Boston College Game Notes: The Red Bandana Game vs. Miami

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 Boston College (5-2, 2-1 ACC) looks to remain undefeated at Alumni Stadium as the Eagles host No. 25 Miami (5-2, 2-1 ACC) Friday night.

  • The game will be broadcast nationally by ESPN. Sean McDonough, Todd Blackledge and Holly Rowe have the call.
  • Coverage on the Boston College IMG Sports Network begins at 6:30 p.m. with Jon Meterparel, Pete Cronan and Scott Mutryn. Fans can listen to the game locally on WEEI 850 AM, nationally on TuneIn and on Sirius channel 81, XM channel 81 and Sirius/XM internet channel 81.
  • The Eagles return to action after a bye week. BC rolled past Louisville 38-20 on Oct. 13 before the off week.
  • The 25th-ranked Hurricanes head north to Chestnut Hill after a bye week as well. In its last game,Miamidropped its first ACC contest of the year in Charlottesville to Virginia, 16-13.

  • Boston College and Miami will meet for the 30th time in series history Friday.
  • BC is 5-24 all-time against the Hurricanes. It is the first meeting between the two schools since Miami’s 41-32 victory at Alumni Stadium to open the 2012 season.
  • BC is 3-9 all-time against Miami in Chestnut Hill. The last time BC defeated the Hurricanes at home was a 28-14 victory in 2007.
  • Former BC great and Heisman Trophy winner Doug Flutie will be at the game along with several of his teammates from the 1983 team. The 1983 and 1993 teams will be honored during the game.
  • The series most memorable meeting was the 1984 game at the Orange Bowl. On Nov. 22, Flute and the Eagles went into the storybooks as No. 22 threw a 48-yard “Hail Mary” touchdown pass to wide receiver Gerard Phelan on the game’s final play to give BC a memorable 47-45 victory.

  • Boston College will recognize the family of Welles Crowther, a former BC lacrosse player, during the game against Miami, in BC’s annual Red Bandana Game.
  • Crowther is known as the “Man in the Red Bandana” after he saved over a dozen lives in the South Tower of the World Trade Center during the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. He wore a red bandana, which he carried with him and wore during his playing days at the Heights, to protect himself from the smoke and dust.
  • BC is distributing red bandanas for fans to wear at Alumni Stadium prior to the game.
  • The Eagles will wear special Under Armour uniforms for Friday’s game featuring red bandana accents on their helmets, gloves, socks and cleats.

Closer Look at AJ Dillon in the Starting Lineup

  • In 14 games since AJ Dillon was named the starter at running back on Oct. 14, 2017 at Louisville, Boston College is 10-4 overall and has averaged:

36.6 points per game

250.3 rushing yards per game

194.3 passing yards per game

444.6 total offense yards per game

1,908 rushing yards by Dillon

159.0 rushing yards per game by Dillon

18 rushing touchdowns by Dillon

10 100-yard rushing games by Dillon

  • Dillon has missed BC’s last two games due to an ankle injury.
  • BC is 28th nationally with 444.6 yards of total offense per game since Dillon became the starter.
  • BC is 19th nationally with 36.6 points per game during the time span with Dillon as the starter.
  • Since Oct. 14, 2017, Dillon leads all players nationally with 159.0 rushing yards per game and is second with 1,908 rushing yards.

Rushing Leaders (Oct. 14, 2017 – Oct. 20, 2018)

Player, School  Yards   Avg.     TD        YPG

  1. AJ Dillon, BC           1,908   6.0       18        159.0
  2. Jonathan Taylor, Wisc.         2,319   6.2       12        144.9
  3. Devin Singletary, FAU  1,900   5.6       35        126.7

Going on the Offensive

  • Boston College is averaging 39.6 points per game, the most points scored per game currently in school history.

