But you don’t know who to follow? Well, here’s a handy guide that might help you choose a team.
In Part One, we’ll look at teams who favour either
running the football or passing it on every down:
Teams Who Primarily
Run The Football
Wisconsin: the
Badgers, of the Big Ten, are famous for their ground and pound offence.
Throwing the football is an afterthought in Madison, and usually only done to
open up the run game. The Badgers have had a staggering array of running back
talent over the years, most recently Melvin Gordon and James White, and Corey Clement
looks set to be a star this year.
Pittsburgh: Out
of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), the Panthers have a brilliant running
back named James Conner, who quietly ran for 1765 rushing yards and twenty-six
touchdowns last year, amidst a disappointing 6-7 record a season ago. Pitt
figure to be better this year, and Conner is shaping as being a potential
Heisman Trophy candidate.
Georgia: Todd
Gurley and Knowshown Moreno have starred in Athens, Georgia in recent years,
and the Bulldogs, who compete in the tough South-eastern Conference (SEC), will
rely on Nick Chubb to carry their offence this season. Last year, he tied for
the best in a very good conference, amassing 1547 yards and fourteen touchdowns.
He’s sitting on a nice streak of eight consecutive 100-yard games. Chubb, who
is like a tank rolling downhill when he gets going, is going to be a huge star
in the SEC this year.
Auburn: the
Tigers from the SEC are a team who have a quarterback in Jeremy Johnson who
arguably runs the ball better than he throws it. They employ the option
offence, and are lucky to have Roc Thomas in the backfield to tote the football
when the quarterback isn’t doing the same. Auburn, under Gus Malzahn, are no
strangers to scoring big, and to amassing huge rushing totals. They’re also
hugely entertaining.
Teams Who Primarily
Throw The Football
Baylor: the
Bears, from the Big Twelve conference, are famous for lighting up the
scoreboard by way of big passing plays. In contrast to Wisconsin, they run the
football to set up the pass play, often via the quarterback, and with moderately-experienced
signal-caller Seth Russell likely to assume the starting mantle from the
departing Bryce Petty, there won’t be that much of a drop-off in production. Art
Briles loves his air raid offence, and it’s undoubtedly spectacular to watch!
Washington State:
the head coach in Pullman is a man named Mike Leach, who, along with the
legendary Hal Mumme, crafted the air-raid offence as we know it today.
Quarterbacks under Leach’s tutelage have regularly posted and broken NCAA
records. The Cougars have been at the bottom of the heap in the Pacific-12
conference for years, but Leach’s arrival has begun to turn the program around.
In 2014, it was not unusual to see WSU quarterbacks Connor Halliday and Luke
Falk attempting up to seventy passes in a game. The Cougs can score, but their
defence has been a serious problem.
California:
the Golden Bears are another Pacific-12 team known for throwing the football
like it’s going out of fashion. Some believe that QB Jared Goff is a sneaky
Heisman candidate in the pass-happy “Bear Raid” system run by Sonny Dykes. He
finished 2014 with 3973 passing yards, thirty-five touchdowns and a completion
percentage of sixty-two. Goff seems poised for bigger numbers this year, and
Cal look like a team who, with some defensive improvement, may shock a few
opponents in the difficult Pac-12 North division. Their games are never boring.
Ohio State:
once we find out who the defending National Champions will have in their
backfield, we’ll know more about the tenor of their offence, but the Buckeyes
know for sure they’ll have Ezekiel Elliott in the backfield. The hero of Ohio
State’s somewhat unlikely run to the national title a year ago, Elliott is a
definite Heisman candidate. He’s going to get a lot of the football, and Urban
Meyer’s option-type offence will see the quarterbacks tucking the ball away and
running with it often, too.
Oregon: the
Ducks, who were beaten by Ohio State in the National Championship Game last
season, have a potential Heisman Trophy candidate in their backfield. His name
is Royce Freeman, and with the Ducks losing QB Marcus Mariota to the NFL, you figure
they’ll spend a lot of their time handing off to Freeman. Why wouldn’t you?
Despite a few key departures, the Ducks will be a Pac-12 force, no doubt.
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