Cumulative Stats Football 2025.pdf (672.5 KB)
Pulled the cumulative stats, take a look. What stat lines stand out to you?
I’ll start…
Cumulative Stats Football 2025.pdf (672.5 KB)
Pulled the cumulative stats, take a look. What stat lines stand out to you?
I’ll start…
Woof. Look at that completion percentage

More interceptions than passing touchdowns. Terrible completion percentage
How the hell did Beale get as many starts as he did.
Can we get stat breakdown of every skill position group? Would love to see overall offensive production
Wonder how lunch’s QB rating is that high with those passings numbers.
Passer rating is calculated differently in college than NFL. Lunch’s passer rating currently ranks him 85th amongst 123 qualified FBS QBs. So basically, Bottom 3rd. Not good at all.
To be fair, Qb rating doesnt paint the whole picture causes he gives us alot in the run game.
Only two receivers with multiple TD’s, and one of them was Dale Martin… That tells a story.
Yeah outside of Shelton, we have no other reliable/consistent receiving threats. Very Alarming.
To be fair, Qb rating doesnt paint the whole picture causes he gives us alot in the run game.
I don’t disagree, but if we’re going to have an offense that helps us legit compete for a conference title, our QB needs to be better than Bottom 3rd in that category. Or else, DCs will successfully stack the box all game long and force him to beat them with his arm, knowing he can’t on a consistent basis.
Hopefully Lunch can improve that aspect of his game during the offseason, because if he does, then he can be a seriously dangerous QB in 2026.
Oh i absolutely agree, i just had to bring us his rushing so folks dont attack me for talking about Lunch.
A quick analysis of the offense’s raw data from Google Gemini.
The 2025 offense was defined by a run-heavy identity anchored by a true dual-threat quarterback, averaging 26.0 points per game. While the ground game was potent, accounting for 65% of the team’s total touchdowns (26 of 40), the passing attack struggled significantly with efficiency and turnovers, finishing the season with more interceptions than touchdowns.
The running game was the clear strength of the offense, averaging 182.9 yards per game. The attack featured a balanced “three-headed monster” that punished defenses on the ground:
Bill Davis: Led the team in rushing yardage with 763 yards (4.8 avg) and scored 6 touchdowns.
Zylan Perry: Proved to be the most efficient back, averaging 5.0 yards per carry for 689 yards and 8 touchdowns.
Lunch Winfield (QB): A massive factor on the ground, rushing for 667 yards and leading the team with 9 rushing touchdowns.
The aerial attack was a liability, averaging only 161.9 yards per game with a low completion percentage of 54.5%. The team struggled to protect the ball, posting a negative touchdown-to-interception ratio (12 TDs to 14 INTs).
Quarterback Play:
Lunch Winfield took the majority of snaps, throwing for 1,555 yards and 11 TDs. However, he struggled with ball security, throwing 7 interceptions.
Other QBs: When Winfield was off the field, the passing game collapsed. Backups Daniel Beale and Walker Howard combined for just 1 touchdown against 7 interceptions.
Receiving Leaders:
Shelton Sampson Jr. was the undisputed WR1, hauling in a team-high 32 catches for 537 yards and 6 TDs (accounting for 50% of the team’s receiving scores).
Caden Jensen served as the reliable possession receiver, finishing second in receptions with 29 catches (231 yards).
Robert Williams provided the secondary yardage threat, recording 25 catches for 309 yards, though he did not find the end zone.
Red Zone Inefficiency: While the team scored on 84% of their trips to the red zone (37-of-44), they struggled to finish drives, converting only 23 of those trips into touchdowns (52%). This reliance on field goals capped their scoring potential in close games.
Quarter Splits: The offense was most dangerous in the 2nd quarter, scoring a season-high 136 points. However, they consistently came out flat after halftime, scoring only 39 points combined in the 3rd quarter across the entire season.
Third Downs: The offense converted 40.63% of third downs, a mediocre rate that frequently stalled drives.
Kicker Tony Sterner was arguably the most consistent scoring weapon, leading the team with 98 total points.
He was perfect on PATs (38-for-38).
He connected on 20-of-28 field goals (71.4%), providing critical points when the offense stalled in the red zone.
The 2025 Ragin’ Cajuns offense relied heavily on Lunch Winfield’s legs and the rushing tandem of Davis and Perry to move the chains. To take the next step, the offense must address the glaring passing inefficiency—specifically the 14 interceptions—and improve their ability to convert red zone trips into touchdowns rather than field goals.
I admit I was wrong about Sampson. Gave him a hard time the first couple of games, but turned out to be a really good WR. Hope he stays for next season
Read it. Then read it again. Then, print it out, pin it to the bulletin board, and read it every day until opening kickoff 2026.
About 90% of us did the first few games…he redeemed himself. Hope we get him back next year.
Can we find another Terrance Carter and Lance Legendre to compliment Sampson plzzzzz