BC All-Time Points Per Game Leaders

Year     Points Per Game

  1. 2018    39.6
  2. 1984    36.7
  3. 1993    34.3
  4. 1974    34.1
  5. 1974    33.2
  6. 1940    32.0

  • Boston College’s 277 points through seven games are the most in program history in the first seven games of a season, surpassing the 261 points scored in the first seven games of 1940. BC finished the 1940 campaign 11-0 overall, including a 19-13 win over No. 4 Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl.
  • BC opened the 2018 season with 40+ points in its first three games, the first time in 120 seasons of football at the Heights the Eagles scored 40+ in the first three games.
  • Boston College has scored at least 40 points in an ACC game five times. Four of those five are in BC’s past eight conference games.
  • The Eagles joined the ACC in 2005, and the other game of 40+ points was 2009 against NC State.
  • Over the last 14 games, BC has eclipsed the 500-yard mark in total offense six times.
  • Boston College rolled up 598 yards of total offense in the 55-21 victory against UMass on Sept. 1. The Eagles topped that mark with 610 yards of total offense in the 62-14 victory over Holy Cross on Sept. 8.
  • BC went over 500 yards of total offense for the 10th time under head coach Steve Addazio in the victory at Wake Forest. The Eagles finished the 41-34 win over the Deacs with 524 yards of total offense.

500+ Yards of Total Offense During Addazio Era

  1. 610 Holy Cross (9/8/18)
  2. 598  UMass (9/1/18)
  3. 581  at Syracuse (11/25/17)
  4. 555  at Louisville (10/14/17)
  5. 550 at New Mexico State (11/9/13)
  6. 524  at Wake Forest (9/13/18)
  7. 523  Army (10/5/13)
  8. 512  at Virginia (10/21/17)
  9. 511  UMass (8/30/14)
  10. 506            No. 9 Southern California (9/13/14)

  • For the first time since 2008, Boston College returned to the Top 25 in both polls following the win at Wake Forest. The Eagles dropped out of the national rankings following the 30-13 setback at Purdue on Sept. 22.

Benny the Jet

  • Redshirt sophomore running back Ben Glines made his first career start at running back for the Eagles at No. 23 NC State. Glines finished the day with 90 yards on 16 carries, including a 21-yard touchdown run. Glines finished with two touchdowns on the day as he hauled in an 11-yard touchdown reception as well.
  • Glines rushed for a career-high 120 and a touchdown the previous game against Temple after Dillon left the game with an ankle injury.
  • In the 38-20 win over Louisville, Glines rushed for 107 yards and a touchdown (6.3 yards per carry).
  • For the season, Glines is averaging 5.6 yards per carry and is second on the team with 372 yards rushing. He has also caught seven passes for 106 yards and three touchdowns as a receiver.

100+100

  • Boston College is one of seven teams nationally to have multiple 100-yard rushers in two or more games in 2018.
  • True freshman David Bailey had season-highs in carries (28) and yards (112) and a touchdown in the win over Louisville. It was the first 100-yard game of Bailey’s career.
  • Bailey and Glines became the second pair of BC running backs to reach the 100-yard mark in the same game this season. Against Temple on Sept. 29, Dillon (160) and Glines (120) each reached triple-digits on the ground.

Boston College:

AJ Dillon – 161 yards/28 attempts/2 TDs; Ben Glines – 120 yards/23 attempts/1 TD (vs. Temple on Sept. 29)

David Bailey – 112 yards/28 attempts/1 TD; Ben Glines – 107 yards/17 attempts/1 TD (vs. Louisville on Oct. 13)

Louisiana:

Raymond Calais – 108 yards/5 attempts/1 TD; Trey Ragas – 103 yards/15 attempts/1 TD (vs. Coastal Carolina on Sept. 22)

Elijah Mitchell – 191 yards/20 attempts/3 TDs; Trey Ragas – 100 yards/21 attempts/1 TD (at Texas State on Oct. 6)

Troy:

Jabir Daughtry-Frye – 140 yards/5 attempts/1 TD; BJ Smith – 103 yards/10 attempts/2 TDs (vs. Coastal Carolina on Sept. 29)

BJ Smith – 140 yards/17 attempts/2 TDs; Kaleb Barker – 111 yards/5 attempts (vs. Georgia State on Oct. 4)

Mississippi State:

Kylin Hill – 211 yards/17 attempts/2 TDs; Nick Fitzgerald – 159 yards/19 attempts (at Kansas State on Sept. 8)

Nick Fitzgerald – 107 yards/15 attempts/4 TDs; Aeris Williams – 101 yards/11 attempts/1 TD (vs. Louisiana on Sept. 15)

Nick Fitzgerald – 195 yds/28 attempts/2 TDs; Kylin Hill – 126 yards/23 attempts (vs. #8 Auburn on Oct. 6)

Oregon:

