Cristobal also spoke more about what he sees in the
Iowa State challenge.
On offense the team is fairly run heavy (485 rush attempts, 437 pass attempts). Redshirt sophomore dual-threat QB Rocco Becht finished hitting on 59.3 percent of his throws for 3,235 yards (249 per game) with 22 TDs and nine INTs. He also ran for 295 yards and seven scores. The top two receiving threats both had 1,000-yard seasons – Jayden Higgins (87 catches, 1,183 yards, nine TDs) and Jaylin Noel (72-1,077-7). At RB sophomore starter Carson Hansen has 670 yards and 11 TDs (5.0 YPC) while sophomore Abu Sama III has 574 yards and two scores (4.7 YPC), and senior Jaylon Jackson 388 yards and two TDs (4.2 YPC). The line is a strength, only allowing 15 sacks on the season. Miami will have to be ready for a multiple offensive looks that will range from four-wide to two tight ends to under center in a jumbo package.
On the flip side, Iowa State isn’t a team that gets a lot of QB pressure with 17 sacks in the 13 games. The team runs a 3-high defense (3 high 3 safety look) with three down linemen. So Miami will need to adjust to a style of defense is hasn’t seen all season. The top sack guy is senior DT J.R. Singleton with four (plus a team-high six QB hurries). Up front others heavily involved are junior DE Tyler Onyedim (33 tackles, 2.5 TFL), senior DE Joey Petersen (6 TFL, 2 sacks) and junior DT Domonique Orange (4.5 TFL, 1 sack). At the linebacker level sophomores Jack Sadowsky (29 tackles 4 TFL, 1 sack) and Kooper Ebel (63 tackles, 6 TFL, 1 sack) are solid. The secondary is the strength of the team led by Beau Freyler (team high 82 tackles, 2 TFL, 2 INTs, 5 PBU), Malik Verdon (76 tackles, INT, 5 PBU), Jontez Williams (team high 4 INTs), Jeremiah Cooper (44 tackles, 2 INTs), Darien Porter (3 INTs), and Ta’Shawn James (33 tackles). Opposing QBs have thrown just 15 TDs and been intercepted 14 times.
“It’s a team that benefits from tremendous coaching – you see strong senior classes, junior classes due to development, retainment,” Cristobal said. “They play great as a team, know where their help is. They are very, very physical and play extremely hard. You can tell that it means at on to them.”