Scoring average against P5 Schools

Since this has come up in a couple of threads about how much should we be scoring, and we are only playing conference teams, lets take a look at the data. I removed all schools that played less than 4 games (which only one non-P5 team played 4 P5 teams so kudos to Lincoln Riley's ECU team. As marked 2013 was non-AQ teams not P5, so slightly different teams in there.

Virginia Tech is there in 2009 (31.5), 2010 (33.4), 2016 (33.3), and 2019 (32.4).

2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 (non-aq) 2012 2011 2010 2009
1 LSU 47 Oklahoma 48.8 Oklahoma State 43.8 Oklahoma 44.5 Baylor 43.3 TCU 45.5 Florida State 47.9 Oregon 48.3 Oklahoma State 46.6 Oregon 42.7 Oregon 39.1
2 Ohio State 44.8 Clemson 45.7 Oklahoma 43.3 Pittsburgh 41.9 Oklahoma 43 Baylor 44.9 Baylor 47.2 Baylor 42.4 Baylor 43.5 Wisconsin 42.4 Cincinnati 36.7
3 Alabama 43.7 Alabama 43.4 Ohio State 40.3 Louisville 41.4 Texas Tech 41.6 Oregon 43.9 Oregon 43.8 Oklahoma State 40.5 Oregon 43.3 Oklahoma State 41.5 Texas 35.1
4 Clemson 42.2 Ohio State 41.8 Arizona 39.6 Washington 40.4 North Carolina 39.7 Ohio State 43.5 Ohio State 43.5 Clemson 40 Stanford 42 Stanford 39.3 Stanford 34.9
5 Oklahoma 39.3 West Virginia 39.2 Penn State 38.7 Texas Tech 39.6 Oregon 39.7 Michigan State 38.5 Texas A&M 40.1 Texas A&M 39.3 Wisconsin 41.7 Oklahoma 38.6 Texas Tech 34.7
6 Washington State 35.8 Syracuse 39.1 Georgia 36.5 Alabama 38.8 Oklahoma State 38.9 Georgia 37.8 Arizona State 38.5 Kansas State 38.1 Texas A&M 38.6 Auburn 37.4 Georgia Tech 33.5
7 Minnesota 34.2 Washington State 35.7 Louisville 36.2 Clemson 38.4 Clemson 38.6 Georgia Tech 37.5 Clemson 38 Alabama 38 Oklahoma 36.8 Ohio State 34.3 Oregon State 33.2
8 USC 33.7 Michigan 34.6 Alabama 34.6 Penn State 38.3 Stanford 38.3 California 36.9 Missouri 37.4 North Carolina 36.9 USC 35.8 Arkansas 34.1 Virginia Tech 31.5
9 Louisville 33.3 Oklahoma State 34.2 Auburn 34 Oklahoma State 37.6 TCU 38.3 East Carolina 35.3 Auburn 37.1 Arizona 36.7 West Virginia 34.5 Illinois 33.7 Arkansas 31.2