Tony Brooks-James – 107 yards/21 attempts/2 TDs; CJ Verdell – 106 yards/11 attempts/1 TD (vs. Portland State on Sept. 8)

Travis Dye – 115 yards/20 attempts/1 TD; CJ Verdell 106 yards/9 attempts (at California on Sept. 29)

Maryland:

Ty Johnson – 124 yards / 12 attempts / 1 TD; Tayon Fleet-Davis – 102 yards / 15 attempts / 2 TDs (vs. Bowling Green on Sept. 8)

Ty Johnson – 123 yards / 11 attempts / 1 TD; Anthony McFarland – 112 yards / 6 attempts / 2 TDs (vs. Minnesota on Sept. 22)

Kentucky:

Benny Snell Jr. – 125 yards/20 attempts/2 TDs; A.J. Rose 104 yards/8 attempts/2 TDs (vs. Central Michigan on Sept. 1)

Benny Snell Jr. – 175 yards/27 attempts; Terry Wilson 105 yards/10 attempts/1 TD (at Florida on Sept. 8)

Block Party

  • Boston College blocked a field goal and a punt at No. 23 NC State on Oct. 6. Kevin Bletzer blocked his first career field goal – the first blocked field goal for Boston College since Connor Wujciak at Virginia Tech on Nov. 1, 2014.
  • In the fourth quarter, redshirt sophomore safety Michael Palmer blocked an NC State punt that was recovered in the end zone for a touchdown by sophomore running back Travis Levy. It was the first punt blocked by BC since Matt Milano vs. Buffalo (10/1/16) and the first returned for a TD since Elijah Robinson’s scoop-and-score vs. Louisville (10/24/15).

Select Company

  • Anthony Brown threw for a career-high 304 yards and five touchdowns on 16-for-25 passing in the 41-34 win at Wake Forest on Sept. 13. The New Jersey native is one of two Boston College quarterbacks in school history to have thrown five or more touchdowns in a game without an interception. Doug Flutie threw for 354 yards and 6 TDs without a pick in 1984 at home vs. North Carolina.
  • Brown became the first BC quarterback to throw for over 300 yards and five TDs in a game since Matt Ryan vs. Wake Forest (9/1/07). It was the first 300-yard passing performance by an Eagle since Chase Rettig vs. Wake Forest (11/3/12).

Unforgettable, That’s What You Are

  • The Walter Camp Football Foundation announced the Football Bowl Subdivision National Offensive and Defensive Players of the Week, presented by Generation UCAN, for games ending September 15.
  • Senior defensive end Wyatt Ray was the sixth Boston College player to earn Walter Camp National Player of the Week honors since 2004, joining current teammate AJ Dillon, who was recognized on Oct. 15, 2017.
  • Ray set a school single-game record with four quarterback sacks as BC earned a 41-34 victory over ACC-rival Wake Forest. Ray also recorded a career-best eight tackles and had one quarterback hurry as the Eagles’ improved to 3-0, their best start to a season since 2007.

  • Ray tallied 3.0 sacks (tied for fourth in BC single-game history) in the 38-20 win over Louisville on Oct. 13.
  • Ray is third nationally with 8.5 sacks on the season.
  • Ray comes from a family full of recording artists. His grandfather was Nat King Cole and his aunt is Natalie Cole.

Watch Out for Walker

  • Michael Walker showed again at Purdue on Sept. 22 why he is one of the nation’s most dangerous kick and punt returners. Walker finished tied for second in BC history with 213 kickoff return yards against the Boilermakers.

BC Single-Game Kickoff Return Yard Leaders

Yards   Name (Year)     Opponent

214      Dave Bennett (1968)    Army

213      Michael Walker (2018)  Purdue

213      Jeff Smith (2006)          Clemson

  • Walker is 21st nationally and second in the ACC with 25.9 yards per kickoff return.
  • In punt returns, Walker was fourth nationally with 354 punt return yards in 2017. This season, he is 13th nationally with 12.3 yards per return.
  • For the second straight year, Walker leads the nation in combined kick and punt return yards (795 yards).
  • Against Central Michigan last year, Walker registered 128 punt return yards – including 124 in the first half – the fourth-best single-game total in BC history. It was the most punt return yards in a game since Ed Rideout finished with 131 punt return yards against Holy Cross in 1970. He finished the game with 135 all-purpose yards.
  • Walker’s 42 punt return yards pushed his career total to 515; moving up three spots to fourth all-time at BC.

