Some interesting data points from the week. It's an incredibly small sample size, but interesting nonetheless.
1. Carson Jones is 4th in SoCon in completion percentage, hitting at 60% on 25 attempts.
For comparison's sake, Chase Artropeous also got fed to the wolves in Knoxville, and hit 52.2% on 23 attempts. Of the four QBs over 60% completion percentage, two of them played Presbyterian and Gardner Webb.
If Jones can hit 60% against that pack of jackals, then there's a pretty good possibility that he'll be a pretty consistent passer for us.
2. Furman had two defenders credited with a sack (Stephens and Chideo).
I don't believe Dimaggio is credited with a sack, even though he slammed into the QB and brought him to the ground, because he was credited with a facemask penalty (I guess, for grabbing the back of the helmet). I believe facemask penalties are just considered running plays in the stat book, so Dimaggio doesn't get the sack, even though he did.
Three sacks against that offense, offensive line, and QB isn't nothing. Only Mercer had more than three sacks this week, albeit against a far less formidable opponent. If we can get in Ole Miss's backfield, I like our chances against FCS competition.
3. Furman had five passes defended. That's third for the week behind Wofford and ETSU, who had 6.
4. Furman only kicked off once, but worth noting that Ian Williams was 100% on touchbacks. Furman was the only SoCon team not to give up a kick return (again, small sample).
Mercer, for instance, had 10 kickoffs, no touchbacks. Their average kickoff went 57.2 yards, so somewhere around the 8 yard line. Small sample, but that may be a weak spot for the Bears this year.
Wofford kicked off 5 times. 1 touchback, and gave up an average return of 39.7 yards. So, their guy struggled to get it down there and the Terriers appeared to have a tough time covering the kicks.
It's not a sexy stat, but I'm not sure fans appreciate how effective Williams is at giving teams virtually no shot at shifting momentum by returning a kick. If you rarely can force a touchback, eventually you're going to get popped in a big game. Just the law of averages.