Kansas Jayhawks
Kansas Jayhawks | |
---|---|
First season | 2014 |
Head coach | 6th season, 48–31–0 (.608) |
Stadium | Memorial Stadium (Capacity: 50,071) |
Year built | 1921 |
Location | Lawrence, Kansas |
League | NCAA Division I FBS |
Division | North |
All-time record | 48–31–0 (.608) |
Bowl record | 2–3–0 (.400) |
Conference titles | 2 (2014, 2018) |
Division titles | 2 (2014, 2018) |
Consensus All-Americans | 2 |
Colors | KU Blue and KU Crimson |
Fight song | "I'm a Jayhawk" |
Rivals | Missouri Tigers Kansas State Wildcats Oklahoma Sooners |
The Kansas Jayhawks, currently coached by stormstopper, are a collegiate football team playing in the Big 12. The Jayhawks play in Memorial Stadium in Lawrence, Kansas, and were a member of the North Division of the Big 12 under the old divisional format.
Contents
History
Stormstopper era
2014
During the 2013 season, Kansas made the decision to join CFBHC. Though they were ineligible in 2013, they hired stormstopper to take the reins after Duke passed on him. The move paid off immediately. In the program's first year, Kansas finished with a 12-2 record (6-1 in conference play) and won the Big 12 championship. Their wins included a rally from a 21-0 deficit to beat TCU on the road, a 28-14 road win over then-#8 Oklahoma to seize control of the division, and a 35-6 victory over Baylor in the 2014 Big 12 Championship Game. They finished the regular season ranked #5 and were the highest-ranked team left out of the playoffs. They subsequently lost the Sugar Bowl to Georgia, 42-17. Their leading passer was Christopher Brooks, their leading rusher was James Otero, their leading receiver was Richard Zimmerman, their leading tackler was Benjamin Lin, their sack leader was Peter Griggs, and their interceptions leader was Ricky Rose.
2015
With DeAndre Jackson and Paul Gibbs stepping up to replace Christopher Brooks and James Otero, the Jayhawks struggled to start off their second season. They started 2-3 with losses to Washington and UNC, as well as a loss to Texas Tech in which the once-vaunted KU offense put up just 3 points. Week 6 against TCU proved to be a turning point. Kansas quarterback DeAndre Jackson ran for a school-record 203 yards and 2 touchdowns on just 9 carries. He followed it up by breaking his own record the following week in an upset of then-#1 Oklahoma, rushing for 204 yards on 12 carries and one 95-yard touchdown run. This was Kansas's second straight win over the Sooners. These two wins started a 5-game win streak that put the Jayhawks within one game of a second straight division title before blowout losses to rivals Kansas State and Missouri. After the pair of devastating setbacks, Kansas went to the Alamo Bowl against #10 Oregon. The Jayhawks ran out to a 14-0 lead and turned back an Oregon rally to win 24-21 on a 37-yard Joshua Stewart field goal with 1 second to play. They finished the season ranked #22 in the country.
2016
After a disappointing 2015 campaign, Kansas returned most of its players for 2016. They boasted an incredibly experienced lineup with 14 seniors starting, including returning starters DeAndre Jackson, Paul Gibbs, Jonathon Robinson, and Jeremy Bell. However, that experience failed to translate to success. Kansas lost their first five games and never recovered. Kansas's bowl hopes were dashed with a 20-14 loss to then-#15 Texas, and their only wins this year are a pair of blowouts over Duke and Iowa State. After DeAndre Jackson's senior night against Iowa State, the Jayhawks turned to redshirt freshman Eric Jennings at quarterback to face Kansas State and Missouri. The Jayhawks would go on to lose to the Wildcats, 20-14, and close their season with a 21-point loss against the Tigers, their worst loss of a 10-loss season.
2017
With the core of the team graduated and most of the starters on the team being talented but young, Kansas was expected to have a decent but not great year. They got off to a hot start at 6-1 and rose to #17 in the nation through week 8, though the second half of the season would feature losses to highly ranked Texas, West Virginia, and Missouri. Despite the team's youth, the Jayhawks were able to win 8 regular-season games for the second time in team history, defeat rivals Oklahoma and Kansas State, and secure a bowl bid after a one-year gap, making the season an unqualified success in comparison to the disaster that was 2016.
