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B-Dawg's Northwestern Wildcats: Navigating the new Big Ten in CFB25

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Old 10-24-2024, 09:40 AM   #1
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B-Dawg's Northwestern Wildcats: Navigating the new Big Ten in CFB25


Cornerback Theran Johnson and all of Wildcat Nation (is that even a thing?) are fired up to have B-Dawg coming
to Northwestern.


B-Dawg takes talents to Northwestern
in quest to satisfy his Big Ten craving


EVANSTON, Ill. — Of all the places B-Dawg could have wound up coaching in College Football 25, how did he end up at Northwestern University?

There were so many other appealing options.

To feed his fetish for playing on funky turf, he could have gone to Boise State (blue), Eastern Michigan (gray) or Coastal Carolina (teal).

The dirty little secret is that he originally signed with Coastal Carolina and began a dynasty, only to abort it when he accidentally simmed the third game of the season. An incredible fourth-quarter comeback in the opener at Jacksonville State will never make a dynasty report, but video of it does exist.

Discouraged, he opened up his recruitment process and headed to the shores of Lake Michigan, not too far from his home state of Michigan. (And, this time, he made sure to always keep a backup file after playing a game.)

The siren song of playing in the new-look Big Ten Conference was too powerful to resist.

“When you go the route of taking over a team in a lower-tier conference, you play so many games in venues that are just … meh,” B-Dawg said. “I crave excitement. I want to play in the Big House, The Shoe, the Rose Bowl, the Coliseum, Husky Stadium. There are so many cool stadiums — or is it stadia? — in the Big Ten that every game will feel so much bigger.”

B-Dawg is a life-long Michigan fan but, even though the real-life Wolverines are looking like a rebuilding job, they aren’t much of a challenge for true dynasty mode buffs in College Football 25. Northwestern fits the bill of B-Dawg’s previous stop, Vanderbilt in NCAA ’14, of being a weaker program in a power conference. When your academic standards are high, it doesn’t tend to attract elite athletes. They’ll go to the SEC or Ohio State where the whole “student-athlete” thing is a complete sham.

In truth, the real-life Wildcats aren’t all too shabby. They went 8-5 in 2023, beating Utah 14-7 in the Las Vegas Bowl. Northwestern wants to take its program to the next level, so the boosters ponied up and came hard after B-Dawg with the proverbial bag.

He takes over a team that is ranked 81 OVR, 82 on offense and 81 on defense. His coaching prestige is C-minus. (They obviously don’t know who he is.)

The alumnus of the University of Michigan (hyphen Flint) has a pipeline in Michigan, safe job security and has been tasked with the goal of winning five games. If the Wildcats stumble against teams of their caliber early in the season as B-Dawg becomes familiar with the game and his team, a tough late-season Big Ten schedule could make that difficult.

There are some talented players on the Northwestern roster but, unfortunately, nearly all of them are seniors. The top player is 88 OVR middle linebacker Xander Mueller. The six players ranked 83 OVR or higher are all fifth-year seniors. It could be a few years before he starts having 90 OVR players on the roster.

B-Dawg has been posting dynasties since his NCAA 2004 Michigan dynasty over at now-defunct MaddenMania (pouring a sip). His style is to take one team and use it for the entire lifespan of a game, with the except of the 11-year run of NCAA ’14. He used three teams in NCAA ’14, playing off and on.

He was patient before starting this dynasty, waiting until after the second major update in hopes he wouldn’t encounter as many of the dynasty glitches as people were encountering right away. (Spoiler alert: He didn’t.) This allows him to use the first roster update for this dynasty, hopefully getting more true freshmen from across the nation who will be stars in a few years.

B-Dawg started out this dynasty with a set of All-American sliders posted by Armor and Sword on Operation Sports. He quickly learned he would need to tweak said sliders to avoid hating life for ever playing this game. The sliders will be a work in progress as the first season or two move along, because there is no such thing as one-size-fits-all sliders. B-Dawg admits he’s a pretty mediocre player when matched up with live competition online, but with the right sliders he can fool the public into thinking he’s a superstar at the sticks.

If you’re not acquainted with B-Dawg’s work, here are his NCAA ’14 dynasties:

* B-DAWG'S VANDERBILT NCAA 2007/2014 FLASHBACK DYNASTY

* B-DAWG'S AIR FORCE DYNASTY

* B-DAWG'S WESTERN MICHIGAN DYNASTY


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Old 10-24-2024, 09:44 AM   #2
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NORTHWESTERN SEASON RECAPS




Cam Porter rushed for 1,461 yards and 14 touchdowns for Northwestern in 2024.

2024

Team ratings: 81 OVR, 82 offense, 81 defense
Preseason ranking: Unranked
Final ranking: Unranked
Record: 7-6, 5-4 Big Ten (T-7th)
Bowl game: Western Michigan 21, Northwestern 10 (Detroit Bowl)
Award winners: MLB Xander Mueller (Linebacker of the Year)
First-team All-America: None
Second-team All-America: HB Cam Porter
Freshman All-America: None
First-team All-Big Ten: None
Second-team All-Big Ten: HB Cam Porter
Passing leader: Mike Wright 309-for-480, 3,273 yards, 13 TD, 15 int.
Rushing leader: Cam Porter 325 carries, 1,461 yards, 14 TD
Receiving leaders: A.J. Henning 72 catches, 736 yards, 1 TD; Bryce Kirtz 59 catches, 746 yards, 2 TD
Defense: Xander Mueller 109 tackles, 27 TFL; Cullen Coleman 11 sacks; Xander Mueller, Devin Turner, Theran Johnson 2 interceptions; Ore Adeyi 10 deflections
Synopsis: It looked like Northwestern was in the midst of a special season when the Wildcats got off to a 7-2 start. They were in the running for a Big Ten championship and a spot in the College Football Playoff, but knew back-to-back games against Ohio State and Michigan in November would be difficult to win. Not only did the Wildcats predictably lose those games, but they lost to Illinois to conclude the regular season and Western Michigan in the Detroit Bowl to end the year with a four-game losing streak. Interceptions were an issue for B-Dawg as he learned the new game, with Northwestern throwing 16 interceptions and only 13 touchdown passes. Bright spots were running back Cam Porter, who rushed for 1,461 yards, and middle linebacker Xander Mueller, who had 109 tackles and was chosen Linebacker of the Year. Disaster struck in the Ohio State game when senior receiver Bryce Kirtz suffered a career-ending back injury, the first such injury B-Dawg has ever incurred playing a college football video game.