10 Texas 33.2 Georgia 33.6 Wake Forest 33.9 Michigan 37.3 Ohio State 36 Nebraska 35 Alabama 37.1 Ohio State 36.7 LSU 34.1 Virginia Tech 33.4 Clemson 30.9
11 Utah 32.4 Missouri 32 Texas Tech 32.9 Tennessee 37 Indiana 35.3 Alabama 34.2 Washington 36.8 Nevada 36.7 Michigan 34 Baylor 33 Notre Dame 30.5
12 Virginia Tech 32.4 Texas A&M 32 USC 32.8 Washington State 37 Arizona State 34.6 Oklahoma 33.9 Oklahoma State 35.7 Oklahoma 36.6 Arkansas 33.7 Kansas State 32.3 Connecticut 30
13 Oregon 31.9 Purdue 31.5 Washington 32.7 California 35.4 Arkansas 34.4 Mississippi State 33.8 Georgia 35.2 West Virginia 36.5 Kansas State 33.3 Alabama 32.1
14 Boston College 31.9 Texas 31.3 Arizona State 32.5 Ohio State 35.2 Mississippi 34 Florida State 33.7 Indiana 34.6 Florida State 35.9 Washington 33.1 North Carolina State 31.1
15 Florida 31.7 North Carolina State 31.1 Notre Dame 32 Oregon 33.8 Alabama 33.3 Arizona 33.4 UCF 34 Georgia 34.8 Clemson 32.7 Georgia 30.1
16 Iowa State 30.8 Notre Dame 30.9 North Carolina State 31.9 Virginia Tech 33.3 California 33 USC 33.2 Texas Tech 33.7 Texas 34.7 Arizona State 32.6
17 Notre Dame 30.8 Texas Tech 30.8 Oregon 31.4 USC 32.5 Washington State 32.8 UCLA 32.8 Oregon State 33.4 Arizona State 34 Alabama 31.9
18 Michigan 30.3 Iowa 30.4 Wisconsin 31.2 Arizona State 32.4 UCLA 32.5 Auburn 32.6 Wisconsin 33.3 Texas Tech 33.6 Missouri 31
19 Baylor 30.1 Arizona 30.3 Stanford 30.5 Baylor 31.8 West Virginia 32.5 Arizona State 32.2 UCLA 33 Georgia Tech 33.3 Georgia Tech 30.4
20 Oregon State 30.1 Penn State 30.1 West Virginia 30.4 Florida State 31.7 Tennessee 31.9 Wisconsin 32 Kansas State 32.6 UCLA 33
21 Auburn 30.1 LSU 30 Texas A&M 30.1 Texas A&M 31.1 Notre Dame 31.8 Kansas State 32 Stanford 32 Louisville 32.1
22 Utah 31 Michigan 31.7 West Virginia 31.8 LSU 31.6 Northwestern 31.2
23 West Virginia 30.2 Nebraska 31.5 South Carolina 31.3 South Carolina 31.1 Tennessee 31.2
24 Arizona 30.9 Washington State 31 Oklahoma 31.1 Miami (Florida) 30.8
25 LSU 30.2 Notre Dame 30 Duke 31 USC 30.7
26 USC 30 Cincinnati 30.6 Wisconsin 30.5
27 Arizona 30.4 Cincinnati 30.3
28 Michigan 30.2 Syracuse 30.2
29 Georgia Tech 30 Penn State 30.1