2018
Kansas came into the season with high hopes. They were favored to win the Big 12 North and were ranked #6 in the preseason poll. After blowing out Notre Dame at home to open up the season, they would need all 60 minutes to hold off West Virginia and Iowa State. After the 3-0 start, the Jayhawks would fall into a deep slump, losing 4 of their next 6 games. The low point was following a blowout home loss to Texas by listlessly dropping their next game against BYU to fall to 5-4. They were able to collect wins over Kansas State and Oklahoma for the second straight year, and they could still clinch the North with a win over Baylor. Eric Jennings's touchdown pass to Malcolm Davis with 50 seconds to play would prove decisive in that matchup, a 17-16 Kansas win that gave the Jayhawks momentum for the remainder of the season. They blew out Oregon, rallied to defeat Missouri for the first time in the history of the Border War, and upset TCU to win the 2018 Big 12 Championship Game. However, they were denied a 10-win season in the Cactus Bowl, as a 6-0 lead turned into a 24-6 loss to UCLA with three interceptions from Eric Jennings.
2019
Kansas was expected to contend for a second straight Big 12 title in the 2019 season behind an experienced and high-powered offense and a strong defense. The former emerged as expected, but cracks began to show in the defense early on. Kansas started out 2-0 with a blowout of Washington and a high-scoring win over West Virginia, rising as high as #4 in the polls. Subsequently, they were upset on the road by Iowa State and were shocked in a neutral-site game against ECU, 38-35, falling out of the polls as a result. They recovered with back-to-back wins over Kansas State and TCU, setting up a critical two-game stretch against Oklahoma and Baylor, both of whom were undefeated and leading their respective divisions. Kansas's fate was sealed when they allowed Oklahoma to rally from a 14-0 deficit in a home overtime loss to the Sooners, followed by a shootout loss to the Baylor Bears to fall to 4-4. Although they were eliminated from division contention with those losses, the Jayhawks still managed to close out the season on a high note. They set a school record for points against Notre Dame, held off an Oklahoma State rally, routed Rice on the road, and turned back a Missouri comeback bid with a Bradley Spurlock pick-six to finish the regular season 8-4. With a win over #17 Oregon in the Alamo Bowl, the Jayhawks secured their second straight nine-win season. Eric Jennings threw for a school-record 4132 yards and 35 touchdowns, winning the Johnny Unitas and Kellen Moore Awards, and Kansas would set a school record by averaging 33.1 points per game for the season.
All-time record vs. Big 12 opponents
This is the Jayhawks' football record against current Big 12 Conference opponents through the 2019 season.