2025

Team ratings: 82 OVR, 84 offense, 82 defense
Preseason ranking: Unranked
Final ranking: Unranked
Record: 9-4, 5-4 Big Ten (T-8th)
Bowl game: Northwestern 38, Boise State 21 (L.A. Bowl presented by our good friend Gronk)
Award winners: DE Anto Saka (Defensive Player of the Year, Lombardi Award, Defensive End of the Year)
First-team All-America: None
Second-team All-America: None
Freshman All-America: None
First-team All-Big Ten: None
Second-team All-Big Ten: OG Jordan Knox, SS Devin Turner
Freshman All-Big Ten: HB Jakori McFarland, K Enrique Swaim
Passing leader: Aidan Gray 181-for-290, 2,095 yards, 9 TD, 6 int.
Rushing leader: Caleb Komolafe 202 carries, 828 yards, 9 TD
Receiving leaders: Jaylen Love 98 catches, 788 yards, 0 TD
Defense: Brendan McIntosh 141 tackles; Anto Saka 27 TFL, 13 sacks; Devin Turner 4 interceptions; Cole Shivers 12 deflections; Braydon Brus 3 forced fumbles
Synopsis: It was almost a carbon copy of B-Dawg’s first season at Northwestern. The Wildcats got off to an 8-1 start with a world of possibilities before them, only to lose three straight games. Northwestern avoided a second straight season-ending four-game losing streak by beating Boise State in the L.A. Bowl presented by our good friend Gronk. After struggling to beat three weak nonconference teams, Northwestern made some noise by beating UCLA and USC to begin Big Ten play. A 45-28 loss to Nebraska in a pick-fest didn’t bode well with Oregon coming to town, but the Wildcats shocked the country by beating the defending national champions in a 13-9 defensive struggle. B-Dawg made the most bone-headed moves in his coaching career by kicking a walk-off field goal at Penn State when the Wildcats were trailing by four points. He thought Northwestern was down by three points. Interceptions continued to be a problem as the Wildcats used Ryan Boe and Aidan Gray at quarterback, as they combined for 13 touchdown passes and 18 picks. Gray was an improvement, throwing nine touchdowns and only six picks. Receiver had an odd stat line, making a team-high 98 catches without ever scoring a touchdown through the air. He did have a touchdown run. Middle linebacker Brendan McIntosh smashed B-Dawg’s all-time record for tackles in a season with 141, surpassing strong safety DeAndre McCollum’s 123 for Air Force in the 2025 season of NCAA ’14.


2026

Team ratings: 80 OVR, 80 offense, 80 defense
Preseason ranking: Unranked
Final ranking: Unranked
Record: 7-6, 4-5 Big Ten (T-10th)
Bowl game: Northwestern 30, Arizona 27, OT (Independence Bowl)
Award winners: DE Nuer Gatkuoth (Best Defensive Player, Best Defensive End)
First-team All-America: None
Second-team All-America: None
Freshman All-America: HB Nazir Kush
First-team All-Big Ten: None
Second-team All-Big Ten: HB Nazir Kush, C Anthony Birsa
Freshman All-Big Ten: QB Forrest Edmond, HB Nazir Kush
Passing leader: Ryan Boe 265-for-440, 2,629 yards, 13 TD, 13 int.
Rushing leader: Nazir Kush 322 carries, 1,255 yards, 11 TD
Receiving leader: Jaylen Love 60 catches, 668 yards, 4 TD
Defense: Matthew Smith 120 tackles; Nuer Gatkuoth 19 TFL, 13.5 sacks; Tito Williams 4 interceptions, 12 deflections
Synopsis: It felt like Northwestern took a step backwards in 2026. Certainly, the Wildcats didn’t progress like you’d hope in the third season of a dynasty. Northwestern lost three straight games late in the season, needing a victory over Illinois in the regular-season finale to qualify for a bowl game. The Wildcats routed Illinois and earned a berth in the Independence Bowl, winning in overtime over Arizona. Northwestern has a future star on its hands in running back Nazir Kush, who ran for 1,255 yards as a true freshman. If he stays healthy, he could threaten B-Dawg’s all-time record. Defensive end Nuer Gatkuoth came over from Colorado State and won Defensive Player of the Year and Best Defensive End.

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Old 10-24-2024, 09:44 AM   #3
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NORTHWESTERN BOWL HISTORY




Northwestern quarterback Ryan Boe scores on the winning 2-yard run in overtime against Arizona in the 2026
Independence Bowl.



2024: Western Michigan 21, Northwestern 10 (Detroit Bowl)
2025: Northwestern 38, Boise State 21 (L.A. Bowl presented by our good friend Gronk)
2026: Northwestern 30, Arizona 27, OT (Independence Bowl)

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Old 10-24-2024, 09:45 AM   #4
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NORTHWESTERN AWARD WINNERS




Xander Mueller was voted Best Linebacker in 2024.

ANTHONY BIRSA, C
2026: Second-team All-Big Ten

FORREST EDMOND, QB
2026: Freshman All-Big Ten

NUER GATKUOTH, DE
2026: Defensive Player of the Year, Best Defensive End

JORDAN KNOX, OG
2025: Second-team All-Big Ten

NAZIR KUSH, HB
2026: Freshman All-America, second-team All-Big Ten, Freshman All-Big Ten

JAKORI McFARLAND, HB
2025: Freshman All-Big Ten

XANDER MUELLER, MLB
2024: Best Linebacker

CAM PORTER, HB
2024: Second-team All-America, second-team All-Big Ten

ANTO SAKA, DE
2025: Defensive Player of the Year, Lombardi Award, Best Defensive End

ENRIQUE SWAIM, K
2025: Freshman All-Big Ten

DEVIN TURNER, SS
2025: Second-team All-Big Ten

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Old 10-24-2024, 09:45 AM   #5
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NORTHWESTERN DYNASTY RECORDS