To sumerize the data (which really shows that 2012-2015 were high scoring years, but possibly defense, or rules have caught up):

2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
Teams over 35 PPG 6 7 7 14 11 9 13 14 8 6 3
Teams over 30 PPG (4 game min) 21 21 21 23 26 25 29 21 19 15 12
All teams over 30 PPG 29 33 31 31 35 32 34 35 28 22 17

Now lets look at the ACC conference

2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
1 Clemson 48 Clemson 46.7 Louisville 36.5 Louisville 45.9 North Carolina 41.9 Georgia Tech 37 Florida State 50.7 Clemson 46.5 Clemson 34.2 Virginia Tech 35.8 Clemson 33.6
2 Louisville 35.3 Syracuse 39.8 Clemson 32.8 Pittsburgh 44.6 Clemson 38.8 Florida State 35.9 Clemson 40.4 Florida State 37.7 Florida State 31.3 North Carolina State 32.3 Virginia Tech 33.6
3 Boston College 33.1 North Carolina State 33.4 Wake Forest 31.3 Clemson 39.8 Duke 27.5 Pittsburgh 30.8 Miami 31.3 North Carolina 37.3 North Carolina 28.1 Florida State 30.2 Florida State 33.5
4 Virginia Tech 32.8 Georgia Tech 33 North Carolina State 29.9 Virginia Tech 34.1 North Carolina State 27.4 North Carolina 30 Georgia Tech 31.1 Georgia Tech 37.2 Georgia Tech 28 Maryland 28.8 Georgia Tech 33.3
5 Virginia 29.6 Pittsburgh 31 Georgia Tech 28 Florida State 30 Virginia 27.1 Duke 27 Duke 29.4 Miami 35.4 Wake Forest 27.5 Miami 25.6 Miami 31.6
6 Wake Forest 29.4 Wake Forest 29.1 Boston College 25.5 Miami 29.4 Pittsburgh 27 Louisville 27 North Carolina 28.1 North Carolina State 28.4 Miami 27.4 North Carolina 24.4 Wake Forest 28.3
7 North Carolina 29.3 North Carolina 27 Miami 24.4 North Carolina 28.5 Florida State 27 Clemson 25.5 Boston College 26.8 Duke 28.1 Virginia Tech 25.8 Duke 24.3 North Carolina State 26.6
8 Miami 26.3 Boston College 26.1 Syracuse 23.6 Georgia Tech 24.8 Louisville 26 North Carolina State 24.6 Virginia Tech 22.8 Virginia Tech 24.1 North Carolina State 25.8 Georgia Tech 23.6 Duke 23.3
9 Florida State 25.9 Miami 24.6 Virginia Tech 23.1 Syracuse 23.9 Virginia Tech 25.4 Miami 23.9 Pittsburgh 22.4 Virginia 21 Maryland 23.8 Clemson 20.3 Boston College 21.8
9 Duke 25.9 Virginia Tech 24.5 Pittsburgh 22.8 North Carolina State 21.6 Syracuse 25.3 Boston College 22.9 Maryland 20.1 Maryland 19.5 Virginia 19.9 Virginia 20 North Carolina 20.9
11 Syracuse 25.3 Virginia 24.3 Virginia 20.1 Duke 20.9 Miami 24.9 Virginia 20.9 North Carolina State 16.9 Boston College 19.3 Duke 19.5 Wake Forest 16.9 Maryland 20.1
12 Pittsburgh 19.9 Duke 22 Duke 19.8 Virginia 20.6 Georgia Tech 23.5 Virginia Tech 19.4 Virginia 16.5 Wake Forest 16.5 Boston College 17.4 Boston College 16.8 Virginia 15.4
13 Georgia Tech 19.1 Florida State 20.4 Florida State 19.5 Wake Forest 17.5 Wake Forest 15 Syracuse 12.9 Wake Forest 15.5
14 North Carolina State 16.1 Louisville 20.3 North Carolina 19.3 Boston College 12 Boston College 9.1 Wake Forest 12.1 Syracuse 15.5

Only once, 2010, did we score over 35 PPG in conference. Against, 2009, 2010, 2016, and 2019 we scored over 30 PPG in conference as we did out of conference. In 2009 and 2010 we led the conference in PPG (in conference games). Each of those years we did better in conference than out of conference.

ACC P5
2009 33.6 31.5
2010 35.8 33.4
2016 34.1 33.3
2019 32.8 32.4
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Comments

When compiling the average score are games against FCS and G5 counted? Example Oklahoma scores 63 against FAU in 2018 or 2019 LSU scoring 55 on Georgia Southern and 65 against Northwestern State and 42 Utah State. Would only counting P5 lower the average down that much for any teams? Especially SEC with often two lower level OOC games each year?

Wet stuff on the red stuff.

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No, this is only vs. P5 teams, or vs. conference teams (for the ACC).

you should consider putting that in the thread title then /s

"Why gobble gobble chumps asks such good questions, I will never know." - TheFifthFuller

Ok wasn't sure if you only removed teams that played less than P5 teams or also games by P5 against lower level. Great work up. This data isn't anywhere else out there it all includes the lower level games.

Wet stuff on the red stuff.

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If it isn't already, it should be restricted to regular time only

Free Hugh

Especially SEC with often two lower level OOC games each year?

