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B-Dawg's Western Michigan Broncos: Unfinished bidnezz
This is a discussion on B-Dawg's Western Michigan Broncos: Unfinished bidnezz within the Football Dynasties forums.
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08-09-2013, 10:46 PM | #1 |
MVP
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B-Dawg's Western Michigan Broncos: Unfinished bidnezz
Greg Jennings (left), Louis Delmas (center) and Tony Scheffler (right) were future NFL players who were in B-Dawg’s NCAA ’06 Western Michigan dynasty. UNFINISHED BIDNEZZ Eight years after bailing, B-Dawg returns to WMU KALAMAZOO, Mich. — It should have been one of the most fun Mid-American Conference dynasties ever. Back in NCAA 2006, B-Dawg rolled with the Western Michigan Broncos in his MaddenMania dynasty. This was no ordinary MAC team. The Broncos’ NCAA 2006 roster included three quality future NFL players in wide receiver Greg Jennings, tight end Tony Scheffler, defensive end and safety Louis Delmas. There was only one problem with this dynasty: The game itself was a piece of crap! There are some gamers who called NCAA 2006 the best version of the game ever, but they were obviously smoking crack. The game was a complete abomination, so much so that B-Dawg just abandoned the dynasty in the third season and played Madden 2006 the rest of that season’s gaming cycle. “I’m an NCAA man first, a Madden man second,” B-Dawg said. “It took a lot for me to put down NCAA in favor of Madden.” The last straw for B-Dawg game in a 2007 game against Bowling Green. Leading by 21 points in the final minute, Bowling Green heaved a long touchdown pass on third-and-long rather than milk the clock. That play demonstrated two things: The horrible unrealistic playcalling by the CPU in NCAA 2006 (little has changed, come to think of it), plus the ease with which the CPU could complete the deep ball (B-Dawg half-expected it and defended accordingly). Eight years later, B-Dawg is returning to Kalamazoo to take care of some unfinished bidnezz. “I always felt like I left the fine folks of Kalamazoo down by abruptly leaving eight years ago,” B-Dawg said. “Now that I have a second chance, I’m going to make the most of it. I just hope NCAA ’14 doesn’t blow! I will have Madden this year as a Plan B.” Western’s NCAA ’14 roster doesn’t appear to have any future NFL stars, but you never know who is underrated in the video game. The top-rated players are three who are at 80 OVR. Besides the desire to make up for his abrupt departure eight years ago, B-Dawg chose Western because it is only 72 OVR with a one-star rating, meaning he should have a long rebuilding job on his hands. Other options were to roll with a weak team in a power conference (Vanderbilt, Colorado, Kansas, Minnesota were options), but B-Dawg wasn’t feeling any of them. He desperately wants to use Boy-Z State in a dynasty, but those Broncos are simply too good. “I love all of the small milestones along the way,” B-Dawg said. “The first win over a ranked opponent. The first time you crack the top 25. The first four-star and five-star recruits. You get all of that way too soon using a team like Boy-Z State, which is already in the preseason top 25.” B-Dawg also wasn’t feeling teams like Air Force, UL-Monroe, UTEP or Wyoming, crappy teams that he considered that are in weaker conferences. “It’s too easy to win in a weak conference right away,” B-Dawg said. “I run that risk with Western Michigan, but I think I’ll enjoy using a Michigan school since I live here.” B-Dawg’s new home in NCAA ’14 is Waldo Stadium. PLATFORM: PlayStation 3 ROSTERS: The first set of community rosters from Operation Sports. I replaced a senior wide receiver who hasn’t done much with red-shirt freshman wide receiver Michael Henry, who I watched play in high school. MODE: All-American mode 4 lyfe, baby!!! Past attempts at Heisman mode were just an exercise in frustration. I kinda suck. SLIDERS: BYU’s at Operation Sports, with some minor tweaks. These will always be a work in progress. I started playing dynasty games without playing a full game to test anything. LAST YEAR: 4-8 (2-6 MAC) PRESTIGE: 1 star TEAM GRADES: C- OVR, C offense, C- defense, C special teams; 72 OVR, 74 offense, 73 defense PRESEASON RANKING: No. 85 RECRUITING RULES: I can’t over-recruit. Once I fill my 70-player roster, I can’t continue to recruit, even if I have unfilled needs. I will just have to take a walk-on and cut another recruit. If I over-recruit by mistake (such as needing two players and having three commit), I have to cut from the last group to commit. CUTS: No cuts from existing roster, unless I find out after starting this dynasty that a player is no longer with Western. REDSHIRTS: Only true freshmen can be red-shirted. Every effort will be made to prevent "accidental red-shirts" of non-freshmen because they didn't get a stat. TRANSFERS: If a player wants to transfer, I won't stop him from leaving. We don't want anyone who doesn't want to be here. PLAYERS LEAVING EARLY: If a player is 95 OVR or higher, I can't try to talk him into staying. If he's 90-94 OVR, I get one week to persuade him to stay. Anyone under 90 OVR, I can do whatever is necessary to keep the player - short of doing a "quit dynasty, don't save." (Note: If I have a special player going for all-time dynasty records, I will put on a full-court press to keep him.) GAME PLAY: I use “Ask Coach” to keep me from relying on money plays. I pick one of the three plays. Exceptions are for hurry-up situations late in a half, when a game is hopelessly out of reach and I want to call plays that won’t add to the frustration level and when I just need to run the ball to milk the clock. I cannot run the clock below 10 seconds until the final two minutes. I also plan to change playbooks every few seasons to keep from getting too comfortable with the offense. PLAYBOOK: Multiple offense, multiple defense until I make my own custom playbook. GAME SETTINGS Mode: All-American offense and defense Injuries: On Fatigue: On Quarter length: 9 minutes Play clock: On Coaching tips: Off Game speed: Normal Player minimum speed threshold: 28 Home field effects: On Ice the kicker: On Penalties: Offsides 80, false start 80, holding 70, facemask 50, offensive and defensive P.I. 0, KR/PR interference 100, clipping 50, intentional grounding 60, roughing the passer 52, roughing the kicker 0. (The zeroes are presumably for penalties that don’t exist anyway, so why bother?) SLIDERS (BYU’s over at Operation Sports, with tweaks) (User/CPU) QB accuracy: 5, 10 Pass blocking: 60, 65 WR catching: 40, 45 RB ability: 45, 65 Run blocking: 25, 45 Pass coverage: 70, 70 Interceptions: 30, 30 Rush defense: 40, 75 Tackling: 35, 35 FG power: 55, 50 FG accuracy: 50, 40 Punt power: 50, 50 Punt accuracy: 50, 50 Kickoff power: 40, 45 TEAM INFO OVR: 72 Offense: 74 Defense: 73 Prestige: 1 star Projected rankings: 106th 2014, 98th 2015, 98th 2016 Coach: B-Dawg Contract: Five years Security: Safe Prestige: C (Don’t they know who I am?!?) Target wins per year: 7 Program tradition: D+ Last edited by BDawg35; 12-24-2015 at 09:47 PM. |
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08-09-2013, 10:47 PM | #2 |
MVP
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Re: B-Dawg's Western Michigan Broncos: Unfinished bidnezz
2013 Prestige: 1 star Grades: C- OVR, C offense, C- defense, C special teams; 72 OVR, 74 offense, 73 defense Preseason ranking: No. 85 Final ranking: Unranked Bowl game: Louisiana-Lafayette 45, Western Michigan 35 (Little Caesars Bowl) Passing leader: Tyler Van Tubbergen 276-for-449, 3,806 yards, 26 TD, 15 int. Rushing leader: Dareyon Chance 172 carries, 686 yards, 9 TD Receiving leaders: Jaime Wilson 65 catches, 1,237 yards, 10 TD Defensive leaders: Desmond Bozeman 87 tackles; Roosevelt Donaldson 21 TFL, 11 sacks; Justin Currie and Donald Celiscar 4 interceptions. Synopsis: Western struggled out of the gates, going 1-4 on its first five games under coach B-Dawg. A triple-overtime victory at Toledo ignited a six-game winning streak that put the Broncos in a position to earn a berth in the MAC Championship Game. However, they were thoroughly thrashed in a battle for the MAC West title, losing 56-35 to 20th-ranked Northern Illinois. NIU quarterback Jordan Lynch had an epic performance, rushing 17 times for 306 yards and five touchdowns, as B-Dawg learned under no uncertain terms that the CPU read option is on steroids in this game. A season that was going so great ended with a two-game losing streak, as the Broncos also lost their bowl game, 45-35 to Louisiana-Lafayette. 2014 Prestige: 2 stars Grades: C OVR, C offense, C defense, B- special teams; 74 OVR, 74 offense, 75 defense Preseason ranking: No. 87 Record: 9-4 (5-3, 3rd place MAC West) Final ranking: Unranked Bowl game: Navy 27, Western Michigan 14 (Military Bowl) Passing leader: Zack Wynn 202-for-339, 2,232 yards, 16 TD, 15 int. Rushing leader: Fabian Johnson 197 carries, 903 yards, 15 TD Receiving leaders: Jaime Wilson 86 catches, 1,108 yards, 4 TD; Kendrick Roberts 4 TD Defensive leaders: Caleb Bailey 87 tackles; Edward Rolle 21 TFL; Roosevelt Donaldson 10 sacks; Donald Celiscar and Jon Henry 3 int. Synopsis: B-Dawg enjoyed perhaps the most exciting season he’s ever played in any video game. In eight of the first 11 games, Western scored the winning points in the final 1:01 of the fourth quarter or overtime. In six of those games, the Broncos rallied from double-digit deficits. Seven games received ESPN Classic scores. The season began with road victories at Boy-Z State and Michigan. Western finished on a sour note, however, losing its final two games for the second year in a row. Zack Wynn took over from struggling Zach Terrell at quarterback. Neither player was terribly effective, but B-Dawg has hope for the future in speedy (93 SPD) athlete recruit David Landrum, who will check in at 80 OVR at quarterback. 