, they might also have the nation's best secondary, with three of the SEC's most successfully aggressive cornerbacks and steady safeties.

Florida's m.o. was to prevent big plays on the ground and attack against the air. Despite a mediocre pass rush, this formula worked. We'll see what changes after turnover on the front and in the booth.

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

117

2.66

3.22

34.2%

63.0%

22.7%

99.2

6.6%

6.0%

Rank

14

31

58

22

39

22

68

28

90

Name

Pos

Ht, Wt

2015
Year

Rivals

247 Comp.

GP

Tackles

% of Team

TFL

Sacks

Int

PBU

FF

FR

Dante Fowler, Jr.

DE

12

44.5

6.6%

15.0

8.5

0

1

2

1

Jonathan Bullard

DT

6'3, 283

Sr.

5 stars (6.1)

0.9918

12

35.5

5.3%

8.5

2.5

0

2

0

0

Bryan Cox, Jr.

DE

6'3, 268

Jr.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8716

11

20.5

3.0%

6.0

4.0

0

0

0

0

Darious Cummings

DT

11

20.5

3.0%

5.0

2.0

0

2

0

0

Alex McCalister

RUSH

6'6, 239

Jr.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8746

12

17.5

2.6%

8.0

6.0

0

1

1

0

Joey Ivie

DT

6'3, 295

Jr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.8814

12

16.0

2.4%

3.0

1.0

0

1

0

0

Caleb Brantley

DT

6'2, 314

So.

4 stars (5.9)

0.9472

12

13.5

2.0%

4.0

0.0

0

0

2

0

Gerald Willis

DE

8

10.0

1.5%

0.5

0.0

0

0

1

0

Leon Orr

DL

5

9.5

1.4%

2.0

0.0

0

0

1

0

Jordan Sherit

RUSH

6'4, 250

So.

4 stars (5.8)

0.9063

9

1.5

0.2%

0.0

0.0

0

1

0

0

Jay-nard Bostwick

DL

5

1.5

0.2%

0.0

0.0

0

0

0

0

Thomas Holley

DE

6'3, 312

RSFr.

4 stars (6.0)

0.9628

Taven Bryan

DT

6'5, 292

RSFr.

3 stars (5.6)

0.8657

Khairi Clark

DT

6'2, 321

RSFr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.9226

Justus Reed

RUSH

6'3, 234

RSFr.

3 stars (5.5)

0.8476

CeCe Jefferson

DE

6'1, 275

Fr.

5 stars (6.1)

0.9951

Jabari Zuniga

DE

6'3, 263

Fr.

3 stars (5.5)

0.8604

Linebackers

Name

Pos

Ht, Wt

2015
Year

Rivals

247 Comp.

GP

Tackles

% of Team

TFL

Sacks

Int

PBU

FF

FR

Antonio Morrison

MLB

6'1, 229

Sr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.8916

12

65.5

9.7%

6.0

1.0

1

1

1

0

Michael Taylor

MLB

11

42.5

6.3%

5.0

1.0

0

1

0

0

Neiron Ball

SLB

9

32.5

4.8%

3.0

2.0

0

1

1

0

Jarrad Davis

WLB

6'2, 230

Jr.

3 stars (5.7)

0.8681

9

17.0

2.5%

1.0

0.0

0

0

0

0

Anthony Harrell
(Ga. Tech)

MLB

6'2, 237

Sr.

3 stars (5.6)

0.8360

13

16.5

2.3%

0.0

0.0

0

0

0

0

Alex Anzalone

WLB

6'3, 244

Jr.

5 stars (6.1)

0.9734

12

10.0

1.5%

1.0

0.0

0

0

0

0

Daniel McMillian

SLB

6'1, 219

Jr.

4 stars (5.9)

0.9729

6

8.0

1.2%

1.0

0.0

0

0

0

0

Jeremi Powell

SLB

6'0, 219

Jr.

4 stars (5.8)

0.9147

7

3.5

0.5%

0.0

0.0

0

0

0

0

Matt Rolin

MLB

6'3, 216

So.

5 stars (5.8)

0.9320

R.J. Raymond

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