PASSING
Passing yards: 411, Aidan Gray vs. Minnesota (Nov. 8, 2025)
Touchdown passes: 3, Mike Wright vs. Duke (Sept. 6, 2024) and Ryan Boe at Indiana (Oct. 17, 2026)
Most interceptions: 5, Mike Wright vs. Miami of Ohio (Aug. 31, 2024) and Ryan Boe vs. Rutgers (Sept. 26, 2026)
Longest pass: 75, Ryan Boe to Josh Fussell vs. Arizona (Dec. 25, 2026)

RUSHING
Rushing yards: 206, Cam Porter at Maryland (Oct. 11, 2024)
Touchdown runs: 3, Cam Porter vs. Indiana (Oct. 5, 2024); 3, Caleb Komolafe at Bowling Green (Sept. 6, 2025); 3, Jakori McFarland at Minnesota (Oct. 3, 2026)
Longest run: 57, Cam Porter vs. Wisconsin (Oct. 19, 2024)
Carries: 37, Cam Porter vs. Indiana (Oct. 5, 2024)

RECEIVING
Receptions: 14, Jaylen Love vs. Minnesota (Nov. 8, 2025)
Receiving yards: 189, Timi Oke at Penn State (Nov. 22, 2025)
Touchdown catches: 2, Camp Magee at Indiana (Oct. 17, 2026)
Longest catch: 75, Josh Fussell from Ryan Boe vs. Arizona (Dec. 25, 2026)

DEFENSE
Tackles: 21, Brendan McIntosh (3 solos, 18 assists) vs. Oregon (Oct. 18, 2025)
Tackles for loss: 7, Brendan McIntosh vs. Michigan (Nov. 15, 2025)
Sacks: 4, Nuer Gatkuoth vs. Penn State (Oct. 31, 2026)
Interceptions: 2, Devin Turner vs. UCLA (Sept. 20, 2025) and Kenny Soares vs. Boise State (Dec. 16, 2025)
Longest interception return: 92, Josh Fussell vs. Michigan (Nov. 15, 2025)

SPECIAL TEAMS
Longest field goal: 42, Jack Olsen at Maryland (Oct. 11, 2024)
Longest punt: 63, Hunter Renner at Purdue (Nov. 2, 2024)
Longest kick return: 41, Josh Fussell vs. Oregon (Oct. 18, 2025)
Longest punt return: 33, Caleb Komolafe vs. Penn State (Oct. 31, 2026)

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Old 10-24-2024, 09:46 AM   #6
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NORTHWESTERN RIVALRIES




Teammates mob Reggie Fleurima after his game-winning touchdown catch with 54 seconds left in a 2025 upset of
Oregon.


ARIZONA
Dec. 25, 2026: Northwestern 30, Arizona 27, OT (Independence Bowl)

BOISE STATE
Dec. 16, 2025: Northwestern 38, Boise State 21 (LA Bowl presented by our good friend Gronk)
Sept. 12, 2026: Northwestern 28, Boise State 21

BOWLING GREEN
Sept. 6, 2025: Northwestern 34, Bowling Green 24

CENTRAL MICHIGAN
Aug. 23, 2026: Central Michigan 28, Northwestern 10

COASTAL CAROLINA
Sept. 14, 2024: Northwestern 34, Coastal Carolina 14

DUKE
Sept. 6, 2024: Northwestern 38, Duke 20

ILLINOIS
Nov. 30, 2024: Illinois 25, Northwestern 24
Nov. 29, 2025: Illinois 24, Northwestern 17
Nov. 28, 2026: Northwestern 41, Illinois 7

INDIANA
Oct. 5, 2024: Northwestern 30, Indiana 21
Oct. 17, 2026: Northwestern 42, Indiana 14

IOWA
Oct. 26, 2024: Northwestern 22, Iowa 7
Nov. 14, 2026: Iowa 31, Northwestern 27

LOUISIANA-MONROE
Aug. 23, 2025: Northwestern 28, UL-Monroe 27

MARYLAND
Oct. 11, 2024: Maryland 34, Northwestern 26

MIAMI (OHIO)
Aug. 31, 2024: Miami (Ohio) 35, Northwestern 21

MICHIGAN
Nov. 23, 2024: Michigan 21, Northwestern 7
Nov. 15, 2025: Michigan 52, Northwestern 14

MICHIGAN STATE
Oct. 10, 2026: Michigan State 29, Northwestern 10

MINNESOTA
Nov. 8, 2025: Northwestern 37, Minnesota 14
Oct. 3, 2026: Northwestern 34, Minnesota 24

NEBRASKA
Oct. 4, 2025: Nebraska 45, Northwestern 28

OHIO STATE
Nov. 16, 2024: Ohio State 38, Northwestern 14
Nov. 21, 2026: Ohio State 7, Northwestern 3

OREGON
Oct. 18, 2025: Northwestern 13, Oregon 9
Nov. 7, 2026: Oregon 29, Northwestern 17

PENN STATE
Nov. 22, 2025: Penn State 17, Northwestern 16
Oct. 31, 2026: Northwestern 36, Penn State 7

PURDUE
Nov. 2, 2024: Northwestern 27, Purdue 24
Nov. 1, 2025: Northwestern 17, Purdue 10

RUTGERS
Sept. 20, 2026: Rutgers 40, Northwestern 28

SAM HOUSTON
Sept. 6, 2026: Northwestern 31, Sam Houston 17

TULANE
Aug. 30, 2025: Northwestern 31, Tulane 24

UCLA
Sept. 20, 2025: Northwestern 29, UCLA 7

USC
Sept. 27, 2025: Northwestern 21, USC 19

WASHINGTON
Sept. 21, 2024: Northwestern 28, Washington 20

WESTERN MICHIGAN
Dec. 20, 2024: Western Michigan 21, Northwestern 10 (Detroit Bowl)

WISCONSIN
Oct. 19, 2024: Northwestern 26, Wisconsin 14

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Old 10-24-2024, 09:47 AM   #7
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BIG TEN STANDINGS

2024




2025


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Old 10-24-2024, 09:47 AM   #8
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B-DAWG'S ALL-TIME RECORDS




Brandon Hester of Air Force threw 8 touchdown passes against Stanford in NCAA 2014, breaking B-Dawg's personal
record of 7 set in NCAA 2004.