2015 Prestige: 3 stars Grades: B- OVR, B offense, C+ defense, B+ special teams; 81 OVR, 86 offense, 76 defense Preseason ranking: No. 69 Record: 12-2 (9-0, MAC champions) Final ranking: No. 18 coaches, No. 19 AP, No. 23 BCS Bowl game: Western Michigan 42, Louisiana-Lafayette 35 (GoDaddy.com Bowl) Passing leader: David Landrum 307-for-426, 3,399 yards, 21 TD, 10 int. Rushing leaders: David Landrum 258 carries, 1,383 yards, 16 TD; Dennis Norfleet 251 carries, 1,031 yards, 16 TD. Receiving leaders: Dennis Norfleet 87 catches, 661 yards, 5 TD; Jaime Wilson 85 catches, 1,181 yards, 7 TD. Defensive leaders: Caleb Bailey 92 tackles; Roosevelt Donaldson 19 TFL, 11 sacks; Logan Oce 4 interceptions, 2 TD; Michael Butler 6 deflections. Synopsis: The David Landrum era began with a bang, as the highly touted freshman quarterback had the best debut season ever for a B-Dawg player. He won the Heisman Trophy over Johnny Manziel, became only the second B-Dawg quarterback ever to rush for 1,000 yards (1,383) and led the Broncos to 12 straight victories after an 0-2 start. Dennis Norfleet also reached the 1,000-yard rushing mark, giving B-Dawg two 1,000-yard rushers for the first time. Western won its first MAC title and first bowl game in B-Dawg’s three-year reign. 2016 Prestige: 4 stars Grades: B OVR; 86 OVR, 91 offense, 82 defense Preseason ranking: No. 36 Record: 12-2 (9-0 MAC champions) Final ranking: No. 11 coaches, No. 13 AP Bowl game: Western Michigan 28, Clemson 25 (Orange Bowl) Passing leader: David Landrum 288-for-413, 2,990 yards, 19 TD, 16 int. Rushing leader: David Landrum 275 carries, 1,430 yards, 16 TD Receiving leader: Corey Davis 74 catches, 762 yards, 4 TD Defensive leaders: Caleb Bailey 82 tackles, 23 TFL; Roosevelt Donaldson 11 sacks; Travis Cox 5 interceptions; Nicholas Schmidt 7 deflections. Synopsis: Sophomore David Landrum won a second straight Heisman trophy as Western Michigan’s dual-threat quarterback. The Broncos won their first BCS bowl, beating Clemson 28-25 in the Orange Bowl. Western won its final 10 games after a 2-2 start that included losses to Florida and Indiana. The Broncos beat Kent State, 38-13, in the MAC title game. 2017 Prestige: 5 stars Grades: B OVR, B+ offense, B- defense, A special teams; 86 OVR, 90 offense, 83 defense Preseason ranking: No. 30 Record: 12-2 (9-0 MAC champions) Final ranking: No. 2 coaches, No. 3 AP Bowl game: Western Michigan 45, Central Florida 24 (Rose Bowl) Passing leader: David Landrum 223-for-315, 2,336 yards, 16 TD, 13 int. Rushing leader: David Landrum 210 carries, 1,430 yards, 17 TD Receiving leader: Jared Gray 71 catches, 882 yard, 5 TD Defensive leaders: Caleb Bailey 107 tackles, 32 TFL; David Curle 18 sacks; Logan Oce 4 interceptions, Derrick Guillory and Bo Wright 7 deflections. Synopsis: With a break or two, Western Michigan might have been playing for the national championship. As it stands, the Broncos had to be satisfied with their second straight victory in a BCS bowl, a 45-24 decision over Central Florida in the Rose Bowl. David Landrum’s bid for a third straight Heisman Trophy ended when he missed three games with an elbow strain suffered in the first half of a 27-26 upset loss at Eastern Michigan. After that loss, the Broncos won their final eight games. They scheduled four nationally ranked teams in nonconference play, coming away with a 3-1 record in those games. 2018 Prestige: 6 stars Grades: B+ OVR, B+ offense, B- defense, A special teams; 88 OVR 91 offense, 83 defense Preseason ranking: No. 13 Record: 8-5, 6-3 Big Ten (T-2nd East Division) Final ranking: No. 24 coaches, No. 26 AP, No. 11 BCS Bowl game: Alabama 38, Western Michigan 21 (Gator Bowl) Passing leader: David Landrum 226-for-343, 2,526 yards, 20 TD, 15 int. Rushing leader: Eric Cox 187 carries, 991 yards, 10 TD Receiving leader: Jared Gray 79 catches, 979 yards, 8 TD Defensive leaders: Xavier Denman 96 tackles, 23 TFL; Nick Holmes 8 sacks; Travis Cox 4 int. Synopsis: Western Michigan was competitive in its first season in the Big Ten, thanks to the talent of superstar senior quarterback David Landrum. The Broncos were in a position to play for the national championship, taking a No. 2 BCS ranking into the regular-season finale at Maryland. However, the Terrapins pulled off a 33-28 victory on a 39-yard touchdown pass from Rashaad McLaughlin to Andrew Holloway with nine seconds left. A Gator Bowl loss to Alabama left Western with a 1-3 record against ranked teams. The Broncos did beat an Ohio State team that was having a down year and was unranked. 2019 Prestige: 5 stars Grades: B+ OVR, B+ offense, B defense, A+ special teams; 88 OVR, 90 offense, 85 defense Preseason ranking: No. 25 Record: 10-3, 6-3 Big Ten (3rd place East Division) Final ranking: No. 7 coaches, No. 7 AP, No. 11 BCS Bowl game: Western Michigan 38, Missouri 28 (Outback Bowl) Passing leader: John Nelson 273-for-405, 2,952 yards, 22 TD, 7 int. Rushing leaders: John Nelson 207 carries, 1,162 yards, 10 TD; Eric Cox 232 carries, 944 yards, 11 TD Receiving leader: Jared Gray 74 catches, 895 yards, 8 TD Defensive leaders: Gary Dennis 74 tackles; Clint Cobbs 19 TFL; Richard Robinson 10 sacks; Calvin Brothers 4 int., 5 deflections Synopsis: Coach B-Dawg added a few more gray hairs late in the season during what appears to be a traditional stretch in the schedule with back-to-back games against Michigan and Ohio State. One week after beating a No. 1-ranked Michigan team in overtime, the Broncos lost to a No. 1-ranked Ohio State team in overtime, a game which produced a No. 2 all-time ESPN Classic score of 3,083 points. The John Nelson era at quarterback started well. While the true freshman quarterback didn't win a Heisman like David Landrum did in his first season, Nelson impressed coach B-Dawg with his ability to protect the ball, throwing 22 touchdown passes and only 7 interceptions. Nelson also kept up the recent tradition of Western having 1,000-yard rushers at quarterback, which pleases B-Dawg immensely. 2020 Prestige: 5 stars Grades: B+ OVR, A- offense, B defense, A+ special teams; 90 OVR, 93 offense, 85 defense Preseason ranking: No. 9 Record: 9-4, 6-3 (T-2nd Big Ten East) Final ranking: No. 14 coaches, No. 15 AP, No. 4 BCS Bowl game: UCLA 31, Western Michigan 21 (Rose Bowl) Passing leader: John Nelson 189-for-293, 2,419 yards, 13 TD, 19 int. Rushing leader: Eric Cox 246 carries, 1,165 yards, 16 TD Receiving leader: Jeremy King 74 catches, 1,115 yards, 6 TD Defensive leaders: Gary Dennis 99 tackles; Chuck Rogers 20 TFL; Richard Robinson 10.5 sacks; Paul Vaughn 3 interceptions; Danny Brantley 9 deflections. Synopsis: Disaster struck in the 2020 season for Western. No, it wasn’t a major injury or any of the losses. It was worse — B-Dawg had his first simmed game ever. He accidentally simmed a game against Purdue (a victory, but that’s besides the point). It created a major dilemma. What to do with the players’ statistics? He wound up not including any of the simmed stats in the final stats he posted. So, quarterback John Nelson was not credited with the game of his life (4 TD passes, 0 interceptions) in what turned out to be a highly disappointing followup to his great freshman year. The bright spot was the play of junior halfback Eric Cox, who finished fourth in Heisman Trophy voting after racking up 3,427 all-purpose yards and 18 total touchdowns. 2021 Prestige: 5 stars Grades: B+ OVR, A- offense, B+ defense, A+ special teams; 90 OVR, 93 offense, 88 defense Preseason ranking: No. 12 Record: 13-1, 9-0 (1st Big Ten East, lost Big Ten Championship Game) Final ranking: No. 5 coaches, No. 5 AP, No. 5 BCS Bowl game: #5 Western Michigan 41, #10 Auburn 24 Passing leader: John Nelson 178 of 267, 2,167 yards, 13 TD, 9 int. Rushing leader: Eric Cox 404 carries, 2,324 yards, 33 TD Receiving leader: Marcus Moody 39 catches, 541 yards, 5 TD Defensive leaders: Chuck Rogers 87 tackles, Quinton Johnson 20 TFL, Scott Whitaker 9 sacks, Paul Vaughn 6 int., Danny Brantley 10 deflections. Synopsis: Western Michigan had its best record ever and a Heisman Trophy winner in Eric Cox, but it will be a painful loss that is remembered most about this season. The Broncos reached No. 1 in the country for the first time in this dynasty late in the season. They looked to be a lock to play for the national championship when they drew Iowa in the Big Ten Conference Championship Game. In the Big Ten opener, Western thrashed Iowa, 56-14, with three Broncos rushing for 100 yards. But it was a much different game the second time around, with the Hawkeyes pulling off a 32-29 upset, depriving Western of a trip to the national championship game. Western switched from a balanced offense that featured the arm and legs of quarterback John Nelson to a run-heavy offense that featured Cox. The 99 OVR Cox was more than capable of handling a heavy load, running 404 times for 2,324 yards and 33 touchdowns to win the Heisman. 2022 Prestige: 6 stars Grades: 93 OVR, 95 offense, 92 defense Preseason ranking: No. 7 Record: 12-2, 8-1 Big Ten (Beat Northwestern, 23-18, in Big Ten Championship Game) Final ranking: No. 8 BCS; because of a glitch I am experiencing at the end of seasons, I don’t know what my final ranking was in the polls. Bowl game: #8 Western Michigan 48, #7 UCLA 45, 3 OT (Rose Bowl) Passing leader: Joe Banks 159-for-240, 1,872 yards, 12 TD, 9 int. Rushing leader: Derek Jones 488 carries, 2,308 yards, 32 TD Receiving leader: Marcus Moody 66 catches, 1,039 yards, 7 TD Defensive leaders: Chuck Rogers and Sam Tremblay 83 tackles; Harvey Boyd and Quinton Johnson 21 TFL; Drew Robinson 11 sacks; Danny Brantley 5 int.; Paul Vaughn 11 deflections. Synopsis: Western Michigan bounced back from an early-season 48-47 loss at Notre Dame to put itself in a position to play in the national championship game. However, the No. 3 Broncos were caught napping in College Park and lost a 30-23 shocker to unheralded Maryland in the regular-season finale. They went on to beat Northwestern, 23-18, in the Big Ten Championship Game and UCLA, 48-45 in three overtimes, in the Rose Bowl, but the loss to Maryland will forever haunt the Broncos. As it turned out, a four-loss Notre Dame team played for — and won — the national championship. John Nelson, Western’s starting quarterback the past three seasons, was yanked in favor of Joe Banks in the fourth game of the year, but Nelson came off the bench to lead the Broncos to the Big Ten and Rose Bowl victories. Running back Derek Jones was the Heisman Trophy runnerup. 