Exactly like the ACC lol?

But as pointed out, this data is against just P5 teams.

To determine how including FCS or G5 would be labor intensive at this point in my data collection, however, it is likely that including G5 and FCS teams would raise a teams PPG based on the stats that follow:

2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
35 PPG 17 22 20 31 31 28 26 25 18 19 11
30 PPG 58 58 50 58 57 59 57 55 42 42 32

So i can't say yes, but probably. However, this is more to look at what this means for this season as most teams are playing P5 opponents only.

Here are the rollups for all FBS teams vs G5/FCS. Some of these numbers only represent 1 game. But basically the G5/FCS gets whaled on.

against G5 teams 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
50 PPG 6 9 13 8 7 11 10 13 9 9 5
40 PPG 23 27 31 29 29 32 30 27 30 31 20
35 PPG 51 41 45 47 48 46 54 46 43 40 34
30 PPG 71 68 67 71 74 70 77 63 57 58 60

Thanks for putting this together. I've thought about looking into it before, but never had the time.

Out of curiosity, outside of leveling the field to just P5 matchups, is there any other standardization going on here? That is, do we remove defensive and special teams scoring to just see offensive stats? Also, are we only looking at regulation scoring, or are we including Overtime scoring as well?

"When I was growing up, Virginia Tech was a school that was kicking ass and taking names, and it's time we get back to that" - James Franklin

Unfortunately no, this is final score. So defense scores and OT are in there. I fairly easily get you break down in to TDs, XPs, FGs, 2pt. conv. but doesn't account for who scored the TD.

Gotcha. Not complaining, this is still great information, so thanks!

For anyone with time, I think that would be an interesting project, even if you broke it down to just the ACC or even the Coastal to see where we stand.

"When I was growing up, Virginia Tech was a school that was kicking ass and taking names, and it's time we get back to that" - James Franklin

Oh I've already complained that scoring offense stats includes defensive TDs and scoring defense stats include defensive TDs. If my defense doesn't let a team cross the 50 and yet my offense throws 3 pick sixes my defense shouldn't get knocked for 21 points.

I mean if those kind of advanced stats existed, it would show Bud Foster absolutely needs to be in the football hall of fame. The way his teams carried VT in the 2000-2010 window doesn't get appreciated nearly as much as it should, and I say that knowing he already gets a lot of credit for it.

"When I was growing up, Virginia Tech was a school that was kicking ass and taking names, and it's time we get back to that" - James Franklin

Yeah, though Bud in the HoF is a different story as it's currently only for head coaches, which is a bunch of BS.

To sumerize the data (which really shows that 2012-2015 were high scoring years, but possibly defense, or rules have caught up):

The defenses have caught up in some ways, but that era was also famous for some pretty insane imbalance between the way the game was officiated. Teams were abusing the hell out of no calls in the RPO game for ineligble man downfield. It wasn't uncommon for those Auburn, Baylor, and TCU teams in particular to be almost hitting their OL in the back 5-8 yards downfield. Auburn's game tying TD in the 2013 Iron Bowl had 4 of 5 OL 3+ yards downfield several at 5 yards and no calls. Not to mention all the subbing rules favor the offense and teams were going fast just to keep the wrong defensive personnel on the field with no possible recourse for the defense. I don't remember the year, but they made a rule where if the offense gets to sub they have to wait for the defense to be able to sub as well.

There are definitely things i noticed that i want to go look up, like Pitt's 44 ppg in ACC in 2016. I do remember the substitution rule too, but don't remember the year. But i am curious to why we got just a 5 year period as i seem to remember teams going no huddle prior to 2012. However, i personally think that RPO is worse for defenses that no-huddle so it would be interesting to see what the data shows, if it can account for everything.