School | Total Games | W | L | T | Pct. | PF | PA | First Year | Last Year | Streak |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Baylor | 5 | 3 | 2 | 0 | .600 | 161 | 108 | 2014 | 2019 | L1 |
Iowa State | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 | .833 | 169 | 83 | 2014 | 2019 | L1 |
Kansas State | 6 | 4 | 2 | 0 | .667 | 136 | 95 | 2014 | 2019 | W3 |
Oklahoma | 6 | 4 | 2 | 0 | .667 | 149 | 122 | 2014 | 2019 | L1 |
Oklahoma State | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | .667 | 83 | 73 | 2016 | 2019 | W2 |
TCU | 5 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 1.000 | 140 | 75 | 2014 | 2019 | W5 |
Texas | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | .000 | 17 | 77 | 2016 | 2018 | L3 |
Texas Tech | 4 | 1 | 3 | 0 | .250 | 58 | 92 | 2014 | 2018 | L3 |
West Virginia | 6 | 4 | 2 | 0 | .667 | 159 | 145 | 2014 | 2019 | W2 |
9 Opponents | 42 | 28 | 16 | 0 | .636 | 1,072 | 870 | 6 Seasons |
Season-by-Season Records
Year | Coach(es) | Conference | Overall Record | Conference Record | Bowl | Final CP Ranking | ||||
Wins | Losses | Wins | Losses | |||||||
Kansas Jayhawks | ||||||||||
2014 | Stormstopper | Big 12 | 12 | 2 | 6 | 1 | Lost Sugar Bowl vs. Georgia (17-42) | #8 | ||
2015 | 8 | 5 | 5 | 2 | Won Alamo Bowl vs. Oregon (24-21) | #22 | ||||
2016 | 2 | 10 | 1 | 6 | - | - | ||||
2017 | 8 | 5 | 5 | 2 | Lost Bourbon Bowl vs. Purdue (14-27) | - | ||||
2018 | 9 | 5 | 5 | 2 | Lost Cactus Bowl vs. UCLA (6-24) | - | ||||
2019 | 9 | 4 | 4 | 3 | Won Alamo Bowl vs. Oregon (37-31) | - | ||||
2020 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | TBD | TBD | ||||
Total | 48 | 31 | 26 | 16 | (all games) |
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National Champions | Conference Champions | Bowl game berth |
Bowl games
The Jayhawks have appeared in 5 bowl games, posting a record of 2-3.
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Individual Award Winners
Players
All-Americans
- 2014
All-Big 12 Players
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Coaches
Rivalries
Missouri Tigers
The 160-year-old rivalry between Kansas and Missouri began with open violence that up to the American Civil War known as Bleeding Kansas that took place in the Kansas Territory (Sacking of Lawrence) and the western frontier towns of Missouri throughout the 1850s. The incidents were clashes between pro-slavery factions from both states and anti-slavery Kansans to influence whether Kansas would enter the Union as a free or slave state. In the opening year of the war, six Missouri towns (the largest being Osceola) and large swaths of the western Missouri country side were plundered and burned by guerrilla "Jayhawkers" from Kansas. The Sacking of Osceola led to a retaliatory raid on Lawrence, Kansas two years later known as the Lawrence Massacre killing between 185 and 200 men and boys, which in turn led to the infamous General Order No. 11 (1863), the forced depopulation of several western Missouri counties. The raid on Lawrence was led by William Quantrill, a Confederate guerrilla born in Ohio who had formed his bushwhacker group at the end of 1861. At the time the Civil War broke out, Quantrill was a resident of Lawrence, Kansas teaching school.
The rivalry on the football field was sparked in 2015 when Missouri accepted Kansas's invitation to begin a series. Originally designed as a home-and-home, the series was extended indefinitely when vtgorilla was hired at Missouri. The rivals meet in Lawrence in odd-numbered years and in Columbia in even-numbered years. In the early-going, Aaron Shea led Missouri to three straight wins to open the series--including a 5-touchdown performance in Lawrence in his final regular-season college football game in 2017. After Shea's graduation, Kansas has been able to get a foothold in the series. A late Joshua Stewart field goal lifted the Jayhawks to a 24-23 victory in Columbia to close the 2018 regular season, and a Bradley Spurlock pick-six sealed a 35-24 win for the Jayhawks in Lawrence to close 2019. Missouri leads the series 3-2.
Kansas State Wildcats (Sunflower Showdown)
The Sunflower Showdown is the series of athletic contests between Kansas State University and the University of Kansas, most notably football and men's basketball. The name is derived from the official nickname for the state of Kansas: the Sunflower State. The two schools compete each year for the Governor's Cup in football. The rivalry between the two schools can be traced indirectly back to their creation in the 1860s. The towns of Manhattan, Kansas (now home to KSU) and Lawrence, Kansas (now home to KU) both competed to be the site of the state University – required in the Kansas Constitution – after Kansas achieved statehood in 1861. Manhattan would have become the home of the University in 1861, but the bill establishing the University in Manhattan was controversially vetoed by Governor Charles L. Robinson of Lawrence. An attempt to override the veto in the Legislature failed by two votes. In 1862, another bill to make Manhattan the site of the University failed by one vote. Finally, on the third attempt, on February 16, 1863, the Kansas Legislature designated Manhattan as home to the state's Land-grant university. Yet the legislature was not done. Prodded by former Governor Robinson, the Legislature distinguished this institution from the "University" in the Constitution, and on February 20 the Legislature named Lawrence as the home to the state university (provided Lawrence could raise $15,000 and acquire not less than 40 acres (160,000 m2) of land). When Lawrence met these conditions, the University of Kansas was established there in 1865.