SINGLE GAME

PASSING
Yards: 659, Devin Gardner (Michigan) at Iowa, Nov. 2, 2013 (NCAA 2012); 647, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force) vs. Oregon, Dec. 7, 2030 (NCAA 2014); 600, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force) at Navy, Oct. 5, 2030 (NCAA 2014); 566, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt) vs. Ohio State, Sept. 13, 2014 (NCAA 2007); 555, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt) vs. Alabama, Dec.6, 2014 (NCAA 2007); 537, Mike Wright (Vanderbilt) vs. Michigan State, Sept. 9, 2023 (NCAA 2014); 532, Josh Washington (Vanderbilt) vs. Georgia, Oct. 14, 2028 (NCAA 2014); 529, Mike Payne (Michigan) vs. Michigan State, Nov. 1, 2008 (NCAA 2012); 526, Brandon Hester (Air Force) vs. Navy, Sept. 28, 2029 (NCAA 2014); 518, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force) at Georgia, Aug. 31, 2030 (NCAA 2014); 514, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt) vs. Oklahoma, Nov. 27, 2027 (NCAA 2014); 502, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan) vs. Iowa, Oct. 4, 2014 (NCAA 2008); 497, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force) at Stanford, Sept. 14, 2030 (NCAA 2014). Note: Team had 652 passing yards vs. Ohio State with two quarterbacks (Josh Washington, 438; Bradley Davis, 214) on Sept. 2, 2028 in NCAA 2014.
Touchdowns: 8, Brandon Hester (Air Force) vs. Stanford, Sept. 15, 2029 (NCAA 2014); 7, P.J. Piskorik (Buffalo) at Miami (Ohio), Oct. 8, 2005 (NCAA 2004)
Interceptions: 7, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan) vs. Texas A&M, Jan. 1, 2017 (NCAA 2008); 6, Antonio Haines (Michigan) at Iowa, Oct. 6, 2007 (NCAA 2004); Alex Engram (Western Michigan) vs. Northern Illinois, Nov. 11, 2006 (NCAA 2006); Mackenzi Adams (Vanderbilt) at Duke, Oct. 28, 2006 (NCAA 2007); Darryl Hayden (Vanderbilt) at West Virginia, Sept. 3, 2016 (NCAA 2007)
Completions: 47, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan) vs. Iowa, Oct. 4, 2014 (NCAA 2008); 43, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt) vs. Oklahoma, Nov. 27, 2027 (NCAA 2014); 40, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt) vs. South Carolina, Sept. 29, 2012 (NCAA 2007). Note: Team had 43 completions vs. Ohio State with two quarterbacks (Josh Washington, 33; Bradley Davis, 10) on Sept. 2, 2028 in NCAA 2014.
Attempts: 64, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan) vs. Iowa, Oct. 4, 2014 (NCAA 2008); 64, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt) at Missouri, Oct. 4, 2025 (NCAA 2014); 63, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force) vs. Oregon, Dec. 7, 2030 (NCAA 2014); 62, Mike Payne (Michigan) vs. Michigan State, Nov. 1, 2008 (NCAA 2004)
Sacks: 11, Clint Cunningham at Wisconsin, Oct. 5, 2013 (NCAA 2008); 10, Clint Cunningham at Iowa, Oct. 31, 2015 (NCAA 2008); 9, Antonio Haines (Michigan) at Iowa, Oct. 6, 2007 (NCAA 2004)
Longest pass: 100, James King (Baylor) to Brook Mosley at Colorado, Oct. 2, 2010 (NCAA 2004)
Consecutive completions: 23, Brandon Blount (Air Force) at Oregon State, Sept. 18, 2027 (NCAA 2014); 20, Corey McDonald (Vanderbilt) at Tennessee, Nov. 23, 2019 (NCAA 2007); Bush Hamdan (Boy-Z State) at Idaho, 2008 (NCAA 2009)
QB rating (10 att.): 348.0, Todd Williams (Eastern Michigan) vs. Vanderbilt, Sept. 5, 2020 (NCAA 2008) (11-for-11, 207 yards, 3 TD, 0 int.)

RUSHING
Yards: 382, Malek Redd (Central Michigan) at Akron, Sept. 21, 2013 (NCAA 2011); 357, Jerome Jackson (Michigan) vs. Northwestern, Nov. 11, 2006 (NCAA 2004)
Touchdowns: 7, Matt Farrell (Buffalo) at North Carolina, Nov. 24, 2007 (NCAA 2004); 6, DeShawn Simmons (Michigan) at Michigan State, Oct. 29, 2005 (NCAA 2004); 6, James Presley (Michigan) at Iowa, Oct. 22, 2005 and at Hawaii, Nov. 18, 2006 (NCAA 2005); 6, Mike Ross (Eastern Michigan) at Purdue, Nov. 28, 2020 (NCAA 2008); 6, Malek Redd (Central Michigan) at Akron, Sept. 21, 2013; 6, Eric Cox (Western Michigan) vs. Iowa, Sept. 25, 2021 (NCAA 2014)
Carries: 50, Derek Jones (Western Michigan) vs. UCLA, Jan. 1, 2023 (NCAA 2014); 47, Joey McBride (Michigan) vs. Northwestern, Oct. 31, 2015 (NCAA 2005)
Longest run: 98, Robert Merriman (Vanderbilt) at Hawaii, Dec. 7, 2019 (NCAA 2007); 98, Sean Fernandez (Michigan) vs. Notre Dame, Sept. 9, 2017 (NCAA 2012)
Longest run by a QB: 91, Ray Terry (Vanderbilt) at Buffalo, Sept. 10, 2016 (NCAA 2007)
Fumbles: 5, Todd Williams (Eastern Michigan) vs. Iowa, Oct. 20, 2018 (NCAA 2008)
Yards from scrimmage: 430, John Morton (Oregon State) vs. Washington, Nov. 12, 2011 (30 carries, 330 yards, 4 TD; 6 catches, 100 yards, 0 TD) (NCAA 2009)
100-yard rushers: 3, at Iowa, Sept. 25, 2021 (NCAA 2004)