2023 Prestige: 6 stars Grades: A- OVR, A+ offense, B+ defense, A- special teams; 93 OVR, 99 offense, 88 defense Preseason ranking: No. 4 Record: 13-1, 8-0 Big Ten (Beat Nebraska, 34-21, in Big Ten Championship Game) Final ranking: No. 1 coaches, No. 1 AP, No. 2 BCS Bowl game: #2 Western Michigan 31, #1 Notre Dame 13 (national championship) Passing leader: Chris Simon 181-for-276, 2,401 yards, 23 TD, 10 int. Rushing leader: Brian Williams 388 carries, 1,971 yards, 25 TD Receiving leader: 70 catches, 1,077 yards, 14 TD Defensive leaders: Harvey Boyd 81 tackles, 30 TFL; T.J. Treangen 11 sacks; Darren Irvin 8 interceptions; Matt Hancock 14 deflections. Synopsis: After knocking on the door of the national championship repeatedly in recent years, Western Michigan finally got into the big game and won it by a surprisingly easy 31-13 score over Notre Dame. Notre Dame, the defending national champion, won two close shootouts with the Broncos in the past two seasons, including 41-38 in the second game of this season. B-Dawg gave true freshman Bo Connor a chance to be the starting quarterback, but he was replaced by fifth-year senior Chris Simon in the third game of the year. Simon kept the turnovers to a minimum, throwing 23 touchdown passes and 10 interceptions. Running back Brian Williams brought home Western’s fourth Heisman Trophy in this dynasty. Unlike past seasons, when Western had numerous close games, the only close games were the early loss to Notre Dame and a 31-24 victory at Ohio State, a game which was won on a touchdown run by Williams with 19 seconds left. 2024 Prestige: 6 stars Grades: A+ OVR, A+ offense, A+ defense, A+ special teams; 99 OVR, 99 offense, 99 defense Preseason ranking: No. 1 Last edited by BDawg35; 12-24-2015 at 08:33 PM. Reason: Because I just keep playing seasons! |
08-09-2013, 10:49 PM | #3 |
MVP
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THE RECORD BOOK
SINGLE GAME PASSING QB rating (min. 10 att.): 288.8, Bo Connor vs. Colorado, 2023 (12-for-15, 255 yards, 3 TD, 0 int.) Yards: 473, David Landrum at Texas A&M, 2015 Touchdowns: 4, Tyler Van Tubbergen vs. Central Michigan, 2013; David Landrum vs. Air Force, 2016; David Landrum at Toledo, 2017 Completions: 42, David Landrum at Texas A&M, 2015 Attempts: 56, David Landrum at Texas A&M, 2015 Interceptions: 4, David Landrum vs. Ohio, 2017; Frank Matthews at Georgia, 2018; John Nelson vs. Nebraska, 2020 Longest pass: 85, Joe Banks to Jeremy King at Penn State, 2020 RUSHING Yards: 305, Derek Jones vs. UCLA, Jan. 1, 2023; 261, Eric Cox at Michigan, Nov. 6, 2021; 250, David Landrum at Toledo, 2017 (my all-time NCAA QB record); 250, Eric Cox at Ohio State, Nov. 13, 2021 Touchdowns: 6, Eric Cox vs. Iowa, Sept. 25, 2021 Carries: 50, Derek Jones vs. UCLA, Jan. 1, 2023 Longest run: 83, Eric Cox at Michigan, Nov. 6, 2021 20+ runs: 4, David Landrum at Central Michigan, 2016; David Landrum at Ball State, 2017; David Landrum at Toledo, 2017; Eric Cox vs. Iowa, Sept. 25, 2021 RECEIVING Catches: 16, Jeremy King vs. UCLA, 2020 Yards: 278, Jaime Wilson vs. UL-Lafayette, 2013 Touchdowns: 3, Jaime Wilson vs. Central Michigan, 2013; Dennis Norfleet at Texas A&M, 2015; Jared Gray vs. Air Force, 2016 Longest catch: 85, Jeremy King from Joe Banks at Penn State, 2020 YAC: 132, Dennis Norfleet at Texas A&M, 2015 Drops: 6, Marcus Moody vs. Notre Dame, Sept. 2, 2023 BLOCKING Pancakes: 11, Darius Phillips at USC, 2017 Sacks allowed: 3, Chad Ferwerda at Wisconsin, 2019 DEFENSE Tackles: 15, Grant DePalma at Toledo, 2015; Caleb Bailey vs. Ohio, 2017 TFL: 6, T.J. Treangen at Hawaii, Sept. 9, 2023 Sacks: 5, David Curle vs. Central Michigan, 2017 Interceptions: 3, Darren Irvin at Hawaii, Sept. 9, 2023 Longest return: 104, Paul McCollum vs. Colorado, Aug. 26, 2023 Deflections: 4, Travis Bell vs. Notre Dame, Jan. 8, 2024 Forced fumbles: 2, Roosevelt Donaldson at Ball State, 2016 Safeties: 1, David Curle at Notre Dame, 2015; Chuck Rogers vs. Michigan State, 2022; Lawrence Lee vs. Northwestern, 2022 Big Ten Championship Game SPECIAL TEAMS Field goals: 5, Austin Babcock at Michigan, 2019 Field goal attempts: 6, Austin Babcock at Michigan, 2019 Longest field goal: 56, Austin Babcock vs. Missouri, 2019 Punts: 9, Dylan Roberts at Penn State, 2020 Punting yards: 326, Dylan Roberts at Penn State, 2020 Longest punt: 62, William Robinson vs. Iowa, Dec. 11, 2021 Punts inside 20: 3, J Schroeder vs. UL-Lafayette, 2013; Dylan Roberts at Washington, 2020 Net punting yards: 305, Dylan Roberts at Penn State, 2020 Kick returns: 10, Kendrick Roberts at Iowa, 2013 and vs. UL-Monroe, 2015 Kick return yards: 306, Eric Cox at Washington, 2020 Longest kick return: 107, Eric Cox vs. Indiana, Nov. 20, 2021; 105, Eric Cox vs. Michigan State, 2020 Punt returns: 8, Logan Oce at Indiana, 2016 Punt return yards: 120, Brian Brown vs. Maryland, 2023 Longest punt return: 55, Eric Cox vs. Maryland, Nov. 27, 2021 SEASON (Through 2023) PASSING QB rating (min. 100 att.): 158.2, Chris Simon (181-for-276, 2,401 yards, 23 TD, 10 int.), 2023 Yards: 3,806, Tyler Van Tubbergen, 2013 Touchdowns: 26, Tyler Van Tubbergen, 2013 Interceptions: 19, John Nelson, 2020 Completions: 307, David Landrum, 2015 Attempts: 449, Tyler Van Tubbergen, 2013 Completion pct. (min. 100 att.): .721, David Landrum, 2015 Sacked: 25, Tyler Van Tubbergen, 2013 RUSHING Yards: 2,324, Eric Cox, 2021 Touchdowns: 33, Eric Cox, 2021 Carries: 488, Derek Jones, 2022 20+ runs: 23, Eric Cox, 2021 Fumbles: 9, David Landrum, 2017 RECEIVING Catches: 87, Dennis Norfleet, 2015 Yards: 1,237, Jaime Wilson, 2013 Touchdowns: 14, Marcus Moody, 2023 YAC: 637, Dennis Norfleet, 2015 Yards per catch (min. 10 rec.): 19.0, Jaime Wilson, 2013 Drops: 14, Jaime Wilson, 2013 and 2014 BLOCKING Pancakes: 23, WR Corey Davis, 2017 Sacks allowed: 8, Chad Ferwerda, 2018 DEFENSE Tackles: 107, Caleb Bailey, 2017 TFL: 32, Caleb Bailey, 2017 Sacks: 18, David Curle, 2017 Interceptions: 8, Darren Irvin, 2023 Deflections: 14, Matt Hancock, 2023 Forced fumbles: 2, Roosevelt Donaldson, 2016 Safeties: 1, David Curle, 2015; Chuck Rogers, 2023; Lawerence Lee, 2023 Touchdowns: 2, Logan Oce, 2015; Derrick Guillory, 2017; Danny Brantley, 2022 SPECIAL TEAMS Field goals: 20, Austin Babcock, 2019 Field goal attempts: 30, Austin Babcock, 2017 Field goal pct.: .938, Johnny Chambers (15 of 16), 2022 Extra points: 75, Johnny Chambers, 2023 Touchbacks: 79, Andrew Haldeman, 2015 Punts: 52, J Schroeder, 2013 Punting yards: 2,025, Joe Schroeder, 2014 Punting avg: 40.8, J Schroeder, 2015 Punts inside 20: 10, Joe Schroeder, 2013 Net punting avg.: 34.5, Austin Babcock, 2016 Kick returns: 68, Kendrick Roberts, 2014 Kick return yards: 1,854, Kendrick Roberts, 2014 Kick return avg.: 38.8, Brian Brown, 2023 Kick return TD’s: 4, Eric Cox, 2021 Punt returns: 55, Brian Brown, 2023 Punt return yards: 549, Brian Brown, 2023 Punt return avg.: 12.4, Eric Cox, 2021 CAREER PASSING QB rating (min. 100 att.): 150.4, Chris Simon (186-for-295, 2,452 yards, 23 TD, 11 int.) Yards: 11,251, David Landrum, 2015-18 Touchdowns: 76, David Landrum, 2015-18 Completions: 1,044, David Landrum, 2015-18 Attempts: 1,497, David Landrum, 2015-18 Completion pct.: 69.7, David Landrum, 2015-18 RUSHING Yards: 5,424, Eric Cox, 2018-21; 5,154, David Landrum, 2015-18 (B-Dawg’s all-time QB record) Touchdowns: 70, Eric Cox, 2018-21; 60, David Landrum, 2015-18 (B-Dawg’s all-time QB record) Carries: 1,069, Eric Cox, 2018-21 20+ runs: 47, David Landrum, 2015-18 and Eric Cox, 2018-21 Fumbles: 28, David Landrum, 2015-18 RECEIVING Catches: 283, Jared Gray, 2016-19 Yards: 3,526, Jaime Wilson, 2013-15 Touchdowns: 26, Jared Gray, 2016-19 and Marcus Moody, 2021-23 YAC: 1,568, Jaime Wilson, 2013-15 Drops: 36, Jaime Wilson, 2013-15 BLOCKING Pancakes: 56, TE David Davis, 2020-23 Sacks allowed: 15, OT Chad Ferwerda, 2016-19 DEFENSE Tackles: 368, Caleb Bailey, 2014-17 TFL: 83, Caleb Bailey, 2014-17 Sacks: 42, Roosevelt Donaldson, 2013-16 Interceptions: 16, Paul Vaughn, 2019-22 Deflections: 29, Danny Brantley, 2018-22 Touchdowns: 3, Logan Oce, 2014-17; Derrick Guillroy, 2016-18; Danny Brantley, 2018-22 SPECIAL TEAMS Field goals: 58, Austin Babcock, 2016-19 Field goal attempts: 85, Austin Babcock, 2016-19 Punts: 141, J Schroeder, 2013-15 Punting yards: 5,489, J Schroeder, 2013-15 Punting avg: 44.3, William Robinson, 2020-21 Punts inside 20: 28, Austin Babcock, 2016-19 Net punting avg.: 35.5, William Robinson, 2020-21 Kick returns: 189, Kendrick Roberts, 2013-15 Kick return yards: 5,178, Kendrick Roberts, 2013-15 Kick return avg.: 38.8, Brian Brown, 2023 Kick return TD’s: 7, Eric Cox, 2018-21 Punt returns: 113, Kendrick Roberts, 2013-15 Punt return yards: 1,148, Kendrick Roberts, 2013-15 Punt return avg.: 11.3, Eric Cox, 2018-21 Western Michigan’s Brian Brown had a 108-yard kick return in NCAA ’14, B-Dawg’s longest TD ever. SINGLE GAME PASSING Yards: 659, Devin Gardner (Michigan) at Iowa, Nov. 2, 2013 (NCAA 2012); 566, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt) vs. Ohio State, Sept. 13, 2014 (NCAA 2007) Touchdowns: 7, P.J. Piskorik (Buffalo) at Miami (Ohio), Oct. 8, 2005 (NCAA 2004) Interceptions: 7, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan) vs. Texas A&M, Jan. 1, 2017 (NCAA 2008); 6, Antonio Haines (Michigan) at Iowa, Oct. 6, 2007 (NCAA 2004); Alex Engram (Western Michigan) vs. Northern Illinois, Nov. 11, 2006 (NCAA 2006); Mackenzi Adams (Vanderbilt) at Duke, Oct. 28, 2006 (NCAA 2007); Darryl Hayden (Vanderbilt) at West Virginia, Sept. 3, 2016 (NCAA 2007) Completions: 47, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan) vs. Iowa, Oct. 4, 2014 (NCAA 2008); 40, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt) vs. South Carolina, Sept. 29, 2012 (NCAA 2007) Attempts: 64, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan) vs. Iowa, Oct. 4, 2014 (NCAA 2008); 62, Mike Payne (Michigan) vs. Michigan State, Nov. 1, 2008 (NCAA 2004) Sacks: 11, Clint Cunningham at Wisconsin, Oct. 5, 2013 (NCAA 2008); 10, Clint Cunningham at Iowa, Oct. 31, 2015 (NCAA 2008); 9, Antonio Haines (Michigan) at Iowa, Oct. 6, 2007 (NCAA 2004) Longest pass: 100, James King (Baylor) to Brook Mosley at Colorado, Oct. 2, 