Tale of the Tape |
|
|
Points Per Game |
35.2 |
28.5 |
Points Against |
22.8 |
31.1 |
Rushing Yards Per Game |
173.6 |
192.7 |
Rushing Yards Allowed Per Game |
103.9 |
141.4 |
Passing Yards Per Game |
268.5 |
200.5 |
Passing Yards Allowed Per Game |
251.7 |
268.9 |
Total Yards Per Game |
442.1 |
393.2 |
Total Yards Allowed Per Game |
355.6 |
410.3 |
First Downs For |
282 |
269 |
First Downs Against |
200 |
265 |
Fumbles/Lost |
7/2 |
17/4 |
Interceptions/Return Yards |
10/133 |
5/101 |
Net Punting |
41.4 |
40.9 |
Field Goal/Attempts |
15/23 |
12/13 |
Time of Possession |
33:48 |
31:51 |
3rd Down Conversions |
76/167 |
69/163 |
3rd Down Conversion Defense |
62/164 |
71/145 |
4th Down Conversions |
12/23 |
23/37 |
4th Down Conversion Defense |
15/25 |
13/20 |
Sacks By/Yards Lost |
25/177 |
20/155 |
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – West Virginia is making its 41st bowl appearance in school history tonight when it faces Memphis in the Scooter’s Coffee Frisco Bowl in Frisco, Texas.
The game is being played at 20,500-seat Frisco Stadium.
Tonight’s contest is the earliest date the Mountaineers have ever played a bowl game, the prior being Dec. 19, 1964, when WVU faced Utah in the Liberty Bowl in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
It will also be the first-ever meeting against Memphis, members of the American Athletic Conference.
The 10-2 Tigers were preseason favorites to win the American and ended the year tied for third with Navy, one game behind Tulane and two games behind 19th-ranked Army.
Memphis, ranked 25th in the final regular season Associated Press Top 25 Poll, has wins over North Alabama, Troy, Florida State, Middle Tennessee State, South Florida, North Texas, Charlotte, Rice, Alabama-Birmingham and Tulane, and losses to Navy and UTSA.
Senior quarterback Seth Henigan became the AAC’s all-time passing leader with 13,984 yards. He’s thrown for more than 3,000 yards each season he’s played for the Tigers, including a 3,883-yard effort in 2023.
That lines up favorably against a West Virginia pass defense that ranks 124th in the country, giving up 268.9 yards per game and 124th in pass efficiency defense with a 158.13 rating.
Henigan has thrown 102 career touchdown passes and needs just three to break Holton Ahlers’ AAC record of 104.
Henigan’s favorite target is Roc Taylor, a 6-foot-3, 224-pound senior who shows 61 catches for 834 yards and two touchdowns.
DeMeer Blankumsee, a Toledo transfer, has 412 catches for 557 yards and a team-best five touchdowns.
Running back Mario Anderson Jr., a South Carolina transfer, is a dual threat who leads the team in rushing with 1,292 yards and 17 touchdowns, while ranking second in receptions with 46 for 290 yards and two touchdowns.
He is averaging 133 all-purpose yards per game.
The Tigers are 19th in scoring averaging 35.2 points per game, 21st in total offense averaging 442.1 yards and 24th in passing offense averaging 268.5 yards per contest.
Defensively, the Tigers have the 10th-best run defense in the nation allowing just 103.9 yards per game. Navy got 361 against Memphis and North Texas ran for 208, but everyone else has struggled to move the ball on the ground against the Tigers.
Florida State managed just 37 yards rushing – one of six times Memphis held its opponent to less than 100 yards in a game. In its last two outings, the Tigers surrendered just 28 yards to UAB and 57 to Tulane, both Memphis victories.
Middle linebacker Chandler Martin, an East Tennessee State transfer, leads the Memphis defense in several categories. The 6-foot, 230-pound junior shows 94 tackles, 15 tackles for loss, 10 quarterback hurries, seven sacks, four pass breakups, four fumble recoveries, a forced fumble and an interception.