RECEIVING
Yards: 416, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt) vs. Northwestern in Capital One Bowl, Jan. 1, 2026 (NCAA 2014); 386, Ryan King (Michigan) at Iowa, Nov. 2, 2013 (NCAA 2012); 375, Earl Bennett (Vanderbilt) vs. Mississippi, Oct. 27, 2007 (NCAA 2007); 354, Corey Burton vs. Ohio State, Sept. 13, 2014 (NCAA 2007); 325, Corey Burton (Vanderbilt) vs. LSU, Nov. 1, 2014 (NCAA 2007); 323, Corey Burton (Vanderbilt) vs. Alabama, Dec. 6, 2014 (NCAA 2007); 321, Curtis Harrell (Vanderbilt) vs. Florida State, Sept. 23, 2017 (NCAA 2007); 293, Earl Bennett (Vanderbilt), Oct. 11, 2008 (NCAA 2007)
Catches: 23, Dee Osborne (Michigan) vs. Northwestern, Nov. 15, 2008 (NCAA 2004); 16, Sean Murphy (Vanderbilt) vs. Oklahoma, Nov. 27, 2027 (NCAA 2014)
Touchdowns: 6, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt) vs. Missouri, Sept. 30, 2024 (NCAA 2014); 6, Ryan Jamison (Vanderbilt) vs. Georgia, Sept. 18, 2027 (NCAA 2014); 5, Paul Gibbons (Air Force) vs. Stanford, Dec. 11, 2027 (NCAA 2014); 4, Alphonso McCown (Michigan) at Northwestern, Nov. 17, 2007 (NCAA 2004); 4, Corey Burton (Vanderbilt) at LSU, Nov. 1, 2014 (NCAA 2007); Corey Burton (Vanderbilt) at Kentucky, Nov. 15, 2014 (NCAA 2007)
Longest catch: 100, Brook Mosley (Baylor) from James King at Colorado, Oct. 2, 2010 (NCAA 2004); 98, Perry Hess (Michigan) from Chad Henne at Notre Dame, Aug. 30, 2008 (NCAA 2005)
Drops: 6, Marcus Moody (Western Michigan) vs. Notre Dame, Sept. 2, 2023 (NCAA 2014)

BLOCKING
Pancakes: 21, Dominic Moran (Western Michigan) vs. Akron, Oct. 21, 2006 (NCAA 2006); 21, Jordan Knox (Northwestern) vs. Arizona, Dec. 25, 2026 (CFB 25)
Sacks allowed: 5, Mark Lee (Eastern Michigan) vs. Penn State, Nov. 17, 2018 (NCAA 2008)

DEFENSE
Tackles: 21, Brendan McIntosh (Northwestern) 3 solos, 18 assists at Oregon, Oct. 18, 2025 (CFB 25); 17, Xander Mueller (Northwestern) vs. Miami of Ohio, Aug. 31, 2024 (CFB 25); 17, Carvin Johnson (Michigan) vs. Air Force, Sept. 1, 2012 (NCAA 2012); 16, Quavian Lewis (Vanderbilt) at Memphis, Sept. 5, 2009 (NCAA 2007); 16, Patrick Bolden (Vanderbilt) at Tennessee, Nov. 27, 2021 (NCAA 2007); 16, Chris May (Eastern Michigan) vs. East Carolina, Dec. 30, 2009 (NCAA 2008); 16, DeAndre McCollum (Air Force) vs. Colorado State, Nov. 15, 2025 (NCAA 2014); 16, DeAndre McCollum (Air Force) at Army, Nov. 1, 2026 (NCAA 2014)
Tackles for loss: 9, Jammal Lavin (Michigan) at Northwestern, Oct. 26, 2013 and vs. Michigan State, Oct. 4, 2014 (NCAA 2005); Fabian McCoy (Eastern Michigan) at Western Michigan, Nov. 6, 2010 (NCAA 2008) Note: Brandent Englemon (Michigan) had 11 tackles for losses at Minnesota, Oct. 8, 2005 and vs. Illinois, Oct. 15, 2005 in NCAA 2004 using a cheesy defense, so his record won’t count.
Sacks: 5, Desi Hatfield (Michigan) vs. Wisconsin, Sept. 27, 2008 (NCAA 2005); Jammal Lavin (Michigan) at Iowa, Oct. 19, 2013 (NCAA 2005); Ulysses Heckel (Vanderbilt) at Kentucky, Sept. 15, 2012 (NCAA 2007); Kenny Wilkins (Michigan) at Boy-Z State, Sept. 14, 2013 (NCAA 2012); Jordan Jackson (Air Force) vs. Idaho, Aug. 20, 2020 (NCAA 2014); Terion Sugick (Vanderbilt) at Alabama, Sept. 9, 2024 (NCAA 2014). Note: Brandent Englemon (Michigan) had 10 sacks at Minnesota, Oct. 8, 2005 and vs. Illinois, Oct. 15, 2005 in NCAA 2004 using a cheesy defense, so his record won’t count.
Interceptions: 4, Aaron Green (Michigan) vs. Northwestern, Nov. 15, 2008 (NCAA 2004); 4, Jimmy Fitzpatrick (Vanderbilt) vs. Mississippi State, Oct. 5, 2019, all in first half (NCAA 2007)
Deflections: 7, Rudy Horton (Vanderbilt) at South Carolina, Sept. 28, 2019 (NCAA 2007)
Touchdowns: 2, Tavarious Sanders (Buffalo) vs. Nevada, 2004 Humanitarian Bowl, 17 FR, 72 INT (NCAA 2004); Kyle Schmidt (Vanderbilt) at Florida, Nov. 6, 2021, 67 INT, 30 INT (NCAA 2007); Alfred Moore (Eastern Michigan) at Akron, Sept. 14, 2013, 30 INT, 52 INT (NCAA 2008); Brad Ransom (Eastern Michigan) at Ohio State, Sept. 29, 2018, 32 INT, 58 INT (NCAA 2008); Jeff Cox (Oregon State) vs. The 'Nati, Sept. 5, 2009, 46 INT, 23 INT (NCAA 2009); Vince Agnew (Central Michigan) vs. Ball State, Oct. 2, 2010, 96 INT, 71 FR (NCAA 2011); Delonte Hollowell (Michigan) at Purdue, Nov. 1, 2014, 35 INT, 54 INT (NCAA 2012); Dailen Sutton (Air Force) at Western Michigan, Sept. 1, 2018, 49 INT, 42 INT (NCAA 2014); Halatoa Tai (Air Force) vs. New Mexico, Nov. 4, 2023, 48 FR, 7 FR (NCAA 2014); Jack Barton (Vanderbilt) vs. Missouri, Sept. 23, 2023, 72 FR, 21 INT (NCAA 2014)
Fumble return TD's: 2, Halatoa Tai (Air Force) vs. New Mexico, Nov. 4, 2023 (NCAA 2014)
Defensive TD's in quarter: 2, Halatoa Tai (Air Force) vs. New Mexico, second quarter, Nov. 4, 2023 (NCAA 2014); Jack Barton (Vanderbilt) vs. Missouri, third quarter, Sept. 23, 2023 (NCAA 2014)
Interception return: 104, Jonathan Kuehn (Eastern Michigan) at Hawaii, Dec. 5, 2021 (NCAA 2008); 104, Paul McCollum (Western Michigan) vs. Colorado, Aug. 26, 2023; 103, Germara Williams (Buffalo) vs. Ohio, Oct. 25, 2003 (NCAA 2004); Barry Sanders (Vanderbilt) vs. Arkansas, Sept. 17, 2011 (NCAA 2007)
Fumble return: 91, Brandon Henderson (Western Michigan) vs. Southern Illinois, Sept. 17, 2005 (NCAA 2006)
Blocked kicks: 2, Albert Pruitt (Vanderbilt) at Mississippi, Oct. 27, 2012 (NCAA 2007); Ulysses Heckel (Vanderbilt) at Georgia, Nov. 17, 2012 (NCAA 2007); Brandon Slater (Eastern Michigan) vs. Northern Illinois, Oct. 18, 2008 (NCAA 2008)
Forced fumbles: 3, Charles Jenkins (Michigan) vs. Wisconsin, Oct. 10, 2015 (NCAA 2012)