BC Single-Game Punt Return Yard Leaders

Yards   Name (Year)     Opponent

166      Kelvin Martin (1985)     Holy Cross

136      Kelvin Martin (1986)     SMU

131      Ed Rideout (1970)        Holy Cross

128      Michael Walker (2017)            Central Michigan

109      Spiffy Evans (2012)      Maryland

BC Career Punt Return Leaders

PR       Name   Years

84        Kenyatta Watson         1993-96

79        Kelvin Martin    1983-86

65        Dedrick Dewalt 1998-01

55        DeJuan Tribble 2004-07

49        Will Blackmon   2002-05

            Clint Kuboyama            1991-92

43        Ed Rideout       1969-71

41        Marcus Cherry  1986-89

40        Michael Walker           2015-present

BC Career Kickoff Return Yardage Leaders

Yards   Name   Years

2,700   Will Blackmon   2002-05

2,284   Michael Walker           2015-present

2,082   Myles Willis       2013-16

BC Career Kickoff Return Leaders

KR       Name   Years

110      Will Blackmon   2002-05

91        Michael Walker           2015-present

86        Tim Frager        1987-90

No. 12 Nationally in Passing Efficiency 

  • Boston College leads the ACC and ranks 12th nationally in passing efficiency in 2018. Starting quarterback Anthony Brown along with backups EJ Perry and Matt McDonald have been sensational so far this season.
  • BC is tied for 11th nationally with 19 touchdown passes in 2018.
  • Brown is 91-of-155 passing for 1,238 yards and 14 touchdowns in 2018. He has completed 58.7% of his passes.
  • Perry is 15-of-18 passing for 179 yards and a pair of touchdowns. The Andover, Mass., native is completed 83.3 percent of his passes.
  • McDonald is 7-of-8 through the air for 118 yards and two touchdowns.

Chunk Plays

  • Boston College is tied for 25th nationally and is second in the ACC with 43 plays of 20+ yards in 2018.
  • Last season, BC was 70th nationally with 57 plays of 20+ yards in 13 games. In 2016, the Eagles were 121st nationally with 42 plays of 20+ yards over the 13-game season.
  • On the ground, BC has three runs of 50+ yards in 2018, tied for the 15th-most in the country.

What Can Brown Do for You?

  • Anthony Brown finished with the best single-game passer rating (245.9) by a BC QB dating back to the 1996 season with his performance against UMass in the season-opener. He finished 15-of-21 passing for 279 yards and four touchdowns. The yards and TD passes were then career-highs for the New Jersey native.
  • Brown finished with the second-best single-game passer rating in the 41-34 win at Wake Forest. Brown became the first BC quarterback to throw for over 300 yards and five TDs in a game at Wake Forest (9/13/18) since Matt Ryan vs. Wake Forest (9/1/07). It was the first 300-yard passing performance by an Eagle since Chase Rettig vs. Wake Forest (11/3/12).
  • Brown was named the ACC Quarterback of the Week for his performance in the win at Wake. In addition, he was one of eight quarterbacks nationally recognized by the Davey O’Brien Award and The Manning Award for his play in the win at Wake.
  • In 2017, Brown was named ACC Rookie of the Week for the first time in his career following the UVA victory and also was one of eight quarterbacks nationally recognized by The Manning Award as its “Stars of the Week.”
  • He was the first Boston College player with three passing touchdowns and zero interceptions in a conference game since Quinton Porter in 2003 in the 41-10 victory at UVA.
  • It marked the third-best single-game passer rating by a BC quarterback since 1996 at the time. The performance now ranks fourth since 1996.
  • Brown was the second freshman in BC history to start a season opener under center in the Sept. 1, 2017 win at Northern Illinois. He is the only freshman quarterback in school history who started to win a season opener on the road.