Senior cornerback Davion Ross leads the team with three interceptions.
West Virginia (6-6) lost its regular season finale at Texas Tech, 52-15, prompting a change in leadership when coach Neal Brown was relieved of his duties on Sunday, Dec. 1.
Chad Scott has been appointed interim coach for the game while taking on Brown’s play-calling responsibilities.
“We will be simple with what we do,” Scott said last Thursday before the team departed for Texas. “We’re going to go down there with a good attitude and a simple game plan. Our guys are excited about playing in this bowl game.”
Interim defensive coordinator Jeff Koonz has been in this role since the Cincinnati game after Jordan Lesley was let go in late October.
Koonz’s defense has allowed 24 points in a win at Cincinnati, 49 in a loss to Baylor, 21 in a win against UCF and 52 most recently at Texas Tech.
“Nobody wants to go out like that performance against Texas Tech,” Koonz said. “I can’t speak for the players, but that has been a motivating factor for me, personally.”
The Mountaineers rank in the 100s in 11 different defensive categories and have struggled all season long stopping the passing game and coming up with turnovers.
West Virginia will also be without its second-leading tackler, Josiah Trotter, who has put his name into the transfer portal.
Senior quarterback Garrett Greene has completed 58.2% of his passes for 1,972 yards and 13 touchdowns, while running 126 times for 638 yards and five touchdowns.
Greene ranks 11th in school history in passing yards (5,042), touchdowns (34) and completions (369) and is 19th in rushing yards (2,041).
He is ninth with 27 career rushing touchdowns.
Only two WVU quarterbacks, Pat White (4,480) and Major Harris (2,161), have rushed for more yards than Greene.
Sophomore Jahiem White is the team’s top rusher with 817 yards, including a season-high 158 against Oklahoma State.
White has topped 100 yards in a game three times this year, Greene once and CJ Donaldson Jr. once.
Sophomore Hudson Clement is the team’s leading receiver with 40 catches for 575 yards and three touchdowns. He is the only player to eclipse 100 yards in a game against Kansas when he caught seven passes for 150 yards.
Tight end Kole Taylor is one catch behind Clement on the squad with 39 catches for 404 yards and three touchdowns.
Senior safety Anthony Wilson Jr. leads the defense 94 tackles and has two of the team’s five interceptions.
“I want to win this last game for the players,” Scott said.
Here is tonight’s Countdown to Kickoff:
10 – The Mountaineers have scored TEN touchdowns on third down this season – three rushing and seven passing.
9 – Quarterback Garrett Greene is tied for NINTH with Leddie Brown in school history with 27 career rushing touchdowns.
8 – West Virginia ranks EIGHTH nationally in fewest penalties with just 52 through 12 games.
7 – Running back CJ Donaldson Jr. caught a career-high SEVEN passes in the regular season finale against Texas Tech.
6 – The Mountaineer defense has recorded multiple sacks in all but SIX of their last 17 games dating back to last season.
5 – Senior safety Anthony Wilson Jr. ranks FIFTH in the Big 12, averaging 7.9 tackles per game.
4 – Tonight’s game against 25th-ranked Memphis will be the FOURTH Top 25 opponent West Virginia has faced this year, joining No. 8 Penn State, No. 11 Iowa State and No. 17 Kansas State.
3 – WVU is one of two FBS teams to have THREE players rush for more than 600 yards this year – Jahiem White (817), CJ Donaldson Jr. (651) and Garrett Greene (638).
2 – West Virginia has won 11 Big 12 Conference games over the last TWO seasons.
1 – The Frisco Bowl represents the FIRST-ever meeting between West Virginia and Memphis on the gridiron.
Tonight’s game will kick off at 9 p.m. ET and will be televised nationally on ESPN (Mike Monaco, Kirk Morrison and Dawn Davenport).
Mountaineer Sports Network radio coverage with Tony Caridi, Dwight Wallace and Jed Drenning will get things underway at 8 p.m. on stations throughout West Virginia, online via WVUsports.com and the Varsity Network and WVU Gameday apps.