SPECIAL TEAMS
Most field goals: 6, Garrett Rivas (Michigan) vs. Oklahoma, Jan. 1, 2006 (NCAA 2005); Byron Jennings (Michigan) vs. Iowa, Sept. 15, 2012 (NCAA 2005); Andre Diles (Vanderbilt) vs. Mississippi State, Oct. 3, 2009 (NCAA 2007)
Most field goal attempts: 8, Garrett Rivas (Michigan) vs. Oklahoma, Jan. 1, 2006 (NCAA 2005)
Longest field goal: 58, Will Hagerup (Michigan) at Ohio State, Nov. 24, 2012 (NCAA 2012); 56, Austin Babcock (Western Michigan) vs. Missouri, Jan. 1, 2020 (NCAA 2014); 55, Garrett Rivas (Michigan) vs. Ohio State, Nov. 24, 2007 (NCAA 2004); Byron Jennings (Michigan) vs. LSU, Jan. 3, 2013 (NCAA 2005)
Longest punt: 77, Brendan Hilton (Michigan) vs. Minnesota, Oct. 11, 2008 (NCAA 2004)
Longest kick return: 109, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt) at Arkansas, Sept. 19, 2026 (NCAA 2014); 108, Brian Brown (Western Michigan) at Michigan State, Nov. 11, 2023 (NCAA 2014); 107, Clay Quinn (Buffalo) vs. Miami, Jan. 3, 2008 (NCAA 2004); 107, Eric Cox (Western Michigan) vs. Indiana, Nov. 20, 2021 (NCAA 2014); 107, Rian Caldwell (Air Force) at Stanford, Sept. 14, 2030 (NCAA 2014)
Longest punt return: 89, Clay Quinn (Buffalo) vs. Virginia Tech, Jan. 2, 2007 (NCAA 2004); 89, Luke Osborne (Baylor) vs. Colorado, Oct. 1, 2011 (NCAA 2004)
All-purpose yards: 516, Eric Cox (Western Michigan) at Washington, Sept. 12, 2020 (6-306, 1 TD KR; 2-21 PR; 17-110 rushing; 5-79 receiving) (NCAA 2014); 504, Burt Gross (Buffalo) at Maryland, Oct. 13, 2007 (12-290 receiving, 6-122 punt returns, 2-92 kick returns) (NCAA 2004)
Kick return TD’s: 2, Jeff Cox (Oregon State) vs. Stanford, Oct. 31, 2009 (NCAA 2009); Brian Randall (Oregon State) vs. Pittsburgh, Dec. 31, 2010 (NCAA 2009); Jeff Cox (Oregon State) vs. Washington State, Oct. 6, 2012 (NCAA 2009); Brian Brown (Western Michigan) at Michigan State, Nov. 11, 2023 (NCAA 2014)



Bryant McClellan of Vanderbilt (NCAA ’07) is B-Dawg’s single-season rushing leader.