2010 (NCAA 2004) Consecutive completions: 20, Corey McDonald (Vanderbilt) at Tennessee, Nov. 23, 2019 (NCAA 2007); Bush Hamdan (Boy-Z State) at Idaho, 2008 (NCAA 2009) QB rating (10 att.): 348.0, Todd Williams (Eastern Michigan) vs. Vanderbilt, Sept. 5, 2020 (NCAA 2008) (11-for-11, 207 yards, 3 TD, 0 int.) RUSHING Yards: 382, Malek Redd (Central Michigan) at Akron, Sept. 21, 2013 (NCAA 2011); 357, Jerome Jackson (Michigan) vs. Northwestern, Nov. 11, 2006 (NCAA 2004) Touchdowns: 7, Matt Farrell (Buffalo) at North Carolina, Nov. 24, 2007 (NCAA 2004); 6, DeShawn Simmons (Michigan) at Michigan State, Oct. 29, 2005 (NCAA 2004); 6, James Presley (Michigan) at Iowa, Oct. 22, 2005 and at Hawaii, Nov. 18, 2006 (NCAA 2005); 6, Mike Ross (Eastern Michigan) at Purdue, Nov. 28, 2020 (NCAA 2008); 6, Malek Redd (Central Michigan) at Akron, Sept. 21, 2013; 6, Eric Cox (Western Michigan) vs. Iowa, Sept. 25, 2021 (NCAA 2014) Carries: 50, Derek Jones (Western Michigan) vs. UCLA, Jan. 1, 2023 (NCAA 2014); 47, Joey McBride (Michigan) vs. Northwestern, Oct. 31, 2015 (NCAA 2005) Longest run: 98, Robert Merriman (Vanderbilt) at Hawaii, Dec. 7, 2019 (NCAA 2007); 98, Sean Fernandez (Michigan) vs. Notre Dame, Sept. 9, 2017 (NCAA 2012) Longest run by a QB: 91, Ray Terry (Vanderbilt) at Buffalo, Sept. 10, 2016 (NCAA 2007) Fumbles: 5, Todd Williams (Eastern Michigan) vs. Iowa, Oct. 20, 2018 (NCAA 2008) Yards from scrimmage: 430, John Morton (Oregon State) vs. Washington, Nov. 12, 2011 (30 carries, 330 yards, 4 TD; 6 catches, 100 yards, 0 TD) (NCAA 2009) 100-yard rushers: 3, at Iowa, Sept. 25, 2021 (NCAA 2004) RECEIVING Yards: 386, Ryan King (Michigan) at Iowa, Nov. 2, 2013 (NCAA 2012); 375, Earl Bennett (Vanderbilt) vs. Mississippi, Oct. 27, 2007 (NCAA 2007); 354, Corey Burton vs. Ohio State, Sept. 13, 2014 (NCAA 2007) Catches: 23, Dee Osborne (Michigan) vs. Northwestern, Nov. 15, 2008 (NCAA 2004) Touchdowns: 4, Alphonso McCown (Michigan) at Northwestern, Nov. 17, 2007 (NCAA 2004); 4, Corey Burton (Vanderbilt) at LSU, Nov. 1, 2014 (NCAA 2007); Corey Burton (Vanderbilt) at Kentucky, Nov. 15, 2014 (NCAA 2007) Longest catch: 100, Brook Mosley (Baylor) from James King at Colorado, Oct. 2, 2010 (NCAA 2004); 98, Perry Hess (Michigan) from Chad Henne at Notre Dame, Aug. 30, 2008 (NCAA 2005) Drops: 6, Marcus Moody (Western Michigan) vs. Notre Dame, Sept. 2, 2023 (NCAA 2014) BLOCKING Pancakes: 21, Dominic Moran (Western Michigan) vs. Akron, Oct. 21, 2006 (NCAA 2006) Sacks allowed: 5, Mark Lee (Eastern Michigan) vs. Penn State, Nov. 17, 2018 (NCAA 2008) DEFENSE Tackles: 17, Carvin Johnson (Michigan) vs. Air Force, Sept. 1, 2012 (NCAA 2012); 16, Quavian Lewis (Vanderbilt) at Memphis, Sept. 5, 2009 (NCAA 2007); Patrick Bolden (Vanderbilt) at Tennessee, Nov. 27, 2021 (NCAA 2007); Chris May (Eastern Michigan) vs. East Carolina, Dec. 30, 2009 (NCAA 2008) Tackles for loss: 9, Jammal Lavin (Michigan) at Northwestern, Oct. 26, 2013 and vs. Michigan State, Oct. 4, 2014 (NCAA 2005); Fabian McCoy (Eastern Michigan) at Western Michigan, Nov. 6, 2010 (NCAA 2008) Note: Brandent Englemon (Michigan) had 11 tackles for losses at Minnesota, Oct. 8, 2005 and vs. Illinois, Oct. 15, 2005 in NCAA 2004 using a cheesy defense, so his record won’t count. Sacks: 5, Desi Hatfield (Michigan) vs. Wisconsin, Sept. 27, 2008 (NCAA 2005); Jammal Lavin (Michigan) at Iowa, Oct. 19, 2013 (NCAA 2005); Ulysses Heckel (Vanderbilt) at Kentucky, Sept. 15, 2012 (NCAA 2007); Kenny Wilkins (Michigan) at Boy-Z State, Sept. 14, 2013 (NCAA 2012) Note: Brandent Englemon (Michigan) had 10 sacks at Minnesota, Oct. 8, 2005 and vs. Illinois, Oct. 15, 2005 in NCAA 2004 using a cheesy defense, so his record won’t count. Interceptions: 4, Aaron Green (Michigan) vs. Northwestern, Nov. 15, 2008 (NCAA 2004); 4, Jimmy Fitzpatrick (Vanderbilt) vs. Mississippi State, Oct. 5, 2019, all in first half (NCAA 2007) Deflections: 7, Rudy Horton (Vanderbilt) at South Carolina, Sept. 28, 2019 (NCAA 2007) Touchdowns: 2, Tavarious Sanders (Buffalo) vs. Nevada, 2004 Humanitarian Bowl (NCAA 2004); Kyle Schmidt (Vanderbilt) at Florida, Nov. 6, 2021 (NCAA 2007); Alfred Moore (Eastern Michigan) at Akron, Sept. 14, 2013 (NCAA 2008); Brad Ransom (Eastern Michigan) at Ohio State, Sept. 29, 2018 (NCAA 2008); Jeff Cox (Oregon State) vs. The ‘Nati, Sept. 5, 2009 (NCAA 2009); Vince Agnew (Central Michigan) vs. Ball State, Oct. 2, 2010 (NCAA 2011); Delonte Hollowell (Michigan) at Purdue, Nov. 1, 2014 (NCAA 2012). Interception return: 104, Jonathan Kuehn (Eastern Michigan) at Hawaii, Dec. 5, 2021 (NCAA 2008); 104, Paul McCollum (Western Michigan) vs. Colorado, Aug. 26, 2023; 103, Germara Williams (Buffalo) vs. Ohio, Oct. 25, 2003 (NCAA 2004); Barry Sanders (Vanderbilt) vs. Arkansas, Sept. 17, 2011 (NCAA 2007) Fumble return: 91, Brandon Henderson (Western Michigan) vs. Southern Illinois, Sept. 17, 2005 (NCAA 2006) Blocked kicks: 2, Albert Pruitt (Vanderbilt) at Mississippi, Oct. 27, 2012 (NCAA 2007); Ulysses Heckel (Vanderbilt) at Georgia, Nov. 17, 2012 (NCAA 2007); Brandon Slater (Eastern Michigan) vs. Northern Illinois, Oct. 18, 2008 (NCAA 2008) Forced fumbles: 3, Charles Jenkins (Michigan) vs. Wisconsin, Oct. 10, 2015 (NCAA 2012) SPECIAL TEAMS Most field goals: 6, Garrett Rivas (Michigan) vs. Oklahoma, Jan. 1, 2006 (NCAA 2005); Byron Jennings (Michigan) vs. Iowa, Sept. 15, 2012 (NCAA 2005); Andre Diles (Vanderbilt) vs. Mississippi State, Oct. 3, 2009 (NCAA 2007) Most field goal attempts: 8, Garrett Rivas (Michigan) vs. Oklahoma, Jan. 1, 2006 (NCAA 2005) Longest field goal: 58, Will Hagerup (Michigan) at Ohio State, Nov. 24, 2012 (NCAA 2012); 56, Austin Babcock (Western Michigan) vs. Missouri, Jan. 1, 2020 (NCAA 2014); 55, Garrett Rivas (Michigan) vs. Ohio State, Nov. 24, 2007 (NCAA 2004); Byron Jennings (Michigan) vs. LSU, Jan. 3, 2013 (NCAA 2005) Longest punt: 77, Brendan Hilton (Michigan) vs. Minnesota, Oct. 11, 2008 (NCAA 2004) Longest kick return: 108, Brian Brown (Western Michigan) at Michigan State, Nov. 11, 2023 (NCAA 2014); 107, Clay Quinn (Buffalo) vs. Miami, Jan. 3, 2008 (NCAA 2004) and Eric Cox (Western Michigan) vs. Indiana, Nov. 20, 2021 (NCAA 2014) Longest punt return: 89, Clay Quinn (Buffalo) vs. Virginia Tech, Jan. 2, 2007 (NCAA 2004); Luke Osborne (Baylor) vs. Colorado, Oct. 1, 2011 (NCAA 2004) All-purpose yards: 516, Eric Cox (Western Michigan) at Washington, Sept. 12, 2020 (6-306, 1 TD KR; 2-21 PR; 17-110 rushing; 5-79 receiving) (NCAA 2014); 504, Burt Gross (Buffalo) at Maryland, Oct. 13, 2007 (12-290 receiving, 6-122 punt returns, 2-92 kick returns) (NCAA 2004) Kick return TD’s: 2, Jeff Cox (Oregon State) vs. Stanford, Oct. 31, 2009 (NCAA 2009); Brian Randall (Oregon State) vs. Pittsburgh, Dec. 31, 2010 (NCAA 2009); Jeff Cox (Oregon State) vs. Washington State, Oct. 6, 2012 (NCAA 2009); Brian Brown (Western Michigan) at Michigan State, Nov. 11, 2023 (NCAA 2014) Bryant McClellan (left) is B-Dawg’s single- season rushing leader, while Jason Toth (right) has the most catches in a season with 104. SINGLE SEASON PASSING Yards: 4,162, Ryan Coleman (Vanderbilt), 2017 (NCAA 2007) Touchdowns: 35, Antwan Smith (Vanderbilt), 2011 (NCAA 2007) Interceptions: 30, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007) Completions: 302, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007) and Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2014 (NCAA 2008) Attempts: 476, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007) Sacks: 55, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013 (NCAA 2008); 45, Mackenzi Adams (Vanderbilt), 2008 (NCAA 2007) QB rating: 181.9, Antwan Smith (Vanderbilt), 2009 (NCAA 2007) Completion pct.: .738, Todd Williams (Eastern Michigan), 2020 (169-for-228) (NCAA 2008); .737, Todd Williams (Eastern Michigan), 2017 (179-for-243) (NCAA 2008); .730, Shannon Auguste (Vanderbilt), 2022 (173-for-237) (NCAA 2007); .721, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2014 (NCAA 2008) RUSHING Yards: 2,513, Bryant McClellan (Vanderbilt), 2015 (NCAA 2007) Touchdowns: 36, Marques Horne (Vanderbilt), 2020 (NCAA 2007) Carries: 488, Derek Jones (Western Michigan), 2022 (NCAA 2014); 418, Joey McBride (Michigan), 2015 (NCAA 2005); 404, Eric Cox (Western Michigan), 2021 (NCAA 2014) Yards per carry: 7.1, Bryant McClellan (Vanderbilt), 2015 (NCAA 2007) RECEIVING Catches: 104, Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007) Yards: 2,275, Corey Burton (Vanderbilt), 2014 (NCAA 2007) Touchdowns: 17, Corey Burton (Vanderbilt), 2014 (NCAA 2007) BLOCKING Pancakes: 147, Dominic Moran (Western Michigan), 2006 (NCAA 2006) Sacks allowed: 16, Dan DeMaster (Eastern Michigan), 2010 (NCAA 2008) DEFENSE Tackles: 119, Ulysses Heckel (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007); Fabian McCoy (Eastern Michigan), 2010 (NCAA 2008) Tackles for loss: 41, Jammal Lavin (Michigan), 2014 (NCAA 2005) Sacks: 23, Jammal Lavin (Michigan), 2014 (NCAA 2005) Note: Brandent Englemon had 38 sacks in the 2005 season of NCAA 2004 through the use of a cheesy Dime Fire-2 defense, so his record won’t count. Interceptions: 9, Corey Everson (Eastern Michigan), 2007 (NCAA 2008); Robert White (Eastern Michigan), 2012 (NCAA 2008) Deflections: 28, Charles Stewart (Michigan), 2005 (NCAA 2005) Touchdowns: 4, Corey Everson (Eastern Michigan), 2007 (NCAA 2008) Forced fumbles: 12, Travis Davis (Vanderbilt), 2014 (NCAA 2007) Fumble recoveries: 5, Ulysses Heckel (Vanderbilt), 2011; Dustin Carpenter (Vanderbilt), 2020 (NCAA 2007) SPECIAL TEAMS Most field goals: 27, Jamie Carlson (Vanderbilt), 2015 (NCAA 2007) Field goal percentage: 1.000, Tavares Garcia (Vanderbilt), 23-for-23, 2022 (NCAA 2007) Punting average: 47.0, Donnie Gray (Vanderbilt), 2021 (NCAA 2007) Kick return average: 38.8, Brian Brown (Western Michigan), 2023 (NCAA 2014); 38.1, Stevie Morris (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 37.7, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 37.2, Jeff Cox, (Oregon State), 2009 (NCAA 2012); 36.1, Clay Quinn (Buffalo), 2006 (NCAA 2004) Punt return average: 26.7, Sammie Stroughter (Oregon State), 2008 (NCAA 2009); 23.0, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2010 (NCAA 2009); 22.0, Clay Quinn (Buffalo), 2007 (NCAA 