Kansas and Kansas State have met on the gridiron every year since the programs joined the Big 12 Conference in 2014. They met during rivalry week in 2014, but Kansas's addition of Missouri to their schedule displaced this game. It was played in the penultimate week of the season until 2018, when it was moved to midseason. The Jayhawks won the first matchup in the series with a comfortable 34-14 win in Manhattan, but Kansas State surprised the college football world with a 34-3 win the following year. That was Kansas State's only win of the season, and it prevented Kansas from defending its Big 12 North title. The Wildcats would win their second straight in the series in 2016. Kansas would rebound in the following years, winning by a 24-14 margin in 2017 and a 24-6 margin the following year. They would extend their winning streak in the series to 3 games with a 37-7 blowout in Lawrence in 2019. Kansas leads the series 4-2.
Oklahoma Sooners
Kansas's rivalry with Oklahoma developed entirely on the football field. Since the formation of the Big 12 North in 2014, the two programs emerged as the division's premier programs. They have combined to win 4 Big 12 North titles in the division's 5 years of existence, and they are the only programs other than Texas to win a Big 12 title. Their on-field matchups have been memorable. Kansas announced its arrival to the college football world in 2014 by upsetting #8 Oklahoma on the road en route to its first conference title. The following year, Kansas upset #1 (and eventual national champion) Oklahoma with a last-second field goal in a 23-20 win in what would prove to be Oklahoma's only loss of the year. The Sooners had their revenge in 2016 with a come-from-behind 21-17 victory, but Kansas regained control of the series with back-to-back wins in 2017 and 2018. Oklahoma once again broke the two-game win streak in the series, rallying from a 14-0 deficit to win 33-30 in overtime for their first-ever win in Lawrence en route to an 11-0 start. Kansas still leads the series 4-2.
NFLHC
Drafted Players
Kansas has had twelve players selected in the first-year player draft. Devon Drummond is the highest selection in Kansas history. James Otero, Eric Jennings, and James Carson were also selected in the top 100 picks of their respective drafts.
Year | Round | Pick | Position | Player | Team |
2015 | 3 | 58 | RB | James Otero | Miami Dolphins |
2015 | 5 | 132 | OT | James Johnson | Green Bay Packers |
2017 | 5 | 183 | CB | Jeremy Bell | Indianapolis Colts |
2017 | 7 | 247 | OLB | David Robinson | Seattle Seahawks |
2017 | 7 | 258 | RB | Paul Gibbs | New Orleans Saints |
2018 | 6 | 177 | ILB | Jamie Zuman | Pittsburgh Steelers |
2018 | 6 | 180 | OG | Gregory Cooke | Minnesota Vikings |
2019 | 2 | 40 | CB | Devon Drummond | Minnesota Vikings |
2019 | 7 | 200 | DT | James Hawkins | Houston Texans |
2020 | 3 | 84 | QB | Eric Jennings | Denver Broncos |
2020 | 3 | 86 | ILB | James Carson | New England Patriots |
2020 | 7 | 229 | CB | Chad Bullock | San Francisco 49ers |
Undrafted Free Agents
Kansas has had many more players make the NFLHC through undrafted free agency than through the draft. Perhaps the most notable UDFA is Richard Zimmerman, who's spent time as the #2 and #1 receiver for the Carolina Panthers, thriving in the presence of Christian Skaggs.
