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Published Oct 22, 2020
Tracking the West Virginia Mountaineers Football true freshman class
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Keenan Cummings  •  WVSports
Managing Editor
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@rivalskeenan

Rivals.com has teamed with Pro Football Focus and as part of that we can provide incredibly detailed statistics on the West Virginia football team.

Today, we take a look at how the true freshmen graded out against Kansas. We will be tracking this all season and updating after each game.

In this article, we use the PFF grades to show you how the true freshmen Mountaineers performed to date as well as statistics.


But first, an explanation from PFF on how the grading scale works:

On every play, a PFF analyst will grade each player on a scale of -2 to +2 according to what he did on the play.

At one end of the scale you have a catastrophic game-ending interception or pick-six from a quarterback, and at the other a perfect deep bomb into a tight window in a critical game situation, with the middle of that scale being 0-graded, or ‘expected’ plays that are neither positive nor negative.

Each game is also graded by a second PFF analyst independent of the first, and those grades are compared by a third, Senior Analyst, who rules on any differences between the two. These grades are verified by the Pro Coach Network, a group of former and current NFL coaches with over 700 combined years of NFL coaching experience, to get them as accurate as they can be.

From there, the grades are normalized to better account for game situation; this ranges from where a player lined up to the dropback depth of the quarterback or the length of time he had the ball in his hand and everything in between. They are finally converted to a 0-100 scale and appear in our Player Grades Tool.

Season-level grades aren’t simply an average of every game-grade a player compiles over a season, but rather factor in the duration at which a player performed at that level. Achieving a grade of 90.0 in a game once is impressive, doing it (12) times in a row is more impressive.

It is entirely possible that a player will have a season grade higher than any individual single-game grade he achieved, because playing well for an extended period of time is harder to do than for a short period, Similarly, playing badly for a long time is a greater problem than playing badly once, so the grade can also be compounded negatively.

Each week, grades are subject to change while we run through our extensive review process including All-22 tape runs and coaching audit, so you may notice discrepancies among grades published in earlier articles compared with those in the Player Grades tool until grade lock each week.

Game 1: Eastern Kentucky: Total Snaps 12 | Grade of 83.8
Game 2: Oklahoma State: Total Snaps 21 | Grade of 68.6
Game 3: Baylor: Total Snaps 22 | Grade of 73.1
Game 4: Kansas: Total Snaps 22 | Grade of 74.0

Mesidor was one of the standouts in camp for West Virginia and he has carried that over into the season seeing action in all four games. Against Kansas he put together his best game yet with six tackles and a pair of sacks. Through four games he now has 15 total tackles and 4 sacks and should continue to work his way into the rotation as the season continues to develop as a very impressive freshman.

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