You don’t seem to follow college football. Reading 2 weeks of box scores ain’t it. If you knew what was going on, you’d know Ole Miss’s qb was hurt last week and the backup came in and they ran the ball for the rest of the game. Also, Ole Miss has thrown for 635 yards and PSU has thrown for 503 yards, so no, those are not about the same.
There's no reason for you to be like this, with the ridiculous attempts to insult. Just stick to facts.
Ole Miss's QB was hurt late in the 4th. He missed one "real" series (there was one victory formation play following an onsides kick recovery by Ole Miss to end the game, in addition to that one series). There were exactly 8 runs in that one series Simmons missed. For the game, Ole Miss had 24 passing attempts and 48 runs. That would mean, before that series, there would have been 24 passing attempts and 40 runs. Additionally, Ole Miss was up by 7 going into their final drive, that Simmons missed. With 4 minutes and 5 seconds left in the game when they got the ball. So even with a healthy Simmons, they would have been mostly running the ball to bleed clock.
In other words, your factoid that was supposed to change everything and show that I was an idiot that knew nothing about college football ... changed absolutely nothing about the overall picture.
Yes, of course Ole Miss has thrown for more yards. That changes nothing about what I've said, to date. In fact, it agrees with my statement that one QB has relied more on higher percentage, shorter yardage throws (meaning the other has relied on lower percentage, longer yardage).
Regardless, PSU is still pass-heavier than Ole Miss this year, and the starting QBs have performed about the same, as I've shown (and explained the different ways they got to around the same overall performance).
Now, you can respond and call me a stinky buttcheese who never knew nuffin 'bout no foosball ... but, at some point, you have to start putting together a cogent argument to back your claims.
Earlier, I highlighted PSU and Ole Miss's run/pass play totals ... we can compare to last year's at this point:
Through 2 games:
PSU 2025: 67 Run/68 Pass
PSU 2024: 79 Run/38 Pass
Ole Miss 2025: 92 Run/61 Pass
Ole Miss 2024: 79 Run/76 Pass
PSU has obviously made a more concerted effort to work on their passing game early this year.
Keep in mind, last year Ole Miss trucked their first 2 opponents, so they would have been more likely to dial it back and run it more often toward the end of the game.
Last year, Ole Miss had 2x as many passes as PSU through 2 games. That's incredible. This year, PSU has more attempts than Ole Miss.