SINGLE SEASON

PASSING
Yards: 5,410, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force), 2030 (NCAA 2014); 5,152, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024 (NCAA 2014); 5,025, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2029 (NCAA 2014); 4,877, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2026 (NCAA 2014); 4,756, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2025 (NCAA 2014); 4,700, Brandon Blount (Air Force), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 4,588, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 4,547, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2028 (NCAA 2014); 4,162, Ryan Coleman (Vanderbilt), 2017 (NCAA 2007)
Touchdowns: 56, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2029 (NCAA 2014); 55, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2028 (NCAA 2014); 49, Brandon Blount (Air Force), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 46, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024 (NCAA 2014); 44, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force), 2030 (NCAA 2014); 44, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2025 (NCAA 2014); 44, Josh Washington (Vanderbilt), 2028 (NCAA 2014); 43, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 40, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2026 (NCAA 2014); 35, Antwan Smith (Vanderbilt), 2011 (NCAA 2007)
Interceptions: 30, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007)
Completions: 411, Brandon Blount (Air Force), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 405, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force), 2030 (NCAA 2014); 398, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024 (NCAA 2014); 394, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2026 (NCAA 2014); 390, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2025 (NCAA 2014); 388, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2029 (NCAA 2014); 378, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 371, Josh Washington (Vanderbilt), 2028 (NCAA 2014); 357, Mike Wright (Vanderbilt), 2023 (NCAA 2014); 350, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2028 (NCAA 2014); 302, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007) and Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2014 (NCAA 2008)
Attempts: 556, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2025 (NCAA 2014); 553, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024 (NCAA 2014); 550, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force), 2030 (NCAA 2014); 548, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2026 (NCAA 2014); 547, Brandon Blount (Air Force), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 532, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2029 (NCAA 2014); 522, Mike Wright (Vanderbilt), 2023 (NCAA 2014); 512, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 496, Josh Washington, 2028 (NCAA 2014); 488, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2028 (NCAA 2014); 476, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007)
Sacks: 55, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013 (NCAA 2008); 45, Mackenzi Adams (Vanderbilt), 2008 (NCAA 2007)
QB rating: 183.3, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2029 (NCAA 2014); 181.9, Antwan Smith (Vanderbilt), 2009 (NCAA 2007); 181.8, Josh Washington, 2028 (NCAA 2014); 180.6, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2028 (NCAA 2014)
Completion pct.: .751, Brandon Blount (Air Force), 2027 (411-for-547) (NCAA 2014); .748, Josh Washington, 2028 (371-for-496), 2028; .746, Bradley Davis (Vanderbilt), 2029 (NCAA 2014); .738, Todd Williams (Eastern Michigan), 2020 (169-for-228) (NCAA 2008); .738, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2027 (378-for-512) (NCAA 2014); .737, Todd Williams (Eastern Michigan), 2017 (179-for-243) (NCAA 2008); .736, Terrence Sharpe (Air Force), 2030 (NCAA 2014); .730, Shannon Auguste (Vanderbilt), 2022 (173-for-237) (NCAA 2007); .729, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2029 (NCAA 2014); .721, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2014 (NCAA 2008); .720, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024 (NCAA 2014); .719, Greg Freeman, 2026 (NCAA 2014)

RUSHING
Yards: 2,513, Bryant McClellan (Vanderbilt), 2015 (NCAA 2007)
Touchdowns: 36, Marques Horne (Vanderbilt), 2020 (NCAA 2007); 34, Leonard Chapman (Vanderbilt), 2029 (NCAA 2014)
Carries: 488, Derek Jones (Western Michigan), 2022 (NCAA 2014); 418, Joey McBride (Michigan), 2015 (NCAA 2005); 404, Eric Cox (Western Michigan), 2021 (NCAA 2014)
Yards per carry: 7.1, Bryant McClellan (Vanderbilt), 2015 (NCAA 2007)

RECEIVING
Catches: 127, J.B. White (Air Force), 2025 (NCAA 2014); 121, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt), 2024 (NCAA 2014); 116, J.B. White (Air Force), 2026 (NCAA 2014); 113, Eric Peterson (Air Force), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 112, Paul Gibbons (Air Force), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 110, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt), 2025 (NCAA 2014); 104, Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007); 104, TE Ryan Jamison (Vanderbilt), 2027 (NCAA 2014)
Yards: 2,275, Corey Burton (Vanderbilt), 2014 (NCAA 2007); 2,035, J.B. White (Air Force), 2025 (NCAA 2014)
Touchdowns: 26, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt), 2024 (NCAA 2014); 21, Paul Gibbons (Air Force), 2028 (NCAA 2014); 20, Paul Gibbons (Air Force), 2027 (NCAA 2014); 20, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt), 2026 (NCAA 2014); 18, TE Ryan Jamison (Vanderbilt), 2028 (NCAA 2014); 17, Sean Thurman (Buffalo), 2005 (NCAA 2004); 17, Corey Burton (Vanderbilt), 2014 (NCAA 2007); 17, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt), 2025 (NCAA 2014)

BLOCKING
Pancakes: 147, Dominic Moran (Western Michigan), 2006 (NCAA 2006)
Sacks allowed: 16, Dan DeMaster (Eastern Michigan), 2010 (NCAA 2008)

DEFENSE
Tackles: 141 (56 solos, 85 assists), Brendan McIntosh (Northwestern), 2025 (CFB 25); 123, DeAndre McCollum (Air Force), 2025 (NCAA 2014); 120, DeAndre McCollum (Air Force), 2026 (NCAA 2014); 119, Ulysses Heckel (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007); 119, Fabian McCoy (Eastern Michigan), 2010 (NCAA 2008)
Tackles for loss: 41, Jammal Lavin (Michigan), 2014 (NCAA 2005)
Sacks: 23, Jammal Lavin (Michigan), 2014 (NCAA 2005) Note: Brandent Englemon had 38 sacks in the 2005 season of NCAA 2004 through the use of a cheesy Dime Fire-2 defense, so his record won’t count.
Interceptions: 11, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 9, Corey Everson (Eastern Michigan), 2007 (NCAA 2008); Robert White (Eastern Michigan), 2012 (NCAA 2008)
Deflections: 28, Charles Stewart (Michigan), 2005 (NCAA 2005)
Touchdowns: 4, Corey Everson (Eastern Michigan), 2007 (NCAA 2008)
Forced fumbles: 12, Travis Davis (Vanderbilt), 2014 (NCAA 2007)
Fumble recoveries: 5, Ulysses Heckel (Vanderbilt), 2011; Dustin Carpenter (Vanderbilt), 2020 (NCAA 2007)

SPECIAL TEAMS
Most field goals: 27, Jamie Carlson (Vanderbilt), 2015 (NCAA 2007)
Field goal percentage: 1.000, Tavares Garcia (Vanderbilt), 23-for-23, 2022 (NCAA 2007)
Punting average: 47.0, Donnie Gray (Vanderbilt), 2021 (NCAA 2007)
Kick return average: 38.8, Brian Brown (Western Michigan), 2023 (NCAA 2014); 38.1, Stevie Morris (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 37.7, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 37.2, Jeff Cox, (Oregon State), 2009 (NCAA 2012); 36.1, Clay Quinn (Buffalo), 2006 (NCAA 2004)
Punt return average: 26.7, Sammie Stroughter (Oregon State), 2008 (NCAA 2009); 23.0, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2010 (NCAA 2009); 22.0, Clay Quinn (Buffalo), 2007 (NCAA 2004)
Kick return TD’s: 4, Eric Cox (Western Michigan), 2021 (NCAA 2014); 3, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009 (NCAA 2009); 3, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 3, Stevie Morris (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009).
Punt return TD’s: 6, Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2012 (NCAA 2007)



Vanderbilt quarterback Greg Freeman shattered B-Dawg’s career passing records in NCAA 2014.