Year | Position | Player | Team |
2015 | SS | Robert Medina | New York Giants |
2015 | ILB | Thomas Cooke | Cleveland Browns |
2015 | WR | Richard Zimmerman | Carolina Panthers |
2015 | OLB | Benjamin Lin | Houston Texans |
2015 | CB | Juan Stewart | Houston Texans |
2015 | QB | Christopher Brooks | Jacksonville Jaguars |
2016 | OG | Robert Thomas | Green Bay Packers |
2016 | CB | Ricky Rose | Detroit Lions |
2016 | SS | George Neal | Cincinnati Bengals |
2017 | QB | DeAndre Jackson | Seattle Seahawks |
2017 | WR | Jonathon Robinson | San Diego Chargers |
2017 | OT | Anthony Webb | San Francisco 49ers |
2017 | DT | John Morgan | New York Giants |
2019 | DE | Russell Farr | Indianapolis Colts |
Record Book
Individual
Single-Game
Record | Holder | Position | Date | Opponent | Stat |
Passing yards | Eric Jennings | QB | Week 2, 2018 | West Virginia | 449 |
Passing touchdowns | Eric Jennings | QB | Week 8, 2017 Week 1, 2018 Week 2, 2018 Week 6, 2019 Week 16, 2019 |
UCLA Notre Dame West Virginia ECU Missouri |
4 |
Passes intercepted | DeAndre Jackson | QB | Week 12, 2015 | Kansas State | 4 |
Completions | Eric Jennings | QB | Week 13, 2018 | Baylor | 30 |
Passes attempted | Eric Jennings | QB | Cactus Bowl, 2018 | UCLA | 50 |
Completion percentage | Christopher Brooks | QB | Week 9, 2014 | Navy | 84% |
Yards per attempt | Christopher Brooks | QB | Week 9, 2014 | Navy | 12.32 |
Passer rating | Eric Jennings | QB | Week 7, 2017 | Oklahoma State | 226.13 |
Rushing yards | DeAndre Jackson | QB | Week 7, 2015 | Oklahoma | 204 |
Rushing touchdowns | James Otero | RB | 5 occasions, all in 2014 | Last: Baylor | 3 |
Carries | James Otero Jalen Clayton |
RB | Week 6, 2014 Week 7, 2017 |
TCU Oklahoma State |
24 |
Yards per carry | DeAndre Jackson | QB | Week 6, 2015 | TCU | 22.56 |
Receiving yards | Malcolm Davis | WR | Week 2, 2018 | West Virginia | 206 |
Receiving touchdowns | Larry Clark Bradley Cantu Lamont Montgomery Malcolm Davis Noah Hills |
WR TE WR WR TE |
Week 12, 2016 Week 7, 2017 Week 8, 2017 Four occasions, 2018 and 2019 Week 6, 2019 |
Iowa State Oklahoma State UCLA Last: Missouri ECU |
2 |
Receptions | Malcolm Davis | WR | Week 16, 2019 | Missouri | 11 |
Yards per reception | Timmy Sutton | WR | Week 5, 2018 | Wisconsin | 39.00 |
All-purpose yards | Eric Jennings | QB | Week 2, 2018 | West Virginia | 449 |
Tackles | Thomas Cooke | ILB | Week 2, 2014 | Arizona | 15 |
Sacks | Peter Griggs Peter Griggs Peter Griggs John Serna John Morgan Kameron Reaves |
DE DE DE DE DT OLB |
Week 1, 2014 Week 3, 2014 Week 12, 2016 Week 9, 2015 Alamo Bowl, 2015 Week 14, 2017 |
Oregon Army Iowa State West Virginia Oregon Kansas State |
2 |
Interceptions | Ricky Rose Robert Medina |
CB SS |
Week 9, 2014 Week 14, 2014 |
Navy Baylor |
2 |
Fumbles forced | Robert Franklin Oliver Bates |
ILB OLB |
Week 6, 2015 Week 7, 2018 |
TCU Kansas State |
1 |
Fumbles recovered | John Serna James Carson |
DE ILB |
Week 6, 2015 Week 7, 2018 |
