There is a narrative floating around that Mike Leach’s offense puts his defenses in bad spots by forcing them to be on the field for 80+ plays every game. Not sure why this idea exists, but there is zero statistical backing that supports it.
Since 2015, here are the average plays per game defended by Washington State and by MSU.
2015 - State: 73.4 WSU: 72.1
2016 - State: 73.5 WSU: 67
2017 - State: 58.7 WSU: 62.9 (Remember State led the country in 3 & outs in 2017)
2018 - State: 63.7 WSU: 64.4
2019 - State: 63.2 WSU: 68.1
That is an average five year difference in plays defensed between State and WSU of less than 0.5 plays per game. Again, 65 some odd games of data for each team and there is practically zero difference between what our defense has been on the field for and what Leach’s defense has been on the field for.
Only once in the last five seasons has Leach’s defense been on the field for more than 70 plays per game. This talking point that we are going to have to routinely defend 15-20 more plays per game is a narrative based on nothing more than perception. In the last five years WSU has never had to defend more than 4.9 plays per game that State in any given season. And in two of the five seasons their defense has been on the field less than ours.
The only way I could see our defense playing significantly more snaps next year is if the passing offense is highly inefficient and a high number of incomplete passes keep the offense from moving the ball. That is a possibility in year 1, but this offense does not inherently put its defense in a bad position.
Since 2015, here are the average plays per game defended by Washington State and by MSU.
2015 - State: 73.4 WSU: 72.1
2016 - State: 73.5 WSU: 67
2017 - State: 58.7 WSU: 62.9 (Remember State led the country in 3 & outs in 2017)
2018 - State: 63.7 WSU: 64.4
2019 - State: 63.2 WSU: 68.1
That is an average five year difference in plays defensed between State and WSU of less than 0.5 plays per game. Again, 65 some odd games of data for each team and there is practically zero difference between what our defense has been on the field for and what Leach’s defense has been on the field for.
Only once in the last five seasons has Leach’s defense been on the field for more than 70 plays per game. This talking point that we are going to have to routinely defend 15-20 more plays per game is a narrative based on nothing more than perception. In the last five years WSU has never had to defend more than 4.9 plays per game that State in any given season. And in two of the five seasons their defense has been on the field less than ours.
The only way I could see our defense playing significantly more snaps next year is if the passing offense is highly inefficient and a high number of incomplete passes keep the offense from moving the ball. That is a possibility in year 1, but this offense does not inherently put its defense in a bad position.