Single-Game Passer Rating Leaders (since 1996)

Player  Rating

  1. Anthony Brown (9/1/18) vs. UMass 245.9

            15-of-21, 279 yards, 4 TD, 0 INT

  1. Anthony Brown (9/13/18) at Wake Forest   232.1

            16-of-25, 304 yards, 5 TD, 0 INT

  1. Quinton Porter (10/11/03) vs. Temple           224.1

            18-of-24, 308 yards, 3 TD, 0 INT

  1. Anthony Brown (10/21/17) vs. Virginia       216.7

            19-of-24, 275 yards, 3 TD, 0 INT

  1. Tim Hasselbeck (9/9/00) vs. Army     216.2

            14-of-21, 256 yards, 3 TD, 0 INT

Notes to Remember

  • Boston College finished the 2017 regular season winning five of its last seven games as the Eagles closed out a 7-6 season and 4-4 mark in the ACC.
  • BC was one of 21 teams nationally – and just one of 13 teams from Power Five conferences – to win at least five of the final six games of the regular season.
  • Boston College was just one of two bowl teams nationally to play 10 teams who qualified for a bowl in 2017.
  • Only Clemson (6-0) and Boston College (5-1) won at least five of their last six in the regular season among ACC schools.
  • Head coach Steve Addazio has led the Eagles to four bowls in his first five years, the first head coach in BC history to do so.
  • The Eagles return ACC Rookie of the Year AJ Dillon, the nation’s second-leading rusher among freshmen and the country’s No. 7 overall rusher with 1,589 yards and 14 touchdowns.
  • Dillon was BC’s first ACC Rookie of the Year. He had 1,099 rushing yards over the last six regular season games, the most of any player in the country.
  • Dillon’s 1,589 rushing yards were the second-most by any ACC freshman in conference history.
  • Dillon tied for the most All-ACC votes with reigning Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson. Dillon had four games of 190+ yards of rushing in 2017.
  • Boston College had nine players earn All-ACC honors, tied for the most in school history. Seven of the nine All-ACC selections return in 2018.
  • Over the last six regular season games, BC averaged 36 points per game and outscored the opposition by 19 points per contest including wins over Florida State (35-3), at Louisville (45-42) and at Virginia (41-10).
  • Boston College was third nationally in pass efficiency defense in 2017.
  • Boston College was 12th nationally in interceptions (18) in 2017.
  • BC scored 35+ points in three consecutive games for the first time since 2002.
  • BC scored 40+ points in consecutive conference games once in school history in the BIG EAST and ACC (this season).
  • 500+ yards of total offense in consecutive games against Louisville and Virginia was also a first in ACC history for BC.
  • Boston College’s rushing offense was the most improved unit of any Power 5 school in yards per carry (96th to 25th).
  • Boston College was 12th nationally and was second in the ACC in sacks allowed in 2017.
  • Boston College was 18th nationally in total plays in 2017. In 2016, the Eagles ranked 94th nationally in total plays.
  • Lukas Denis was tied for second nationally with seven interceptions in 2017.

100-yard Games Piling Up

  • AJ Dillon has just 12 career starts, but he has 11 career 100-yard games already at Boston College in 18 games played.
  • He is tied for eighth in BC history with 11 career 100-yard games.

Dillon Named ACC Preseason Player of the Year

  • AJ Dillon returns as the ACC Preseason Player of the Year after a record-setting freshman campaign in 2017.
  • Dillon’s 1,589 yards rushing last season were the second-most by any freshman in ACC history. The New London, Connecticut, native ranked second nationally among all freshmen in rushing in 2017 and seventh among all players. Dillon set the Boston College freshman rushing record while posting the fourth-highest single-season total in school history.
  • Dillon received 45 votes in this year’s ACC Preseason Player of the Year balloting to edge Clemson defensive tackle Christian Wilkins by three votes. NC State quarterback Ryan Finley placed third with 37 votes, and Florida State running back Cam Akers followed with 13.

Second in ACC History

  • AJ Dillon became the 12th freshman in ACC history to run for 1,000 yards in a season after his 196-yard performance against No. 23 NC State on Nov. 11, 2017. He finished 2017 second in ACC history with 1,589 rushing yards by a freshman.

ACC Freshman Rushing Yards Leaders

  1. Ryan Williams, Virginia Tech (2009) 1,655
  2. AJ Dillon, Boston College (2017)      1,589
  3. Darren Evans, Virginia Tech (2008) 1,265
  4. Giovani Bernard, North Carolina (2011)        1,253
  5. Amos Lawrence, North Carolina (1977)        1,211

  • Dillon was the first BC player to rush for over 1,000 yards since graduate quarterback Tyler Murphy accumulated 1,184 in 2014.