2004) Kick return TD’s: 4, Eric Cox (Western Michigan), 2021 (NCAA 2014); 3, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009 (NCAA 2009); 3, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 3, Stevie Morris (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009). Punt return TD’s: 6, Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007) Earl Bennett (left) has more career receiving yards than any B-Dawg player. Joey McBride (right) is his all-time rushing leader. CAREER PASSING Yards: 13,591, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008); 13,298, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007) Touchdowns: 112, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007); 86, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008) Interceptions: 91, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007); 80, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008) Completions: 1,085, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008); 921, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007) Attempts: 1,576, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008); 1,460, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007) Sacks: 100, Mackenzi Adams (Vanderbilt), 2006-09 and Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007) QB rating: 160.5, Ryan Coleman (Vanderbilt), 2016-2018 (NCAA 2007) Completion pct.: .688, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008); .671, Shannon Auguste (Vanderbilt), 2019-2022 (NCAA 2007) RUSHING Yards: 6,192, Joey McBride (Michigan), 2013-2015 (NCAA 2005) Touchdowns: 105, James Presley, 2004-2007 (NCAA 2005) Carries: 1,139, Joey McBride (Michigan), 2013-2015 (NCAA 2005) RECEIVING Yards: 5,002, Earl Bennett (Vanderbilt), 2006-08 (NCAA 2007) Catches: 246, Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2007) Touchdowns: 34, Earl Bennett (Vanderbilt), 2006-08 and Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2007) BLOCKING Pancakes: 204, Dominic Moran (Western Michigan), 2005-2006 (NCAA 2006) Sacks allowed: 37, John Austin (Vanderbilt), 2008-2011 (NCAA 2007) DEFENSE Tackles: Gang-tackling era: 413, Fabin McCoy (Eastern Michigan), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2008); Pre-gang-tackling: 360, David Henry (Vanderbilt), 2015-2018 (NCAA 2007) Tackles for loss: 100, Jammal Lavin (Michigan), 2011-2014 (NCAA 2005) Sacks: 57, Jammal Lavin (Michigan), 2011-2014 (NCAA 2005) Note: Brandent Englemon had 91 sacks from 2004-2007 in NCAA 2004 through the use of a cheesy Dime Fire-2 defense, so his record won’t count. Interceptions: 22, Jason Lewis (Vanderbilt), 2010-2013 (NCAA 2007); 22, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 698 return yards, 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009) Deflections: 67, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009); 63, Charles Stewart (Michigan), 2005-2007 (NCAA 2005) Touchdowns: 12, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009); 4, Jason Lewis (Vanderbilt), 2010-2013 (NCAA 2007); Corey Everson (Eastern Michigan), 2007 (NCAA 2008) Forced fumbles: 25, David Henry (Vanderbilt), 2015-2018 (NCAA 2007) SPECIAL TEAMS Most field goals: 96, Donnie Gray (Vanderbilt), 2018-2021 (NCAA 2007) Most field goal attempts: 114, Donnie Gray (Vanderbilt), 2018-2021 (NCAA 2007) Field goal percentage: .842, Donnie Gray (Vanderbilt), 2018-2021 (NCAA 2007) Kick return average: 38.1, Stevie Morris (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 37.7, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 34.3, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2011 (NCAA 2009); 33.5, Clay Quinn (Buffalo), 2005-2007 (NCAA 2004) Punt return average: 19.9, Clay Quinn (Buffalo), 2005-2007 (NCAA 2004); 19.5, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009). Kick return TD’s: 8, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009); 7, Eric Cox (Western Michigan), 2018-21 (NCAA 2014) Punt return TD’s: 13, Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2007) Last edited by BDawg35; 12-24-2015 at 08:29 PM. Reason: Because records are meant to be broken! |
08-09-2013, 10:51 PM | #4 |
MVP
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Western Michigan results, award winners
2013: Louisiana-Lafayette 45, Western Michigan 35 (Little Caesars Bowl) 2014: Navy 27, Western Michigan 14 (Military Bowl) 2015: #23 Western Michigan 42, Louisiana-Lafayette 35 (GoDaddy.com Bowl) 2016: #12 Western Michigan 28, Clemson 25 (Orange Bowl) 2017: #4 Western Michigan 45, Central Florida 24 (Rose Bowl) 2018: #14 Alabama 38, #11 Western Michigan 21 (Gator Bowl) 2019: #11 Western Michigan 38, #9 Missouri 28 (Outback Bowl) 2020: #9 UCLA 31, #4 Western Michigan 21 (Rose Bowl) 2021: #5 Western Michigan 41, #10 Auburn 24 (Capital One Bowl) 2022: #8 Western Michigan 48, #7 UCLA 45, 3 OT (Rose Bowl) 2023: #2 Western Michigan 31, #1 Notre Dame 13 (BCS championship) Click on the score for a link to the game report. Sept. 10, 2016: Western Michigan 38, Air Force 27 Nov. 21, 2015: Western Michigan 45, Akron 20 Nov. 19, 2016: #17 Western Michigan 48, Akron 21 Jan. 1, 2019: #14 Alabama 38, #11 Western Michigan 21 (Gator Bowl) Aug. 24, 2024: #1 Western Michigan 38, #2 Alabama 0 Sept. 16, 2023: #7 Western Michigan 36, #5 Army 17 Sept. 5, 2020: #9 Western Michigan 28, #10 Auburn 7 Jan. 1, 2022: #5 Western Michigan 41, #10 Auburn 24 (Capital One Bowl) Oct. 19, 2013: Western Michigan 43, Ball State 21 Nov. 15, 2014: Western Michigan 38, Ball State 31 Nov. 14, 2015: Western Michigan 19, Ball State 17 Nov. 10, 2016: #19 Western Michigan 10, Ball State 7 Nov. 11, 2017: #9 Western Michigan 48, Ball State 13 Aug. 28, 2014: Western Michigan 28, Boy-Z State 21 (OT) Aug. 27, 2016: Western Michigan 31, Boy-Z State 27 Sept. 4, 2021: #12 Western Michigan 14, Boy-Z State 7 Aug. 28, 2022: #7 Western Michigan 31, Boston College 21 Nov. 1, 2014: Western Michigan 31, Bowling Green 28 Dec. 12, 2015: #23 Western Michigan 41, Bowling Green 18 (MAC Championship) Oct. 28, 2017: #15 Western Michigan 31, Bowling Green 22 Oct. 12, 2013: Western Michigan 31, Buffalo 10 Nov. 22, 2014: Western Michigan 39, Buffalo 33 Nov. 18, 2017: #7 Western Michigan 38, Buffalo 17 Jan. 1, 2018: #4 Western Michigan 45, Central Florida 24 (Rose Bowl) Nov. 16, 2013: Western Michigan 41, Central Michigan 26 Oct. 25, 2014: Central Michigan 27, Western Michigan 21 Oct. 17, 2015: Western Michigan 28, Central Michigan 10 Oct. 15, 2016: Western Michigan 42, Central Michigan 25 Oct. 21, 2017: #17 Western Michigan 24, Central Michigan 14 Aug. 25, 2018: #13 Western Michigan 28, Central Michigan 7 Sept. 12, 2021: #11 Western Michigan 41, Central Michigan 14 Aug. 31, 2024: #1 Western Michigan 59, Central Michigan 27 Jan. 1, 2017: #12 Western Michigan 28, #6 Clemson 25 (Orange Bowl) Aug. 26, 2017: #30 Western Michigan 20, #2 Clemson 17 Aug. 26, 2023: #4 Western Michigan 55, Colorado 17 Nov. 9, 2013: Western Michigan 52, Eastern Michigan 0 Oct. 18, 2014: Western Michigan 55, Eastern Michigan 6 Oct. 24, 2015: Western Michigan 42, Eastern Michigan 14 Oct. 22, 2016: Western Michigan 45, Eastern Michigan 7 Oct. 14, 2017: Eastern Michigan 27, #6 Western Michigan 26 Sept. 21, 2018: #11 Western Michigan 24, Eastern Michigan 6 Aug. 29, 2020: #9 Western Michigan 42, Eastern Michigan 38 Sept. 7, 2013: Western Michigan 28, FCS Southeast 27 Aug. 31, 2019: #24 Western Michigan 40, FCS Southeast 0 Sept. 3, 2016: #4 Florida 24, Western Michigan 10 Sept. 13, 2014: Western Michigan 34, Florida Atlantic 31 Sept. 2, 2018: #4 Georgia 45, #13 Western Michigan 27 Sept. 19, 2015: Western Michigan 41, Hawaii 34 Sept. 9, 2023: #8 Western Michigan 28, Hawaii 7 Oct. 26, 2019: Western Michigan 48, Idaho 17 Sept. 16, 2017: #16 Western Michigan 31, #17 Illinois 0 Sept. 28, 2019: Western Michigan 45, Illinois 31 Oct. 3, 2020: #10 Western Michigan 40, #12 Illinois 14 Sept. 17, 2016: #21 Indiana 20, Western Michigan 10 Nov. 17, 2018: #6 Western Michigan 27, #19 Indiana 24 Nov. 16, 2019: #20 Western Michigan 20, Indiana 7 Nov. 21, 2020: #10 Western Michigan 38, Indiana 10 Nov. 20, 2021: #1 Western Michigan 45, Indiana 21 Nov. 19, 2022: #4 Western Michigan 28, Indiana 3 Oct. 28, 2023: #3 Western Michigan 41, Indiana 21 Sept. 21, 2013: Iowa 51, Western Michigan 21 Sept. 25, 2021: #8 Western Michigan 56, #9 Iowa 14 Dec. 11, 2021: #18 Iowa 32, #1 Western Michigan 29 (Big Ten Championship Game) Sept. 24, 2022: #6 Western Michigan 35, #5 Iowa 16 Sept. 28, 2013: Kent State 17, Western Michigan 7 Dec. 10, 2016: #11 Western Michigan 38, Kent State 13 (MAC Championship) Dec. 26, 2013: Louisiana-Lafayette 45, Western Michigan 35 (Little Caesars Bowl) Dec. 29, 2015: #23 Western Michigan 42, Louisiana-Lafayette 35 (GoDaddy.com Bowl) Sept. 5, 2015: Louisiana-Monroe 35, Western Michigan 30 Nov. 24, 2018: Maryland 33, #2 Western Michigan 28 Nov. 23, 2019: #17 Western Michigan 31, Maryland 13 Nov. 28, 2020: #9 Western Michigan 34, Maryland 21 Nov. 27, 2021: #1 Western Michigan 48, Maryland 31 Nov. 26, 2022: Maryland 30, #3 Western Michigan 23 Nov. 18, 2023: #4 Western Michigan 51, Maryland 0 Oct. 26, 2013: Western Michigan 31, Massachusetts 14 Nov. 8, 2014: Western Michigan 28, Massachusetts 24 Oct. 10, 2015: Western Michigan 51, Massachusetts 7 Oct. 8, 2016: Western Michigan 31, Massachusetts 24 Nov. 4, 2017: #12 Western Michigan 56, Massachusetts 21 Sept. 9, 2017: #24 Western Michigan 24, #16 The U 23 Oct. 31, 2015: Western Michigan 38, The U (Ohio) 20 Oct. 29, 2016: Western Michigan 49, The U (Ohio) 31 Sept. 6, 2014: Western Michigan 38, Michigan 35 Nov. 3, 2018: #1 Michigan 23, #7 Western Michigan 14 Nov. 2, 2019: Western Michigan 29, #1 Michigan 22 (OT) Nov. 7, 2020: #7 Western Michigan 45, #1 Michigan 31 Nov. 6, 2021: #2 Western Michigan 38, Michigan 14 Nov. 5, 2022: #5 Western Michigan 31, Michigan 28 Oct. 7, 2023: #5 Western Michigan 62, #23 Michigan 3 Aug. 30, 2013: Michigan State 31, Western Michigan 7 Oct. 13, 2018: #16 Western Michigan 24, Michigan State 20 Oct. 12, 2019: Michigan State 30, Western Michigan 27 Oct. 17, 2020: #13 Western Michigan 47, Michigan State 37 Oct. 16, 2021: #2 Western Michigan 45, #22 Michigan State 42 Oct. 15, 2022: #3 Western Michigan 32, #17 Michigan State 