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Study Hall: Oregon 34, Washington 17

Washington just had no hope of matching Oregon, big play for big play (aside from backup quarterback Nick Montana's one play, strangely enough). Oregon's offense was good in this game, but the Ducks' defense was great.

Oregon 34, Washington 17

Oregon Washington Oregon Washington
Close % 80.9% STANDARD DOWNS
Field Position % 64.1% 43.1% Success Rate 58.7% 42.9%
Leverage % 71.9% 68.1% PPP 0.43 0.20
S&P 1.020 0.625
TOTAL
EqPts 24.9 12.3 PASSING DOWNS
Close Success Rate 54.0% 41.7% Success Rate 33.3% 26.1%
Close PPP 0.46 0.17 PPP 0.28 0.12
Close S&P 1.003 0.583 S&P 0.614 0.380
RUSHING TURNOVERS
EqPts 15.2 4.8 Number 1 3
Close Success Rate 65.4% 37.0% Turnover Pts 4.7 15.2
Close PPP 0.52 0.18 Turnover Pts Margin +10.5 -10.5
Close S&P 1.178 0.550
Line Yards/carry 4.06 3.21 Q1 S&P 0.726 0.281
Q2 S&P 1.189 0.734
PASSING Q3 S&P 1.055 0.762
EqPts 9.7 7.5 Q4 S&P 0.558 0.364
Close Success Rate 41.7% 45.5%
Close PPP 0.40 0.16 1st Down S&P 0.810 0.556
Close S&P 0.813 0.610 2nd Down S&P 1.149 0.503
SD/PD Sack Rate 0.0% / 0.0% 14.3%/14.3% 3rd Down S&P 0.698 0.675
Projected Pt. Margin: Oregon +23.1 | Actual Pt. Margin: Oregon +17

Quick glossary (complete with national averages) after the jump.

A Quick Glossary

F/+ Rankings: The official rankings for the college portion of Football Outsiders. They combine my own S&P+ rankings (based on play-by-play data) with Brian Fremeau's drives-based FEI rankings.

Field Position %: The percentage of a team's plays run in their opponent's field position. National average: 43%.

Leverage Rate: A team's ratio of standard downs to passing downs. National average: 68%. Anything over 68% means a team did a good job of avoiding being leveraged into passing downs.

Passing Downs: Second-and-7 or more, third-and-5 or more.

PPP: An explosiveness measure derived from determining the point value of every yard line (based on the expected number of points an offense could expect to score from that yard line) and, therefore, every play of a given game. National average: 0.32.

S&P: Think of this as an OPS (the "On-Base Plus Slugging" baseball measure) for football. The 'S' stands for success rate. The 'P' stands for PPP, an explosiveness measure that stands for EqPts Per Play. S&P is measured for all non-garbage time plays in a given college football game. Plays are counted within the following criteria: when the score is within 28 points in the first quarter, within 24 points in the second quarter, within 21 points in the third quarter, and within 16 points (i.e. two possession) in the fourth quarter. For more about this measure, visit the main S&P+ page at Football Outsiders. National average: 0.747. Standard downs S&P average: 0.787. Passing downs S&P average: 0.636.

Standard Downs: First downs, second-and-6 or less, third-and-4 or less.

Success Rate: A common Football Outsiders tool used to measure efficiency by determining whether every play of a given game was successful or not. The terms of success in college football: 50 percent of necessary yardage on first down, 70 percent on second down, and 100 percent on third and fourth down. National Average: 42%.