I probably should have said "defenses and/or rules"

Random, but my first takeaway was just how insane LSU's takeoff was this year. The ten years prior, they're sitting around 30-32 in a good year - and then all of a sudden 47 in 2019??? Just let that sink in. Heck, they're the only SEC team at the top of the list in any year. And that's WITH Texas, Auburn, Alabama, Georgia, and Clemson on the schedule... That has got to be one of, if not the best offense in CFB history. Safe to say nobody saw that coming. It'll be interesting to see how far the dropoff is this year.

Yeah I think a lot of the best offenses in CFB history have been in recent years. Tua's Bama teams, 2019 LSU, Basically all of Lincoln Riley's teams, have been putting up insane numbers and advanced analytics. Hell, Deshaun Watson had a 4000/1000 season in 2015.

Kind of just goes to show how little parity there is in college sports. In order to be a championship team, you need to be absolutely dominant to the point of absolutely blowing everyone out and not shy to absolutely bury everyone without taking your foot off the gas.

Being good isn't enough. Being great isn't enough. You need to be absolutely dominant.

"When I was growing up, Virginia Tech was a school that was kicking ass and taking names, and it's time we get back to that" - James Franklin

One thing that showed up while compiling this (that won't show up here), is how many times removed TCU for not having enough games. They put up some points.

So you are saying we should be going after former TCU coaches if we want to put up some points?

Plan for the worst and hope for the best, not the other way around.

Also, if anyone wants a good laugh, check out Boston College's 2015 team. They played 3 top 10 teams that year and only gave up more than 20 points twice.... (to us and Clemson). By the numbers, probably one of the best defensive teams in the country.

So how good were they? Oh that's right, only one non-FCS victory, because they never put up more than 17 points against an FBS team....

By the way, thanks for your work on this, KingJames! I know these kinds of things are tedious and take a lot of work, but it is much appreciated! Love looking through stats.

Welcome, i enjoy this stuff. This was a lot less tedious than most of the other stuff I have done.

We seem to do really well when we average about 33 points. That was with Bud's defenses, but also goes to show scoring 40 a game shouldn't be the benchmark.

Plan for the worst and hope for the best, not the other way around.

This is fantastic work. The question still lingers for me though, and it was mentioned above, how many points was the offense scoring against P-5 competition?

Is coronavirus over yet?

All of them

"A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K

As mentioned above the stats don't take into account defensive and special teams scores (which I'm sure would require quite a bit of work).

Is coronavirus over yet?

Good work.

Maybe we're a decent team after all?

What interests me the most is how similar 2019 and 2016 look with drastically different fan opinions of each. Obviously the defense was the difference maker in overall standings but we are not as far away as it may seem to getting this thing on track. Now we need to get some croots to keep the trajectory on an upward course.

"A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K

What interests me the most is how similar 2019 and 2016 look with drastically different fan opinions of each.

PPG is nice, but it's not an adjusted statistic. The ACC had a rare "strong" year in 2016, which makes it all the more impressive that we had a really good season. Our schedule was on the weaker end of P5 schools in 2019 and we still lost to UVA for the first time since 2003, got beat at home by Duke by 35, lost our bowl game to a team playing a WR at QB, and lost to Boston College (who lost to Kansas at home by 24 points two weeks later).

In 2016 we took the eventual national champs to the wire in the ACCCG, beat UVA 52-10, overturned a 0-24 halftime deficit in our bowl game against an SEC team with 35 unanswered points, and had a couple handfuls of NFL players on the roster. This was also year 1, and we finished the season hopeful that our newfound offense and jolt of energy into the program would continue.

I'm not so sure the two seasons are really comparable at all. When you look at the seasons in terms of memorable moments, and the context surrounding each season, I think its very easy to see why there are drastically different fan opinions.

The defense in 2016 was better than the 2019 defense. It can be that simple.

I was only comparing the offensive total production similarities. The 2016 team was hot garbage in first halves all year. So while the bowl game was a nod to perseverance it was also a common flaw to dig a hole. I do agree that timing matters but a raw comparison is not that much different.

"A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K