Today, we begin with Clemson's offense against Oklahoma's defense. I'll go ahead and preface all the forthcoming posts by saying this: We are down to the top four teams in the country, so there is minuscule advantages across the board.
Clemson Tigers Offense
Total Offense Rank: 12th
Total Yards Per Game: 510.7
Yards Per Play: 6.43
Rushing Offense Rank: 22nd
Rushing Yards Per Game: 222.2
Passing Offense Rank: 23rd
Passing Yards Per Game: 288.5
Scoring Offense Rank: 15th
Points Per Game: 38.5
Oklahoma Sooners Defense
Total Defense Rank: 32nd
Total Yards Per Game: 350.7
Yards Per Play: 4.68
Rushing Defense Rank: 45th
Rushing Yards Per Game: 149.2
Passing Defense Rank: 34th
Passing Yards Per Game: 201.5
Scoring Defense Rank: 21st
Points Per Game: 20.8
A simple look at the statistical rankings of each unit bears nothing for this game. Clemson benefits from playing in the ACC and while the conference had several of the top defenses statistically, many of those stats can be misconstrued because of the sub-par offenses.
On the flip side, OU's defense was the best in the Big 12, although it is outside the Top 20 in every category above. Well, think of the conference it plays in and now think about the type of offenses that conference boasts - Baylor, TCU, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, West Virginia ... six of the top 28 offenses in the NCAA.
We could sit here and argue all day, "Well, the defenses in the Big 12 aren't great, hence why the offenses seem to be so good." Or, "The ACC owns five of the Top 20 defenses, so Clemson's stats are that much more impressive."
Look, you can make stats say whatever you want them to say. What can be concluded from watching each team is that these two units match up extremely well.
For starters, Clemson has the best quarterback in the nation in Deshaun Watson. A Heisman finalist and winner of the Davey O'Brien award, Watson is a surgeon signal-caller. He completed 69.5 percent of his passes for over 3,500 yards and 30 touchdowns. Watson did throw 11 interceptions, but only four of those came in the final seven games.
It's Watson's running game, though, that has exploded in the second half of the season. Through the first six games of the season, Watson had one game where he ran for more than 60 yards. In the final five games, He had over 100 yards on the ground four times and had seven of his 11 rushing TDs. Watson finished with 887 rush yards to give him 4,399 total for the season.
While the Tigers lack a go-to playmaker at the skill positions, they make up for it with a bevy of talent. Running back Wayne Gallman ran for 1,332 yards and 10 touchdowns despite sitting out a full game (Wake Forest) and having his carries limited in others when Clemson held big leads. The Tigers' wide receiver corps consists of several reliable players and is led by Artavis Scott with 805 yards. Freshman Deon Cain and senior Charone Peake each have over 500 yards and five TDs. Lump in tight end Jordan Leggett and his team-leading seven TD receptions, and it's easy to see Watson likes to spread the ball around.
Clemson RB Wayne Gallman will be looked upon to shoulder the load against OU's run defense. (Photo courtesy TigerNet.com) |
For OU's defense, it starts up front with defense end Charles Tapper and linebacker Eric Striker. The two combined for 14.5 sacks and caused havoc in offensive backfields all season. Striker finds ways to disrupt a quarterbacks timing and is extremely quick on the edge. I expect Tapper to get double-teamed by Clemson's offensive line, but that frees up a gap and creates one-on-one matchups for guys like Striker and Matt Dimon, the end opposite Tapper. Clemson's offensive line started five new guys in 2015 and the big hogs only allowed 14 sacks.
If Clemson is able to win the line of scrimmage, that's great. But it's not the determining factor in the ballgame. In steps OU's secondary. What makes that unit scary good is the exceptional linebacker coverage. Striker, Dominique Alexander and Jordan Evans are hybrid backers who cover the short passing game probably better than any other group in the country. If they need to play up and stop the run, they can. If they need to drop back into coverage, they can. And they do both well.
The next line of defense is a veteran cornerback and safety group. Zack Sanchez, Jordan Thomas, Ahmad Thomas, Dakota Austin and Steven Parker anchor the secondary. Sanchez had a team-leading six interceptions and Jordan Thomas was one shy with five picks. They were burned a season ago by virtually this same group of receivers, so there will be plenty to play for. That and the fact that they shut down Baylor, Texas Tech, West Virginia, TCU and Oklahoma State provides more proof that they aren't fooling around this year.
Oklahoma's Zack Sanchez picks off one of his team-leading six INTs this season. (Photo courtesy AP) |
That's the matchup to watch. How will Clemson utilize the short and underneath passes to loosen up OU's secondary? If they are successful early, Watson could take some deep shots that might be the difference. If the Sooners don't allow Gallman to get free or Scott, Peake and Leggett to exploit the middle of the field, it could be a long night for those in orange. Historically, Oklahoma has had trouble defending dual-threat quarterbacks. Watson's legs could get another workout after eclipsing 20 carries for the first time in his career in each of the Tigers' final two games (21 carriers vs. South Carolina; 24 vs. North Carolina).
Advantage: SLIGHT to Clemson - and I mean SLIGHT!
-BtW
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