TCU Kansas State |
1 |
Defensive TD | Ricky Rose Robert Medina Jeremy Bell Kenneth Parker Bradley Spurlock |
CB SS CB CB |
Two occasions, 2014 Week 7, 2014 Week 9, 2016 Week 6, 2017 Three occasions, 2019 |
Last: Iowa State Oklahoma West Virginia Duke Last: Missouri |
1 |
Extra Points Made | Joshua Stewart | K | Week 7, 2016 | Duke | 7 |
Field Goals Made | Joel Hawley | K | Week 11, 2019 | Notre Dame | 5 |
Long FG | Joshua Stewart | K | Week 9, 2018 | Oklahoma | 50 |
Kick Return TD | Jeffrey Goss | WR | Week 1, 2015 | Duke | 1 |
Punt Return TD | Jeffrey Goss Timmy Sutton Albert Chastain |
WR WR RB |
Week 6, 2015 Week 7, 2017 Week 8, 2019 |
TCU Oklahoma State TCU |
1 |
Punting Average | Michael Williams | P | Week 7, 2017 | Oklahoma State | 45.7 |
Single-Season
Record | Holder | Position | Year | Stat |
Passing yards | Eric Jennings | QB | 2019 | 4132 |
Passing touchdowns | Eric Jennings | QB | 2019 | 35 |
Passes intercepted | Eric Jennings | QB | 2018 | 14 |
Completions | Eric Jennings | QB | 2018 | 320 |
Passes attempted | Eric Jennings | QB | 2018 | 521 |
Completion percentage (min. 100 attempts) | Christopher Brooks | QB | 2014 | 68.00% |
Yards per attempt (min. 100 attempts) | Eric Jennings | QB | 2017 | 8.87 |
Passer rating (min. 100 attempts) | Eric Jennings | QB | 2019 | 162.47 |
Rushing yards | James Otero | RB | 2014 | 1693 |
Rushing touchdowns | James Otero | RB | 2014 | 30 |
Carries | James Otero | RB | 2014 | 249 |
Yards per carry (min. 50 attempts) | DeAndre Jackson | QB | 2015 | 10.88 |
Receiving yards | Malcolm Davis | WR | 2019 | 1335 |
Receiving touchdowns | Malcolm Davis | WR | 2019 | 10 |
Receptions | Malcolm Davis | WR | 2018 and 2019 | 86 |
Yards per reception | Jonathon Robinson | WR | 2016 | 16.98 |
All-purpose yards | Eric Jennings | QB | 2018 | 4132 |
Tackles | Benjamin Lin | OLB | 2014 | 82 |
Sacks | Russell Farr | DE | 2017 | 6.5 |
Interceptions | Ricky Rose Jeremy Bell Bradley Spurlock |
CB | 2014 2015 2019 |
6 |
Fumbles forced | Robert Franklin Oliver Bates |
ILB |
2015 2018 |
1 |
Fumbles recovered | John Serna James Carson |
DE ILB |
2015 2018 |
1 |
Defensive TD | Bradley Spurlock | CB | 2019 | 3 |
Extra Points Made | Christopher Massey | P | 2014 | 57 |
Field Goals Made | Joel Hawley | K | 2019 | 29 |
Long FG | Joshua Stewart | K | 2018 | 50 |
GW FG under 2:00 | Joshua Stewart | K | 2015 2018 |
2 |
Kick Return TD | Jeffrey Goss | WR | 2015 | 1 |
Punt Return TD | Jeffrey Goss Timmy Sutton Albert Chastain |
WR WR RB |
2015 2017 2019 |
1 |
Career
Record | Holder | Position | Stat |
Passing yards | Eric Jennings | QB | 11709 |
Passing touchdowns | Eric Jennings | QB | 91 |
Passes intercepted | Eric Jennings | QB | 33 |
Completions | Eric Jennings | QB | 909 |
Passes attempted | DeAndre Jackson | QB | 1407 |
Completion percentage | Christopher Brooks | QB | 68.00% |
Yards per attempt | Eric Jennings | QB | 8.32 |
Passer rating | Christopher Brooks | QB | 151.88 |
