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PFF breakdown of the Tennessee rushing attack
Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:33 pm
Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:33 pm
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Dobbs
Hurd
Kamara
Dobbs
quote:
Joshua Dobbs is one of the best running QBs in the country
As a passer Dobbs, left a lot to be desired in his sophomore and junior seasons. What he did well in both seasons, however, was run the ball. He finished 2015 as our 10th-highest-graded returning quarterback as a runner, rushing for 816 yards and 11 touchdowns. What’s impressive is that only 187 of those yards came on quarterback scrambles, with Dobbs actually built well into the offense on designed runs.
He forced 45 missed tackles on 125 carries, averaging 4.5 yards after contact per carry. To put that in perspective, our elusive rating looks at how tough a running back is to bring down, taking into account missed tackles and yards after contact to give a clearer picture of production and big play ability than yards alone. UCLA’s Paul Perkins lead running backs last year with an elusive rating of 114.7. Joshua Dobb’s elusive rating comes in at 160.9.
In short, he was incredibly difficult to bring down, which lead to big plays like this one

Hurd
quote:
When we’re talking about the best running backs in the SEC, Leonard Fournette and Nick Chubb are the go-to names. There’s good reason for as they’ve both been outstanding, but Tennessee’s Hurd has the potential to enter that conversation this year. He’s graded well over the past two seasons, rushing for 2,186 yards and scoring 17 touchdowns.
At 6-3 and 227 pounds, he’s a big physical runner who can run over defenders if he has to, with 65 missed tackles forced on 275 carries last year, while averaging 2.9 yards after contact per carry. He’s been pretty consistent in each of the past two seasons, averaging 4.7 yards per carry in both years, though he did have a higher elusive rating (79.1) in 2014 than 2015 (68.1). His 2015 number was still good enough to rank seventh among returning running backs in the SEC though, so it’s not as if this is an area where he struggles.
He’s also a pretty solid breakaway threat, with 16 runs of 15 yards or more in 2015, ranking fourth among returning running backs in the SEC. He does need to become a little bit more productive here, with those 16 runs accounting for 29.4 percent of his carries, ranking ninth among returning running backs in the SEC. The flip side to that is he still averaged 4.7 yards a carry — so was doing a lot of damage on a per-snap basis instead of relying on a couple of big runs to buoy his average.
Kamara
quote:
Most colleges in the nation would be happy to have a one-two punch in the backfield, either with a power runner and a shiftier speedster, or a solid running back and running quarterback combo. With Hurd and Dobbs alone the Volunteers would have the later, but they also boast a third talented player in the backfield in Alvin Kamara.
Often the forgotten man when people talk about the Tennessee backfield, Kamara was really productive in 2015. He played just 338 snaps, but graded at +23.0, with positives grades as a runner, receivers and pass blocker. He forced 28 missed tackles on just 106 carries, averaged 6.6 yards per carry, with 3.8 of those yards coming after contact. That all gave him an elusive rating of 109.2, ranking fifth in the nation among returning running backs, and coming with a better elusive rating than Leonard Fournette, Royce Freeman and Dalvin Cook, to name just three.
In fact, while he’s almost definitely the least well-known of the running backs in Tennessee, you could make the case that he’s a better player than Jalen Hurd given how he’s performed, admittedly in a more limited role.
Regardless of who the better of the two are, the fact that the Volunteers have two of the most talented runners in the SEC — coupled with one of the most dangerous running QBs in the nation — gives defenses a three-pronged attack that will be very tough to deal with, and may even be enough to propel them towards the College Football Playoff.
Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:35 pm to TheDarrell McSteal
Dobbs reminds me of Vince Young. A little smaller and not as fast top end but very hard to bring down with great balance.
Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:36 pm to TheDarrell McSteal
Yessir, and they will be running behind an OL that is even better this year. Hopefully we see Hurd getting more handoffs out of the I-formation.
Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:39 pm to HolographicCharizard
Annnnnndddddddddd.... still lose to UF 

Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:40 pm to TheDarrell McSteal
quote:
He finished 2015 as our 10th-highest-graded returning quarterback as a runner, rushing for 816 yards and 11 touchdowns.
Well Dobbs only ran for 671 yards last year. Maybe they aren't including sacks though like the NFL.
That run Hurd had against UK last year was unbelievable. UT definitely has the potential to have one of the strongest (if not the strongest) rushing attack in the league.
Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:40 pm to bigDgator
That's a pretty good comparison, who would you consider the better passer. I think Young has the better arm but Dobbs may be more accurate
Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:45 pm to Fus0623
I posted this the other day. The similarities between Dobbs and Young atp in their careers is strange. I doubt Dobbs blows up like Young did in 2005 but it would be nice
Vince (2004) vs Dobbs (2015)
2899 vs 2962 Total Yards
59.2% vs 59.6%
26 vs 26 Total TDs
11 vs 5 ints
128.4 vs 127.0 Rating

Vince (2004) vs Dobbs (2015)
2899 vs 2962 Total Yards
59.2% vs 59.6%
26 vs 26 Total TDs
11 vs 5 ints
128.4 vs 127.0 Rating
Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:45 pm to bigDgator
quote:
Dobbs reminds me of Vince Young. A little smaller and not as fast top end but very hard to bring down with great balance.
I don't get this comparison. Yes, they're both dual-threat QBs, but Vince Young was really never held in check as a runner throughout his entire career. Dobbs has been held in check quite often, despite his phenomenal rushing games against UGA and UF.
And Dobbs is much more developed as a passer than Young was through a couple years in College. Dobbs reminds me more of Juice Williams or a Deshaun Watson.
This post was edited on 8/3/16 at 2:51 pm
Posted on 8/3/16 at 2:51 pm to Dawgsontop34
My God. Pick your poison. VOLS to the 'ship!!!!
Posted on 8/3/16 at 5:18 pm to Dawgsontop34
quote:
Dobbs
quote:
reminds me more of
quote:
Deshaun Watson.

Posted on 8/3/16 at 5:34 pm to TheDarrell McSteal
Dobbs is a great runner on designed runs because he's hard to bring down, but he's not nearly the dual threat that Vince was. Vince would look to pass first then improvise when nothing was there and bust out a 40-yard run on a scramble.
This post was edited on 8/3/16 at 5:35 pm
Posted on 8/3/16 at 5:41 pm to TheDarrell McSteal
Lost to Chokelahoma, Arky and Florida


Posted on 8/3/16 at 5:57 pm to ArHog
quote:
Lost to Chokelahoma, Arky and Florida
Better than losing to Toledo, Texas Tech, Mississippi State, and Texas A&M.
Posted on 8/3/16 at 6:22 pm to rockytop627
quote:
Better than losing to Toledo, Texas Tech, Mississippi State, and Texas A&M.
Didn't see any of those teams on your schedule.
Ya'll lost to both of your West opponents.
Enjoy that weak east schedule

Posted on 8/3/16 at 6:40 pm to Fus0623
As of now Young by a mile. But he made a big jump between his 3rd and 4th season, hoping Dobbs follows his lead
Posted on 8/3/16 at 6:41 pm to ArHog
Strange how bottomfeeder Arky posters are usually the first to bring up strength of divisions. Year 4 of Bert and you guys will be happy with a return trip to Memphis 

Posted on 8/3/16 at 6:44 pm to TheDarrell McSteal
Solid 423rd post
Come play the West schedule fricktard

Come play the West schedule fricktard

Posted on 8/3/16 at 6:51 pm to ArHog
Lol this ozark ridgerunner can't read user profiles either.
Posted on 8/3/16 at 6:54 pm to ArHog
Can't blame your Toledo and TTU losses on a "tough west schedule."
Besides, we could have said the same thing about the east schedule as opposed to the west several years ago.
Besides, we could have said the same thing about the east schedule as opposed to the west several years ago.
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