BC Single-Season Rushing Yards Leaders

  1. Andre Williams (2013)           2,177
  2. Mike Cloud (1998)    1,726
  3. Derrick Knight (2003)            1,721
  4. AJ Dillon (2017)      1,589
  5. William Green (2001)            1,559

BC Single-Game Rushing Leaders

  1. Andre Williams (339 vs. NC State)        11/16/13
  2. Andre Williams (295 at New Mexico State)        11/9/13
  3. AJ Dillon (272 at Louisville)   10/14/17
  4. Montel Harris (264 vs. NC State)           10/17/09

BC Single-Game Rushing Attempt Leaders

  1. Andre Williams (42 vs. NC State)      11/16/13

Andre Williams (42 at Syracuse)           11/27/10

  1. Montel Harris (41 vs. Maryland)         11/28/09

Fred Willis (41 vs. Pitt)  11/14/70

  1. AJ Dillon (39 at Louisville) 10/14/17

Rolandan Finch (39 vs. Maryland)        10/29/11

Jim Bell (39 vs. Tennessee)      10/31/87

BC vs. 2018 Opponents

  • Boston College is 175-167-6 all-time against its 2018 opponents. The Eagles own winning records against UMass, Holy Cross, Wake Forest, Temple and NC State.

UMass  22-5

Holy Cross        49-31-3

Wake Forest     14-10-2

Purdue 0-1

Temple 29-7-2

NC State          9-7

Louisville          5-6

Miami   5-24

Virginia Tech    8-18

Clemson           9-16-2

Florida State    5-11

Syracuse          20-31

Cap and Gown

  • Five members of the 2018 Boston College Football team have already earned their undergraduate degree from BC: Center Jon Baker (marketing), linebacker Kevin Bletzer (communication), offensive lineman Sam Schmal (marketing), linebacker Connor Strachan (finance) and tight end Tommy Sweeney (marketing).

Look Out for Lukas

  • Lukas Denis made a flawless transition from cornerback to free safety in 2017. The Everett native tied for second nationally with seven interceptions last year.
  • He is the only player in the country over the last decade to total at least 80 tackles, seven interceptions, 10 pass breakups and two forced fumbles in a single-season.
  • Denis ended the season earning Walter Camp Football Foundation Second-Team All-America honors and was an All-ACC selection for the first time in his career.
  • Denis also tied for 12th nationally with 17 passes defended in 2017.
  • Denis started the 2018 season with his ninth career interception – and first pick-six – with a 59-yard interception return for a touchdown against UMass.

The Nation’s Most Complete Defensive Lineman

  • Boston College defensive end Zach Allen has quietly become the most complete defensive lineman in the nation.
  • Allen, a Preseason All-America selection, was one of two defensive linemen nationally in 2017 that recorded 100 or more tackles.
  • An All-ACC honorable mention pick last year, Allen finished the season with 100 tackles, 15.5 tackles-for-loss and 6.0 sacks. The 15.5 TFLs ranked Allen in the top-10 in BC single-season history.
  • Allen recorded a career-high 14 tackles, leading all players, in the Oct. 7, 2017 game against No. 16 Virginia Tech. He notched a career-high three tackles for loss and one sack on the night. He was named the ACC Defensive Lineman of the Week for his efforts in the Virginia Tech game.
  • In the 45-35 win over Temple on Sept. 29, Allen was practically unblockable. The Connecticut native led BC with eight tackles, four tackles for loss and two sacks. He also broke up two passes and was credited with one quarterback hurry.
  • In the 38-20 victory against Louisville on Oct. 13, Allen was named ACC Defensive Lineman of the Week for the second time in his career. Allen was all over the field as he totaled seven tackles, three tackles-for-loss and a sack in BC’s win over Louisville. Allen also blocked an extra point on special teams in the victory. BC allowed a season-low 217 yards of total offense and held the Cardinals to 47 rushing yards on 32 attempts, the fewest amount of rushing yards by an opponent in 2018. BC finished with seven sacks and 12 tackles-for-loss in the win.

Pound the Rock

  • For the 13th time under Steve Addazio, Boston College rushed for 300 yards or more in the Sept. 8 win against Holy Cross. BC finished with a season-best 365 yards rushing vs. the Crusaders.
  • Under Addazio, BC is 13-0 when rushing for 300+ yards in a game.
  • The Eagles rank 27th nationally with 222.8 rushing yards per game in 2018.
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