Rushing yards | Jalen Clayton | RB | 3118 |
Rushing touchdowns | James Otero | RB | 30 |
Carries | Jalen Clayton | RB | 700 |
Yards per carry | DeAndre Jackson | QB | 8.56 |
Receiving yards | Malcolm Davis | WR | 3347 |
Receiving touchdowns | Malcolm Davis | WR | 23 |
Receptions | Malcolm Davis | WR | 233 |
Yards per reception | Jonathon Robinson | WR | 15.57 |
All-purpose yards | Eric Jennings | QB | 11709 |
Tackles | James Carson | ILB | 176 |
Sacks | Amir Ransom | DE | 10.5 |
Interceptions | Jeremy Bell Devon Drummond |
CB | 8 |
Fumbles forced | Robert Franklin Oliver Bates |
ILB OLB |
1 |
Fumbles recovered | John Serna James Carson |
DE ILB |
1 |
Defensive TD | Bradley Spurlock | CB | 3 |
Extra Points Made | Joshua Stewart | K | 137 |
Field Goals Made | Joshua Stewart | K | 41 |
Long FG | Joshua Stewart | K | 50 |
GW FG under 2:00 | Joshua Stewart | K | 5 |
Kick Return TD | Jeffrey Goss | WR | 1 |
Punt Return TD | Jeffrey Goss Timmy Sutton Albert Chastain |
WR WR RB |
1 |
Team
Single-Game
Record | Date | Opponent | Statistic |
Passing yards | Week 2, 2018 | West Virginia | 449 |
Passing touchdowns | Week 8, 2017 Week 1, 2018 Week 2, 2018 Week 6, 2019 |
UCLA Notre Dame West Virginia ECU |
4 |
Rushing yards | Week 6, 2015 | TCU | 323 |
Rushing touchdowns | Week 7, 2016 | Duke | 6 |
Yards per carry | Week 7, 2015 | Oklahoma | 11.00 |
Total yards | Week 6, 2015 | TCU | 549 |
Yards per play | Week 6, 2015 | TCU | 11.20 |
Points | Week 12, 2019 | Notre Dame | 50 |
Fewest pass yards allowed | Week 6, 2015 | TCU | 64 |
Fewest rush yards allowed | Week 7, 2016 | Duke | 7 |
Fewest total yards allowed | Week 6, 2015 | TCU | 103 |
Fewest points allowed | Week 9, 2014 Week 11, 2015 |
Navy Baylor |
0 |
Sacks | Week 14, 2017 | Kansas State | 3 |
Interceptions | Week 14, 2014 | Baylor | 4 |
Margin of victory | Week 9, 2014 Week 7, 2016 |
Navy Duke |
42 |
Single-Season
Record | Year | Stat |
Passing yards | 2019 | 4132 |
Passing touchdowns | 2019 | 35 |
Rushing yards | 2014 | 2354 |
Rushing touchdowns | 2014 | 39 |
Yards per carry | 2014 | 6.82 |
Total yards | 2019 | 5127 |
Yards per play | 2019 | 7.50 |
Sacks | 2017 | 13 |
Interceptions | 2019 | 15 |
Points | 2014 | 440 |
Points per game | 2019 | 33.08 |
Fewest passing yards allowed | 2015 | 2243 |
Fewest passing touchdowns allowed | 2015 | 13 |
Fewest rushing yards allowed | 2016 | 800 |
Fewest rushing touchdowns allowed | 2014 2016 2017 |
12 |
Fewest yards per carry allowed | 2016 | 4.28 |
Fewest total yards allowed | 2015 | 3180 |
Fewest yards per play allowed | 2014 | 5.93 |
Fewest sacks allowed | 2017 | 5 |
Fewest passes intercepted | 2014 | 3 |
Fewest points allowed | 2015 | 226 |
Ring of Honor
Player | Position | Seasons Played | Accolades |
James Otero | RB | 2014 | 2014 All-American Doak Walker Award winner 2014 All-Big 12 2014 Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year |
Ricky Rose | CB/FS | 2014-15 | 2014 All-American 2014 All-Big 12 |
External Links