Dixon vs. Ingram: Crunching Those Numbers
by bradlocke
 Inside Mississippi State Sports
7 months ago | 1080 views | 7 7 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

The week of the Mississippi State-Alabama game, I did a brief statistical comparison between tailbacks Anthony Dixon and Mark Ingram. With Ingram having a real good shot at winning both the Heisman Trophy and a BCS national title with the Crimson Tide, I thought it’d be good to take a closer look at these two fine specimens and what they did on the field this season.

First, the obvious numbers.

Rushing yards: Dixon 1,391; Ingram 1,542

Yards per game: Dixon 126.5 (11 games); Ingram 118.6 (13 games)

Yards per carry: Dixon 5.4; Ingram 6.2

Rushing touchdowns: Dixon 12, Ingram 15

Receptions-yards-TDs: Dixon 18-123-0; Ingram 30-322-3

OK, now let’s go a little deeper.

100-yard games: Dixon 8 (in 11 games); Ingram 8 (in 13 games)

Season low (carries-yards): Dixon 15-53, vs. Florida; Ingram 16-30, vs. Auburn

Season high (carries-yards): Dixon 33-252, vs. Kentucky; Ingram 24-246, vs. South Carolina

Yards per game vs. ranked opponents: Dixon 95.8 (five games); Ingram 144.8 (four games)

Yards per game vs. bowl teams: Dixon 126.8 (10 games); Ingram 127.1 (9 games)

Yards per game against common opponents (6 games): Dixon 135.3; Ingram 108.2

Percentage of rushing offense accounted for: Dixon 50.93; Ingram 54.95

Percentage of total offense accounted for: Dixon 33.92; Ingram 34.65

So there you have it. Of the 13 categories I covered here, Ingram comes out ahead in eight of them, but most of them are close. So maybe he is a better running back than Dixon, but it’s really hard to make a clear delineation between them. But the national pundits have done so by essentially ignoring Dixon, which has been easy because MSU went 5-7 and is not a perennial powerhouse like Alabama.

And that’s the only reason Ingram is getting so much love and Dixon isn’t. It’s why Ingram is a Heisman frontrunner, why he’s a finalist for the Walter Camp Player of the Year award, why he’s a finalist for the Doak Walker award, which goes to the nation’s top running back.

That’s too bad, because Dixon is being punished for playing on the wrong team. If he and Ingram switched places, who do you think would be getting the pub? Dixon, of course. Because people make the elementary logical error of equating your team’s ability to win with your value as a player.

MSU’s offensive line was much improved this season, as evidenced by the fact that the Bulldogs were first in the SEC and 10th in the nation in rushing offense (227.6 ypg). But there was so much more help around Ingram – at quarterback, at receiver, and on the other side of the ball. Ingram didn’t have to win games for Alabama; Dixon sure had to for State.

Should Ingram win the Heisman? No, but he probably will. (If I had a vote, it’d go to Nebraska DT Ndamukong Suh.) Let’s just hope that whatever else Ingram accomplishes, Dixon’s greatness won’t be forgotten.

comments (7)
« MSUCowbelle wrote on Wednesday, Dec 09 at 12:36 AM »
I agree with mculpepper that the main reason Ingram has so many touches, reps, and yards is because the offensive line giving him the room and holes. AD created them by himself. He carried the offense by himself for a good number of years (not to say that other people haven't stood out, just not like AD). I mean the 'Dude' can carry 5-7 people on him for 12 yards for a touchdown, don't see Ingram doing that. Well, maybe 2 people, but not 5-7.
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« dusty-dawg wrote on Monday, Dec 07 at 04:22 PM »
mculpepper why such high regard for Alabama's offensive line?

State ranked #9 in the nation in rushing and #1 in the SEC.

Alabama ranked #12 in the nation and #3 in the SEC.

"Alabama has a far superior O-line."????
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« dusty-dawg wrote on Monday, Dec 07 at 03:32 PM »
MSU-Kentucky Rewind

by bradlocke

Inside Mississippi State Sports

1 month ago

« dusty_dawg wrote on Monday, Nov 02 at 10:11 AM »

Question: If Anthony Dixon can will this team to bowl eligibility, considering the competition encountered along the way, should he be mentioned in the Heisman race?

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« PontotocaRocka wrote on Monday, Dec 07 at 02:08 PM »
1 for Ndamukong Suh...as Dixon might say,"That DUDE is a beast." I hope Dixon gets on a good NFL team and has a great career.
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« mculpepper wrote on Monday, Dec 07 at 11:15 AM »
Plus MSU had the hardest schedule in the country and Alabama has a far superior O-line.

I understand that the definition of Heisman has effectively been changed from "best player in the country" to "best player on an undefeated BCS team" - but for Dixon to be left off the Doak Walker finalist list is a travesty. We should start a petition.
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« ToddM. wrote on Monday, Dec 07 at 11:04 AM »
Brad, I agree 100%...I don't even acknowledge the Heisman anymore. It's supposed to be an INDIVIDUAL award. It shouldn't matter what team you play for...They should start flying the entire team in for the presentation.
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« ezfreeze wrote on Monday, Dec 07 at 10:58 AM »
Excellent article BL... I personally think that Dixon is the better back... Mainly because of 2 things... The talent level between MSU and Bama are like night and day... and second, MSU had the tougher schedule...

Dixon's numbers would be a lot higher if he would have played Jackson State... But even if you take that out of the equation...

Logic tells you for obvious reasons, if Dixon was on Bama's team he would probably have bigger numbers... And if Ingram was on MSU teams he would probably have smaller numbers...

Either way I am pulling for Ingram... So Dixon can tell the story of how he beat out the Heisman trophy winner for that years SEC rushing title...

No sour grapes here... Can't wait to see the two in the NFL... And see their stats then...
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