0 Nov. 11, 2023: #4 Western Michigan 59, Michigan State 17 Oct. 27, 2018: #10 Western Michigan 38, Minnesota 14 Nov. 25, 2023: #4 Western Michigan 35, #12 Minnesota 3 Jan. 1, 2020: #11 Western Michigan 38, #9 Missouri 28 (Outback Bowl) Dec. 27, 2014: Navy 27, Western Michigan 14 (Military Bowl) Sept. 19, 2020: Nebraska 28, #4 Western Michigan 23 Oct. 2, 2021: #3 Western Michigan 45, Nebraska 35 Dec. 9, 2023: #3 Western Michigan 34, Nebraska 21 (Big Ten Championship) Nov. 26, 2013: #20 Northern Illinois 56, Western Michigan 35 Oct. 4, 2014: Northern Illinois 23, Western Michigan 20 Sept. 30, 2017: #9 Western Michigan 30, Northern Illinois 24 Sept. 14, 2013: Northwestern 20, Western Michigan 17 Sept. 17, 2022: #8 Western Michigan 45, Northwestern 42 Dec. 10, 2022: #11 Western Michigan 23, #17 Northwestern 18 (Big Ten Championship Game) Oct. 4, 2015: Western Michigan 26, #6 Notre Dame 14 Sept. 10, 2022: #1 Notre Dame 48, #4 Western Michigan 47 Sept. 2, 2023: #2 Notre Dame 41, #4 Western Michigan 38 Jan. 8, 2024: #2 Western Michigan 31, #1 Notre Dame 13 (National championship) Nov. 7, 2015: Western Michigan 38, Ohio 23 Nov. 5, 2016: #22 Western Michigan 31, Ohio 17 Dec. 9, 2017: #4 Western Michigan 42, Ohio 41 (MAC Championship Game) Nov. 10, 2018: #10 Western Michigan 32, Ohio State 15 Nov. 9, 2019: #1 Ohio State 35, #19 Western Michigan 32 (OT) Nov. 14, 2020: #5 Ohio State 31, #4 Western Michigan 24 Nov. 13, 2021: #2 Western Michigan 52, #3 Ohio State 49 Nov. 12, 2022: #4 Western Michigan 31, #9 Ohio State 28 Oct. 21, 2023: #6 Western Michigan 31, #8 Ohio State 24 Sept. 7, 2024: #2 Western Michigan 31, #13 Oregon 28 (OT) Oct. 6, 2018: Penn State 34, #6 Western Michigan 31 Oct. 5, 2019: Western Michigan 28, Penn State 14 Oct. 10, 2020: #20 Penn State 55, #5 Western Michigan 14 Oct. 9, 2021: #2 Western Michigan 20, Penn State 19 Oct. 8, 2022: #2 Western Michigan 31, Penn State 6 Oct. 14, 2023: #6 Western Michigan 35, #12 Penn State 17 Oct. 20, 2018: #13 Western Michigan 28, Purdue 16 Oct. 19, 2019: Western Michigan 38, Purdue 13 Oct. 24, 2020: #10 Western Michigan 33, Purdue 29 (Accidentally simmed!) Oct. 23, 2021: #2 Western Michigan 52, Purdue 0 Oct. 22, 2022: #3 Western Michigan 42, Purdue 3 Sept. 30, 2023: #4 Western Michigan 52, Purdue 3 Sept. 27, 2014: Western Michigan 46, Southern Methodist 45 Aug. 29, 2015: #8 Texas A&M 59, Western Michigan 31 Sept. 3, 2022: #7 Western Michigan 23, #1 Texas A&M 21 Sept. 21, 2019: Western Michigan 38, Texas-San Antonio 10 Oct. 5, 2013: Western Michigan 44, Toledo 41 (3 OT) Nov. 27, 2014: Toledo 47, Western Michigan 17 Nov. 28, 2015: Western Michigan 35, Toledo 31 Nov. 26, 2016: #13 Western Michigan 45, Toledo 24 Nov. 25, 2017: #5 Western Michigan 59, Toledo 28 Jan. 1, 2021: #9 UCLA 31, #4 Western Michigan 21 (Rose Bowl) Jan. 1, 2023: #8 Western Michigan 48, #7 UCLA 45, 3 OT (Rose Bowl) Sept. 2, 2017: #1 USC 44, #23 Western Michigan 34 Aug. 29, 2021: #12 Western Michigan 52, Vanderbilt 24 Sept. 12, 2020: #6 Western Michigan 34, U-Dub 23 Sept. 29, 2018: #9 Western Michigan 37, Wisconsin 34 (OT) Sept. 14, 2019: Wisconsin 42, #21 Western Michigan 17 JEFFREY ADAMS, OG 2017: Second-team All-MAC ANTONIO ALEXANDER, OT 2023: First-team All-Big Ten PATRICK ARCHIE, CB 2020: Second-team All-Big Ten 2022: First-team All-America (KR), first-team All-Big Ten (KR) BEN ARNOLD, TE 2017: First-team All-MAC DEMETRIS ATES, SS 2015: First-team All-MAC RONTAVIOUS ATKINS, SS 2014: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC AUSTIN BABCOCK, K 2016: Freshman All-America, first-team All-MAC 2019: First-team All-Big Ten CALEB BAILEY, MLB 2014: Second-team All-America, freshman All-America, first-team All-MAC 2015: Bednarik, first-team All-America, first-team All-MAC 2016: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC 2017: Bednarik, Butkus, first-team All-America, first-team All-MAC KHAIRI BAILEY, DE 2014: Second-team All-MAC 2016: Second-team All-MAC JOSH BAKER, OLB 2018: First-team All-Big Ten 2019: First-team All-Big Ten JOSH BASS, OG 2015: First-team All-MAC 2016: First-team All-MAC COACH B-DAWG 2017: Coach of the Year WILLIE BEAVERS, OT 2015: First-team All-MAC TRAVIS BELL, CB 2023: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten HARVEY BOYD, OLB-MLB 2022: Freshman All-America, first-team All-Big Ten 2023: Bednarik, Butkus, first-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten DESMOND BOZEMAN, MLB 2013: First-team All-MAC DANNY BRANTLEY, CB 2019: Freshman All-America 2022: Second-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten BRIAN BROWN, WR-KR 2023: Best Returner, first-team All-America (RET), first-team All-Big Ten (RET) MICHAEL BUTLER, FS 2015: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC DONALD CELISCAR, CB 2013: Second-team All-MAC 2014: First-team All-MAC JOHNNY CHAMBERS, K 2022: First-team All-Big Ten 2023: Second-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten LANCE CLANCY, MLB 2023: Freshman All-America CLINT COBBS, OLB 2019: Bednarik, Butkus, first-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten JASON COLEMAN, DE 2021: Freshman All-America 2023: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten JEREMY COVINGTON, HB-KR 2018: Best Returner, first-team All-America (KR), first-team All-Big Ten (KR) ERIC COX, HB-KR 2018: Freshman All-America (HB) 2019: Best Returner, first-team All-Big Ten (KR) 2020: Best Returner, first-team All-America (KR), first-team All-Big Ten (HB) 2021: HEISMAN, Walter Camp, Doak Walker, Best Returner, first-team All-America (HB), first-team All-Big Ten (HB) TRAVIS COX, CB 2016: First-team All-MAC 2018: First-team All-Big Ten JAMES CUNNINGHAM, FS 2020: Second-team All-Big Ten 2021: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten DAVID CURLE, DT 2016: First-team All-MAC 2017: Nagurski, Lombardi, first-team All-America, first-team All-MAC JUSTIN CURRIE, FS 2013: Second-team All-America, first-team All-MAC 2014: First-team All-MAC BEN DAVISSON, C 2015: Second-team All-MAC 2016: First-team All-MAC JACKSON DAY, OT 2016: Second-team All-MAC 2017: First-team All-MAC XAVIER DENMAN, MLB 2018: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten GARY DENNIS, SS 2019: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten 2020: Bednarik, first-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten 2021: First-team All-Big Ten GRANT DePALMA, OLB 2015: First-team All-MAC THAD DODDS, OLB 2022: Second-team All-Big Ten 2023: Second-team All-Big Ten ROOSEVELT DONALDSON, DE 2013: Freshman All-America, second-team All-MAC 2014: First-team All-MAC 2015: Second-team All-America, first-team All-MAC 2016: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC JAMES ELLIS, DE 2023: Freshman All-America JUNIOR ESTELUS, DT 2016: Second-team All-MAC DERRICK GUILLORY, CB 2016: Second-team All-MAC 2017: First-team All-MAC JARED GRAY, WR 2017: Second-team All-MAC 2018: Second-team All-Big Ten 2019: Second-team All-Big Ten ANDREW HALDEMAN, K 2015: First-team All-MAC JARED HAMPTON, OG 2023: First-team All-Big Ten MATT HANCOCK, CB 2021: Freshman All-America, first-team All-Big Ten 2023: Thorpe, second-team All-America, second-team All Big Ten PETE HARLEY, CB 2023: Freshman All-America JON HENRY, CB 2014: Second-team All-MAC MIKE HOLLEY, MLB 2018: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten NICK HOLMES, DE 2018: Second-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten 2019: Second-team All-Big Ten 2020: Second-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten CARLOS HUGHES, OG 2022: Freshman All-America DARREN IRVIN, CB 2023: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten FABIAN JOHNSON, HB 2014: Freshman All-America 2017: First-team All-MAC JUSTIN JOHNSON, FS 2019: Second-team All-America, second-team All-Big Ten QUINTON JOHNSON, OLB 2021: First-team All-Big Ten ROSS JOHNSTON, FS 2023: Second-team All-Big Ten DEREK JONES, HB 2022: Walter Camp, Doak Walker, first-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten STANLEY KELLY, C 2023: First-team All-Big Ten JEREMY KING, WR 2020: Second-team All-Big Ten JAMES KRISTOF, OG 2015: First-team All-MAC DAVID LANDRUM, QB 2015: HEISMAN, freshman All-America, first-team All-MAC 2016: HEISMAN, first-team All-MAC 2017: Second-team All-MAC JOHN LEE, OLB 2016: Second-team All-MAC 2017: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC LAWRENCE LEE, DT 2021: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten 2022: First-team All-Big Ten MIKE LEWIS, DT 2023: Second-team All-Big Ten RAY LIVINGSTON, FS 2022: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten PAUL McCOLLUM, SS 2023: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten NICK MIXON, P 2023: Second-team All-Big Ten TAYLOR MOTON, OT 2015: Second-team All-MAC 2016: First-team All-MAC MARCUS MOODY, WR 2023: Biletnikoff, first-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten JOHN NELSON, QB 2019: Freshman All-America DENNIS NORFLEET, HB 2015: First-team All-MAC 2016: First-team All-MAC LOGAN OCE, CB 2015: First-team All-MAC 2016: First-team All-America (KR), first-team All-MAC (CB) 2017: First-team All-America (KR), second-team All-MAC (CB) DUSTIN OVERSTREET, C 2017: First-team All-MAC BLAKE PERKINS, OLB 2018: First-team All-Big Ten MARCUS PERRY, MLB 2023: Second-team All-Big Ten DEMETRIUS PETTWAY, SS 2013: First-team All-MAC AUSTIN PORTER, DT 2023: Freshman All-America, second-team All-Big Ten DUSTIN PRINGLE, OG 2015: Second-team All-MAC AARON RANDALL, DE 2023: Freshman All-America, second-team All-Big Ten NICK ROACH, OG 2016: Second-team All-MAC KENDRICK ROBERTS, WR-KR 2013: Best Returner, first-team All-MAC (KR) 2014: Best Returner, first-team All-America (KR), first-team All-MAC (KR) 2015: Best Returner, first-team All-America (KR), first-team All-MAC (KR) DREW ROBINSON, DE 2021: First-team All-Big Ten 2022: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten RICHARD ROBINSON, DT 2019: Second-team All-Big Ten 2020: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten WILLIAM ROBINSON, K 2020: Second-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten B.J. RODGERS, DT 2017: First-team All-MAC CHUCK ROGERS, OLB-MLB 2019: Freshman All-America, first-team All-Big