CAREER

PASSING
Yards: 19,373, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024-27 (NCAA 2014); 13,701, Chad Rice (Air Force), 2023-26 (NCAA 2014); 13,591, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008); 13,298, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007)
Touchdowns: 173, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024-27 (NCAA 2014); 113, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2026-29 (NCAA 2014); 112, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007); 86, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008); 83, Chad Rice (Air Force), 2023-26 (NCAA 2014)
Interceptions: 91, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007); 80, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008)
Completions: 1,560, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024-27 (NCAA 2014); 1,093, Chad Rice (Air Force), 2023-26 (NCAA 2014); 1,085, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008); 921, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007)
Attempts: 2,169, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024-27 (NCAA 2014); 1,667, Chad Rice (Air Force), 2023-26 (NCAA 2014); 1,576, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008); 1,460, Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007)
Sacks: 100, Mackenzi Adams (Vanderbilt), 2006-09 and Ken Collins (Vanderbilt), 2012-2015 (NCAA 2007)
QB rating: 180.485, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2026-29 (NCAA 2014); 170.2, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024-27 (NCAA 2014); 169.84, Brandon Blount (Air Force), 2024-27 (NCAA 2014); 160.5, Ryan Coleman (Vanderbilt), 2016-2018 (NCAA 2007)
Completion pct.: .737, Brandon Blount (Air Force), 2024-27 (NCAA 2014); .723, Brandon Hester (Air Force), 2026-29 (NCAA 2014); .719, Greg Freeman (Vanderbilt), 2024-27 (NCAA 2014); .688, Clint Cunningham (Eastern Michigan), 2013-2016 (NCAA 2008); .671, Shannon Auguste (Vanderbilt), 2019-2022 (NCAA 2007)

RUSHING
Yards: 6,192, Joey McBride (Michigan), 2013-2015 (NCAA 2005)
Touchdowns: 105, James Presley, 2004-2007 (NCAA 2005)
Carries: 1,139, Joey McBride (Michigan), 2013-2015 (NCAA 2005)

RECEIVING
Yards: 6,236, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt), 2023-26 (NCAA 2014); 6,200 Paul Gibbons (Air Force), 2027-30 (NCAA 2014); 5,002, Earl Bennett (Vanderbilt), 2006-08 (NCAA 2007)
Catches: 432, Michael Johnson (Vanderbilt), 2023-26 (NCAA 2014); 428, Paul Gibbons (Air Force), 2027-30 (NCAA 2014); 344, TE Ryan Jamison (Vanderbilt), 2025-28 (NCAA 2014); 297, J.B. White (Air Force), 2023-26 (NCAA 2014); 276, Alex Webster (Air Force), 2027-30 (NCAA 2014); 246, Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2007)
Touchdowns: 84, Paul Gibbons (Air Force), 2027-30 (NCAA 2014); 71, Michael Johnson, 2023-26 (NCAA 2014); 45, TE Ryan Jamison (Vanderbilt), 2025-28 (NCAA 2014); 34, Earl Bennett (Vanderbilt), 2006-08 and Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2007)
Tight end career: Ryan Jamison (Vanderbilt) 344 catches, 4,147 yards, 45 TD, 2025-28 (NCAA 2014)

BLOCKING
Pancakes: 204, Dominic Moran (Western Michigan), 2005-2006 (NCAA 2006)
Sacks allowed: 37, John Austin (Vanderbilt), 2008-2011 (NCAA 2007)

DEFENSE
Tackles: Gang-tackling era: 422, DeAndre McCollum (Air Force), 2023-26 (NCAA 2014); 413, Fabian McCoy (Eastern Michigan), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2008); Pre-gang-tackling: 360, David Henry (Vanderbilt), 2015-2018 (NCAA 2007)
Tackles for loss: 100, Jammal Lavin (Michigan), 2011-2014 (NCAA 2005)
Sacks: 57, Jammal Lavin (Michigan), 2011-2014 (NCAA 2005) Note: Brandent Englemon had 91 sacks from 2004-2007 in NCAA 2004 through the use of a cheesy Dime Fire-2 defense, so his record won’t count.
Interceptions: 22, Jason Lewis (Vanderbilt), 2010-2013 (NCAA 2007); 22, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 698 return yards, 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009)
Deflections: 67, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009); 63, Charles Stewart (Michigan), 2005-2007 (NCAA 2005)
Touchdowns: 12, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009); 4, Jason Lewis (Vanderbilt), 2010-2013 (NCAA 2007); Corey Everson (Eastern Michigan), 2007 (NCAA 2008)
Forced fumbles: 25, David Henry (Vanderbilt), 2015-2018 (NCAA 2007)

SPECIAL TEAMS
Most field goals: 96, Donnie Gray (Vanderbilt), 2018-2021 (NCAA 2007)
Most field goal attempts: 114, Donnie Gray (Vanderbilt), 2018-2021 (NCAA 2007)
Field goal percentage: .842, Donnie Gray (Vanderbilt), 2018-2021 (NCAA 2007)
Kick return average: 38.1, Stevie Morris (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 37.7, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2012 (NCAA 2009); 34.3, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2011 (NCAA 2009); 33.5, Clay Quinn (Buffalo), 2005-2007 (NCAA 2004)
Punt return average: 19.9, Clay Quinn (Buffalo), 2005-2007 (NCAA 2004); 19.5, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009).
Kick return TD’s: 8, Jeff Cox (Oregon State), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2009); 7, Eric Cox (Western Michigan), 2018-21 (NCAA 2014)
Punt return TD’s: 13, Jason Toth (Vanderbilt), 2009-2012 (NCAA 2007)

Last edited by BDawg35; 01-08-2025 at 03:10 PM.
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