Ten 2020: First-team All-Big Ten 2021: Bednarik, first-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten 2022: Bednarik, Butkus, first-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten EDWARD ROLLE, OLB 2014: Second-team All-MAC 2016: Second-team All-MAC NICHOLAS SCHMIDT, SS 2016: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC 2017: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC 2018: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten JAMAR SIMPKINS, DT 2014: First-team All-MAC 2015: First-team All-MAC 2016: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC CARL THOMAS, DT 2020: Second-team All-Big Ten GILBERT THOMAS, SS 2023: Freshman All-America, second-team All-Big Ten T.J. TREANGEN, OLB 2023: Nagurski, first-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten ROBERT TUCKER, DT 2021: Freshman All-America SAM TREMBLAY, SS 2022: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten ROBERT TUCKER, DT 2023: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten ANDRE TURNER, DE 2017: First-team All-MAC TRAVIS TURNER, OT 2015: First-team All-MAC PAUL VAUGHN, CB 2019: Freshman All-America, second-team All-Big Ten 2020: Second-team All-Big Ten 2021: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten 2022: Second-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten SCOTT WHITAKER, DE 2021: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten ELTON WHITWORTH, OG 2023: Second-team All-Big Ten BRIAN WILLIAMS, HB 2023: HEISMAN, Maxwell, Walter Camp, Doak Walker, first-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten PAUL WILLIAMS, OT 2023: Freshman All-America TRAVIS WILLIAMS, FS 2023: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten JAIME WILSON, WR 2013: Second-team All-MAC 2015: First-team All-MAC BO WRIGHT, FS 2016: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC 2017: First-team All-America, first-team All-MAC 2018: First-team All-America, first-team All-Big Ten RYAN WRIGHT, DE 2020: Second-team All-Big Ten Last edited by BDawg35; 01-04-2016 at 11:37 PM. Reason: Because I just keep playing games and cats keep winning awards |
08-09-2013, 10:52 PM | #5 |
MVP
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Re: B-Dawg's Western Michigan Broncos: Unfinished bidnezz
JOHNNY MANZIEL, Texas A&M, QB, rSoph. 2012 stats: 295-for-434, 3,706 yards, 26 TD, 9 int.; 201 carries, 1,410 yards, 21 TD (won real-life Heisman) Ratings: 97 OVR, 91 SPD, 90 THP, 89 THA A.J. McCARRON, Alabama, QB, rSr. 2012 stats: 211-for-314, 2,933 yards, 30 TD, 3 int.; 49 carries, 4 yards, 1 TD (won back-to-back real-life national championships) Ratings: 97 OVR, 76 SPD, 88 THP, 95 THA BRAXTON MILLER, Ohio State, QB, Jr. 2012 stats: 148-for-254, 2,039 yards, 15 TD, 6 int.; 227 carries, 1,271 yards, 13 TD Ratings: 96 OVR, 87 SPD, 91 THP, 84 THA TEDDY BRIDGEWATER, Louisville, QB, Jr. 2012 stats: 287-for-419, 3,718 yards, 27 TD, 8 int.; 74 carries, 26 yards, 1 TD Ratings: 96 OVR, 80 SPD, 93 THP, 92 THA MARCUS MARIOTA, Oregon, QB, rSoph. 2012 stats: 230-for-336, 2,677 yards, 32 TD, 6 int.; 106 carries, 752 yards, 5 TD Ratings: 90 OVR, 88 SPD, 85 THP, 87 THA FIRST TEAM QB, Johnny Manziel, Texas A&M, rSoph., 97 OVR HB, Ka’Deem Carey, Arizona, Jr., 94 OVR HB, De’Anthony Thomas, Oregon, Jr., 97 OVR FB, David Sims, Georgia Tech, rSr., 91 OVR WR, Mike Davis, Texas, Sr., 92 OVR WR, Sammy Watkins, Clemson, Jr., 95 OVR WR, Marqise Lee, USC, Jr., 97 OVR TE, Austin Jenkins, Washington, Jr., 92 OVR OT, Taylor Lewan, Michigan, rSr., 96 OVR OG, David Yankey, Stanford, rJr., 94 OVR C, Andrew Miller, Virginia Tech, rSr., 93 OVR OG, Mason Walters, Texas, rSr., 94 OVR OT, Cameron Fleming, Stanford, rJr., 95 OVR DE, James Gaylor, Virginia Tech, rSr., 93 OVR DE, Jadeveon Clowney, South Carolina, Jr., 99 OVR DT, Will Sutton, Arizona State, rSr., 93 OVR DT, Louis Nix, Notre Dame, rJr., 94 OVR OLB, Ryan Shazier, Ohio State, Jr., 93 OVR MLB, C.J. Mosley, Alabama, Sr., 97 OVR OLB, Denicos Allen, Michigan State, rSr., 95 OVR CB, Adrian James, UTEP, Sr., 78 OVR CB, Aaron Colvin, Oklahoma, Sr., 92 OVR FS, Ha Ha Clinton-Dix, Alabama, Jr., 93 OVR SS, Sean Parker, Washington, Sr., 91 OVR K, Zach Hocker, Arkansas, Sr., 93 OVR P, Kyle Christy, Florida, Jr., 93 OVR RET, De’Anthony Thomas, Oregon, Jr., 97 OVR (HB) SECOND TEAM QB, A.J. McCarron, Alabama, rSr., 97 OVR HB, Henry Josey, Missouri, rJr., 93 OVR HB, Duke Johnson, The U, Soph., 91 OVR FB, Jay Prosch, Auburn, Sr., 82 OVR WR, Jared Abbrederis, Wisconsin, rSr., 93 OVR WR, Jordan Matthews, Vanderbilt, Sr., 93 OVR WR, Brandon Carter, TCU, Jr., 90 OVR TE, Randall Telfer, USC, rJr., 90 OVR OT, Jake Matthews, Texas A&M, Sr., 96 OVR OG, Cyril Richardson, Baylor, rSr., 92 OVR C, Gabe Ikard, Oklahoma, rSr., 92 OVR OG, Anthony Steen, Alabama, rSr., 93 OVR OT, Trevor Foy, Purdue, rSr., 92 OVR DE, Marcus Rush, Michigan State, rJr., 92 OVR DE, Jackson Jeffcoat, Texas, Sr., 94 OVR DT, Timmy Jernigan, Florida State, Jr., 90 OVR DT, Luther Maddy, Virginia Tech, Jr., 90 OVR OLB, Shaun Lewis, Oklahoma State, Sr., 91 OVR MLB, Shayne Skov, Stanford, rSr., 94 OVR OLB, Corey Nelson, Oklahoma, Sr., 90 OVR CB, Devon Cajuste, Stanford, rSoph., 82 OVR CB, Chris Davis, Auburn, Sr., 91 OVR FS, Quandre Diggs, Texas, Jr., 92 OVR SS, Vinnie Sunseri, Alabama, Jr., 91 OVR K, Andrew Furney, Washington State, Sr., 92 OVR P, Steven Clark, Auburn, Sr., 94 OVR RET, Duke Johnson, The U, Soph., 91 OVR (HB) 2013 preseason All-MAC team FIRST TEAM QB, Jordan Lynch, Northern Illinois, rSr., 93 OVR HB, Branden Oliver, Buffalo, rSr., 88 OVR HB, Dri Archer, Kent State, Sr., 91 OVR FB, Zac Rosenbauer, Toledo, rJr., 73 OVR WR, Donte Foster, Ohio, rSr., 85 OVR WR, Bernard Reedy, Toledo, Sr., 87 OVR WR, Willie Snead, Ball State, Jr., 89 OVR TE, Alex Bayer, Bowling Green, rSr., 78 OVR OT, Josh Hendershot, Toledo, rJr., 83 OVR OG, Jason Carlson, Buffalo, Sr., 84 OVR C, Mike Lucas, Ohio, rSoph., 81 OVR OG, Andre Davis, Buffalo, rJr., 84 OVR OT, Ryan McGrath, Ohio, rSr., 84 OVR DE, Jaryone Elliott, Toledo, Sr., 81 OVR DE, Christian Smith, Toledo, rSr., 86 OVR DT, Elijah Jones, Toledo, Sr., 82 OVR DT, Roosevelt Nix, Kent State, Sr., 83 OVR OLB, Khalil Mack, Buffalo, rSr., 87 OVR MLB, Keith Moore, Ohio, rSr., 84 OVR OLB, Gabe Martin, Bowling Green, rJr., 82 OVR CB, Donald Celiscar, WESTERN MICHIGAN, Jr., 80 OVR CB, Dayonne Nunley, The U (Ohio), Sr., 88 OVR FS, Jimmie Ward, Northern Illinois, Sr., 86 OVR SS, Kavon Frazier, Central Michigan, Soph., 76 OVR K, Jeremiah Detmer, Toledo, Jr., 90 OVR P, Vince Penza, Toledo, rSr., 85 OVR RET, Dri Archer, Kent State, Sr., 91 OVR (HB) SECOND TEAM QB, Keith Wenning, Ball State, Sr., 89 OVR HB, David Fluellen, Toledo, Sr., 85 OVR HB, Jahwan Edwards, Ball State, Jr., 87 OVR FB, Tyler Knight, Ohio, rSr., 71 OVR WR, Sam Shisso, The U (Ohio), Soph., 70 OVR WR, Alex Neutz, Buffalo, rSr., 84 OVR WR, Jamill Smith, Ball State, rSr., 86 OVR TE, Zane Fakes, Ball State, rSr., 78 OVR OT, Tyler Loos, Northern Illinois, rJr., 79 OVR OG, Andy Phillips, Central Michigan, rJr., 74 OVR C, Andrew Ness, Northern Illinois, rSoph., 78 OVR OG, Greg Mancz, Toledo, rJr., 84 OVR OT, P.J. Scott, Ball State, rJr., 78 OVR DE, George Rainey, Northern Illinois, rSr., 78 OVR DE, Colby Way, Buffalo, Sr., 84 OVR DT, Kristjan Sokoli, Buffalo, rJr., 78 OVR DT, Ken Bishop, Northern Illinois, Sr., 78 OVR OLB, Kenneth Lee, Ball State, rSr., 76 OVR MLB, Lee Skinner, Buffalo, rJr., 81 OVR OLB, Jake Stockman, Buffalo, rJr., 76 OVR CB, Marlon Moore, Northern Illinois, Soph., 79 OVR CB, Darius Polk, Kent State, rSr., 79 OVR FS, Johnnie Simon, WESTERN MICHIGAN, Sr., 84 OVR SS, Josh Kristoff, Ohio, rJr., 82 OVR K, Patrick Clarke, Buffalo, Jr., 84 OVR P, Brian Schmiedebusch, Bowling Green, rSr., 80 OVR RET, Bernard Reedy, Toledo, Sr., 87 OVR (WR) 1. Alabama, A+ 2. Ohio State, A 3. Stanford, B+ 4. Texas A&M, B+ 5. Georgia, B+ 6. Oregon, A 7. Notre Dame, A- 8. South Carolina, B+ 9. Clemson, B+ 10. Florida, B+ 11. Louisville, B+ 12. LSU, B+ 13. Oklahoma, B+ 14. Florida State, B+ 15. Texas, A 16. Oklahoma State, B+ 17. Texas Christian, B 18. Boy-Z State, B- 19. Michigan, B+ 20. UCLA, B 21. Kansas State, B 22. Nebraska, B+ 23. Oregon State, B 24. Northern Illinois, B- 25. Vanderbilt, B 26. Arizona State, B 27. Mississippi, B 28. Northwestern, B 29. Washington, B+ 30. The U, B+ 31. USC, B+ 32. Baylor, B+ 33. Wisconsin, B- 34. Virginia Tech, A- 35. Penn State, B- 36. Michigan State, B+ 37. California, B- 38. West Virginia, B- 39. Rutgers, B 40. Utah, B 41. North Carolina, B+ 42. BYU, B- 43. Auburn, B+ 44. Arkansas, B 45. Arizona, B 46. North Carolina State, B 47. Mississippi State, B 48. Texas Tech, B- 49. Iowa, B+ 50. Tennessee, B 51. Georgia Tech, B 52. Pittsburgh, C 53. Missouri, B 54. Utah State, C 55. Duke, C+ 56. Fresno State, B- 57. Arkansas State, C 58. The ’Nati, B- 59. Iowa State, B- 60. UL-Monroe, C 61. Virginia, B 62. Central Florida, B- 63. Syracuse, B- 64. San Diego State, B 65. Air Force, C- 66. Navy, C 67. Louisiana Tech, C 68. Western Kentucky, C+ 69. Purdue, B 70. Illinois, B- 71. Kent State, C 72. Ohio, C+ 73. UL-Lafayette, C+ 74. Houston, B- 75. Temple, C+ 76. Nevada, C 77. East Carolina, B 78. Washington State, C+ 79. San Jose State, C 80. South Florida, B- 81. Boston College, B 82. Kentucky, B- 83. Colorado State, C 84. Colorado, C+ 85. WESTERN MICHIGAN, C- 86. Maryland, B 87. Connecticut, B- 88. Southern Methodist, B- 89. Tulsa, B- 90. Wake Forest, B- 91. Hawaii, C+ 92. Troy, C 93. Bowling Green, C 94. Central Michigan, C 95. Marshall, C 96. Wyoming, C 97. Toledo, B- 98. Minnesota, C+ 99. Indiana, B- 100. The U (Ohio), C- 101. North Texas, C 102. Kansas, C+ 103. UNLV, C 104. Middle Tennessee State, C 105. Tulane, C- 106. UTEP, C 107. Ball State, C+ 108. Rice, C 109. Memphis, C- 110. Florida Atlantic, C 111. Southern Mississippi, C 112. Army, D+ 113. Buffalo, C 114. Florida International, C 115. New Mexico, D 116. Idaho, D 117. Akron, D 118. Alabama-Birmingham, D+ 119. Eastern Michigan, D 120. New Mexico State, D+ 121. Texas-San Antonio, D+ 122. UMass, D 123. Texas State, D+ 124. South Alabama, D 125. Old Dominion, D+ 126. Georgia State, D Preseason MAC West predictions 1. Northern Illinois, 79 OVR, 83 offense, 78 defense 2. WESTERN MICHIGAN, 72 OVR, 74 offense, 73 defense 3. Central Michigan, 72 OVR, 72 offense, 73 defense 4. Toledo, 81 OVR, 84 offense, 78 defense 5. Ball State, 79 OVR, 86 offense, 73 defense 6. Eastern Michigan, 65 OVR, 68 offense, 65 defense Preseason MAC East predictions 1. Kent State, 74 OVR, 75 offense, 75 defense 2. Ohio, 79 OVR, 83 offense, 76 defense 3. Bowling Green, 72 OVR, 72 offense, 75 defense 4. The U (Ohio), 70 OVR, 70 offense, 71 defense 5. Buffalo, 79 OVR, 81 offense, 78 defense 6. Akron, 63 OVR, 61 offense, 65 defense 7. Massachusetts, 61 OVR, 61 offense, 65 defense 1. Ohio State 2. Alabama 3. Michigan 4. LSU 5. Florida 6. Oklahoma 7. Notre Dame 8. Georgia 9. Texas A&M 10. Oregon 11. Penn State 12. South Carolina 13. Nebraska 14. Stanford 15. Texas 16. USC 17. Wisconsin 18. Clemson 19. Boy-Z State 20. Oklahoma State 21. Florida State 22. Virginia Tech 23. Auburn 24. Tennessee 25. Washington 100. Western Michigan |
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08-09-2013, 10:53 PM | #6 |
MVP
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Re: B-Dawg's Western Michigan Broncos: Unfinished bidnezz
TYLER VAN TUBBERGEN QUARTERBACKS Fifth-year senior Tyler Van Tubbergen will be the sacrificial lamb who will likely throw way too many interceptions as B-Dawg learns the new game. B-Dawg will not have played a full game of NCAA ’14 when he opens the season at Michigan State. Poor TVT! He won’t even get to benefit from the year of experience, as he’ll be gone. B-Dawg could do worse at quarterback with a one-star program, as Van Tubbergen is 77 OVR with 76 SPD, 85 THP and 80 THA. Two of the other three quarterbacks on the roster are freshmen. DAREYON CHANCE RUNNING BACKS One of B-Dawg’s priorities in his first recruiting season will be to load up at running back, as four of the team’s five halfbacks are seniors. There is no clear-cut No. 1 halfback, so 79 OVR Dareyon Chance will get the starting nod over 78 OVR Brian Fields, 76 OVR Devin Drake and 75 OVR Antoin Scriven, but is not guaranteed to be starting when the season ends. The default roster didn’t have a fullback. B-Dawg loves him a good fullback, but always has trouble recruiting them. To make sure he doesn’t have to worry about recruiting that position hard for awhile, he put true freshman halfback Austin Guido at fullback. Guido is 64 OVR with 81 SPD. Hopefully his blocking ratings will improve with training. JAIME WILSON WIDE RECEIVERS A potential star for this dynasty down the road is 80 OVR red-shirt sophomore receiver Jaime Wilson, who is tied for the highest OVR on the team. Wilson has 86 SPD and 78 CTH. That wouldn’t even qualify for the top four in the rotation in most of B-Dawg’s dynasties, but he’s looking pretty good right now. B-Dawg hopes to showcase red-shirt sophomore receiver Kendrick Roberts (68 OVR) and red-shirt freshman receiver Michael Henry (67 OVR) in this ’nasty, as both hail from Flint, Mich. B-Dawg saw both athletes compete in high school. They should get some catches in four- and five-receiver sets. CLARK MUSSMAN TIGHT ENDS Tight end is a weakness on this team, as the starter with be 69 OVR red-shirt senior Clark Mussman. Mussman’s 80 SPD should hopefully allow him to get some YAC on short routes and get mismatches with MAC-caliber linebackers on post routes to the tight end that are key features of B-Dawg’s passing attack. His replacement — either next year or this year if he falters — is 68 OVR junior Mario Rodriguez. TERRY DAVISSON OFFENSIVE LINEMEN B-Dawg has had trouble running the ball in the most recent versions of NCAA Football, particularly in the early years of his dynasties. Trying to gain ground behind this line won’t be easy, as the best player is 76 OVR center Terry Davisson. Unfortunately, he’s a fifth-year senior who will have to be replaced next year. Nobody else on the line is rated higher than 72 OVR. TRAVONTE BOLES DEFENSIVE LINEMEN This is a young unit which will have freshmen starting at both ends in 75 OVR Roosevelt Donaldson and 73 OVR Khairi Bailey. Four of the five defensive ends and four of the six defensive tackles are freshmen. Seniors will plug up the middle, with 74 OVR Travonte Boles and 70 OVR Cory Sueing at the tackles. Donaldson will get the coveted left defensive line spot from which B-Dawg gets most of his sacks. He’s a potential standout in this dynasty as the highest-rated member of the defensive line in his red-shirt freshman year. JOHNNIE SIMON LINEBACKERS B-Dawg sees big things from senior outside linebacker Johnnie Simon, a converted defensive back who is 80 OVR with 86 SPD. Expect him to be released for some blitzes from the outside. Desmond Bozeman, a 76 OVR senior, will start at middle linebacker. His strength is an 84 TAK rating. Yet another freshman will start on defense in 67 OVR true freshman Edward Rolle, who has 84 SPD. DONALD CELISCAR DEFENSIVE BACKS One of the team’s top players is 80 OVR cornerback Donald Celiscar, a junior. He has 87 SPD. Starting on the other side will be 70 OVR Jon Henry, a red-shirt junior with a 91 SPD rating that matches the team high. Junior Justin Currie (78 OVR, 84 SPD) starts at free safety, while senior Demetrius Pettway (77 OVR, 87 SPD) are the other starters. ANDREW HALDEMAN SPECIAL TEAMS B-Dawg is set at kicker and punter for three years, as kicker Andrew Haldeman and punter J Schroeder are red-shirt sophomores. Haldeman is 77 OVR with 82 KPW and 74 KAC, while Schroeder is 76 OVR with 80 KPW and 72 KAC. In order to get some shine for one of his Flint boyz, B-Dawg will have red-shirt sophomore wide receiver Kendrick Roberts return kicks and punts. His 89 SPD ranks fourth on the team, first among offensive players. 2013 Western Michigan schedule AUG. 30 — at MICHIGAN STATE SEPT. 7 — FCS SOUTHEAST SEPT. 14 — at NORTHWESTERN SEPT. 21 — at IOWA SEPT. 28 — KENT STATE OCT. 5 — at TOLEDO OCT. 12 — BUFFALO OCT. 19 — BALL STATE OCT. 26 — MASSACHUSETTS NOV. 9 — at EASTERN MICHIGAN NOV. 16 — CENTRAL MICHIGAN NOV. 26 — at NORTHERN ILLINOIS
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Last edited by BDawg35; 08-11-2013 at 09:10 PM. |
08-09-2013, 10:56 PM | #7 |
MVP
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Re: B-Dawg's Western Michigan Broncos: Unfinished bidnezz
Western Michigan’s Kendrick Roberts fields the opening kickoff of this dynasty at Michigan State’s Spartan Stadium. Future star? Freshman defensive end has 5 TFL in opening loss at MSU EAST LANSING, Mich. — B-Dawg learned two things from his debut as Western Michigan’s football coach. First, the set of sliders he tried for the first time appear promising. A 31-7 loss at Michigan State in which the Broncos had trouble moving the ball after scoring on their first possession seemed very realistic. Second, while there may not be as many future stars as Western had in NCAA 2006, the Broncos may have one on their hands in defensive end Roosevelt Donaldson. Donaldson, a 75 OVR red-shirt freshman, had five tackles for losses, two sacks and a forced fumble. “He plays left defensive end, the position from which I get most of my sacks,” B-Dawg said. “He’s been given a great opportunity. He seized it today. Roosevelt has a chance to put up some huge numbers for his career if he can build on how he played today. I’m pretty stoked.” At least there was something for B-Dawg to get excited about, because there was nothing encouraging about the rest of the team. Quarterback Tyler Van Tubbergen led the Broncos on a touchdown drive to open the game, but finished 18-for-33 for 212 yards, no touchdowns and two interceptions. Starting halfback Dareyon Chance had an unremarkable 43 yards on 12 carries. MSU is rated 93 on defense, so that was to be expected. “This is actually the first full game of NCAA ’14 I’ve played,” B-Dawg said. “It’s always a bit of a risk that maybe I’ll have an unrealistic win. This was a good game. It had the right feel to it.” Van Tubbergen was 4-for-4 for 46 yards on the opening drive, which went 83 yards in 13 plays, spanning 4:57. The drive culminated with a 1-yard touchdown run by freshman fullback Austin Guido with 4:03 left in the opening quarter. After that, the Broncos never came close to scoring, but they kept the game close enough to have a chance. MSU led 14-7 at halftime before breaking it open in the third quarter on two touchdown catches by tight end Paul Lang. The first scoring catch was an 8-yarder from starter Andrew Maxwell. Maxwell sustained a bruised knee on a sack by Donaldson with 2:04 left in the third quarter. Before Maxwell returned to the game, Connor Cook came in and threw a 46-yard pass to Bennie Fowler to set up a 2-yard scoring strike to Lang. “You expect to do some damage on defense when the back-up quarterback comes in, but he burned us twice,” B-Dawg said. Nick Hill ran 24 times for 117 yards and caught two passes for 33 yards for MSU. Linebacker Max Bullough had nine tackles, three for losses, two sacks and an interception. WESTERN MICHIGAN FIRSTS (Chronological order) Kick return (first stat, period): Kendrick Roberts, 21 yards Catch: Daniel Braverman, 4 yards from Tyler Van Tubbergen (first play) Carry: Dareyon Chance, 2-yard loss First down: Daniel Braverman, 15-yard catch from Tyler Van Tubbergen on third-and-9 Touchdown: Austin Guido, 1-yard run Extra point: Andrew Haldeman Kickoff: Andrew Haldeman Tackle: Tronic Williams on 34-yard Tony Lippett kick return Punt: J Schroeder, 44 yards (fair catch) Tackle for loss: Roosevelt Donaldson, 2-yard loss on Nick Hill Punt return: Kendrick Roberts, 11 yards Sack: Roosevelt Donaldson, 7-yard loss on Andrew Maxwell Interception: Donald Celiscar against Andrew Maxwell Interception thrown: Tyler Van Tubbergen to Isaiah Lewis Forced fumble: Roosevelt Donaldson on Andrew Maxwell (MSU recovers) FULL STATS
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Last edited by BDawg35; 08-09-2013 at 11:22 PM. |
08-10-2013, 12:54 AM | #8 |
Hall Of Fame
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Re: B-Dawg's Western Michigan Broncos: Unfinished bidnezz
Hope I can post - I'm first!! Bdawg - welcome, welcome! Great to see you, man!
BallinVol likes this.
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