For too long now, college football offensive linemen have been overlooked and undervalued when ranking the very best in the game. Using PFSN’s College Team OLi metric, each week of the season, we’ll dive into the best units the country has to offer, starting with the college football OL rankings from a jam-packed slate of pancakes, pressures, and protection duty in Week 1.
25) UTSA Roadrunners
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 79.2 (C+)
Facing one of the more imposing defensive fronts in college football, the UTSA Roadrunners’ offensive line allowed the American Conference outfit much more success than the final score suggests. Jeff Traylor’s team averaged 6.8 yards per carry, with the line ensuring the running back room got a 1.0-yard head start on their progress down the field before meeting contact.
Although Owen McCown was pressured on 40.0% of his dropbacks, the line only gave up one sack on true dropbacks (a 4.0% sack rate). The UTSA offensive line included two individual players who earned top-100 weekly grades, with Darrell Jones (79.3, C+) and Ben Rios (76.1, C) leading the way for a line that was consistent all across the front against their SEC opponent.
24) LSU Tigers
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 79.3 (C+)
Heading into the Week 1 encounter with the Clemson Tigers, there were plenty of concerns about how an LSU Tigers offensive line that was decimated by the NFL Draft would fare against one of the better defensive fronts in the country. When the bell tolled, the five-man army answered, resulting in an overall grade of 79.3 (C+) in the top 25 of our college football OL rankings.
The key number here is zero, as in the number of sacks that LSU allowed on Saturday in “Death Valley.” Led by Braelin Moore (87.5, B+) and Tyree Adams (80.2, B-), the Tigers were fierce protectors for quarterback Garrett Nussmeier, who was pressured on just 19.4% of his true dropbacks and has almost three seconds per dropback (2.87) to operate before being pressured.
23) Hawaii Warriors
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 79.4 (C+)
Although college football Week 1 didn’t bring the same result as the season-opening win over the Stanford Cardinal, the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors continue to be a consistently strong presence in our college football OL rankings. Their shellacking at the hands of the Arizona Wildcats wasn’t for a lack of protection, with the health of quarterback Micah Alejado a more substantial issue.
The Hawaii line only allowed one quick pressure (2.2% quick pressure rate), with Alejado having over four seconds (4.13) before being pressured by the Wildcats’ defense, ranking 29th out of the 135 programs featured in Week 1. While Arizona had success pressuring from the pivot to the right side of the line, left guard Zhen Sotelo had a stellar outing (87.1, B+) for the ‘Bows.
22) Massachusetts Minutemen
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 79.6 (C+)
It was a difficult start to the season for the UMass Minutemen, putting up just 10 points in a sizeable defeat to the Temple Owls. However, there were positives to take away from Joe Harasymiak’s first game at the helm of the new Mid-American Conference outfit as an offensive line that allowed 2.5 sacks per game in 2024 appeared to show signs of great improvement.
In fact, the Minutemen allowed just one true dropback sack against the Owls, with a 2.4% sack rate and did a good job of making time for transfer quarterback Brandon Rose to work before facing pressure. Meanwhile, their positioning in our college football OL rankings was bolstered by run blocking that paved the way for Rocko Griffin to average 9.4 yards per carry.
21) Boise State Broncos
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 79.8 (C+)
Anchored by PFSN College Football Top 100 honoree Kage Casey, much was expected of the Boise State Broncos’ offensive line in 2025, and in some part, they delivered on that promise. Although they allowed two sacks, the unit worked hard to give Maddux Madsen time to throw (3.68 seconds) in the face of an onslaught from the South Florida Bulls defense in Week 1.
Only one other offensive line was asked to work harder in pass protection last week, with Madsen making 57 dropbacks. Part of the reason was an inability to get the ground game moving. The Broncos’ rush offense only averaged 3.2 yards per designed run, and just 0.86 of that production came before contact.
20) Arizona Wildcats
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 79.9 (C+)
Although they’ll face more difficult challenges when they get into Big 12 play, the Arizona Wildcats’ offensive line helped sow the seeds of a comeback campaign for the former Pac-12 program. Amid their struggles a year ago, the offensive line finished 74th in our college football OL rankings (73.4, C), and there was a clear upgrade in the first week of the 2025 campaign.
MORE: College Football Defense Rankings After Week 1
The most significant difference for the Wildcats was the offensive line’s performance in the run game. Last fall, they created just 0.6 yards before contact per rush. Against Hawaii in Week 1, that leapt up to 1.74 yards. The result was a 2.7-yard improvement in yards per carry on designed runs, with Quincy Craig feasting to the tune of seven carries for 125 yards and a touchdown.
19) Indiana Hoosiers
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 79.9 (C+)
There was a sense of excitement about the Indiana Hoosiers’ offensive line, particularly for quarterback Fernando Mendoza, ahead of the season, and they didn’t disappoint. Cracking the top 20 of our college football OL rankings, they were effective both as pass protectors and as the driving force behind a run game that tallied 309 rushing yards and two scores vs. Old Dominion.
1.3 yards of their 5.4 average per designed run came before contact, helping spring Roman Hemby for his first 100-yard outing since doing it against the Hoosiers for Maryland last September. Meanwhile, Mendoza had all the time in the world to operate, with zero quick pressures on 34 dropbacks. All five linemen finished in the top 70 at their respective positions.
18) Toledo Rockets
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 80.0 (B-)
The Toledo Rockets were earmarked as a potential Week 1 giant killer when they went on the road to face Kentucky. While the reality didn’t meet the expectation, it wasn’t for a lack of effort on behalf of the offensive line, which faced one of the better defenses in the country in Week 1, according to the PFSN College DEFi metric (the Wildcats’ 85.3 grade ranked 12th out of 135).
35.7% of the Rockets’ rushing yards per designed run came before contact. Meanwhile, Tucker Gleason had an average of 3.29 seconds to work in before pressure. Despite that, there were six occasions where the Wildcats were able to quickly get to the Toledo quarterback, and he was sacked on 7.1% of his true dropbacks. The line should still stand up to scrutiny in the MAC.
17) Nebraska Cornhuskers
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 80.1 (B-)
The Nebraska Cornhuskers’ offensive line features numerous players who were among the highest-graded linemen from a year ago. Hence, it’s no surprise that they are among the top 25 teams in our Week 1 college football OL rankings. If you take your eyes away from Dylan Raiola’s commitment to his Patrick Mahomes cosplay for a moment, you can see the line at work.
Cincinnati had to blitz to get any pressure on the young Nebraska cornerback, with just 11.5% of pressure coming from non-blitz packages. On average, Raiola had 3.85 seconds to operate before any pressure came his way, and only one pressure was classed as “quick pressure.” The two sacks allowed were more of an indictment on the quarterback than the men protecting him.
16) Northwestern Wildcats
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 80.1 (B-)
The pressure is piling on Northwestern Wildcats head coach David Braun after the Big Ten program opened the 2025 college football season with another insipid offensive display. The team has scored less than 14 points in half of his games in charge, but the offense shouldn’t be labelled a complete flop as the Wildcats continue their rich tradition of producing stellar o-line play.
The Tulane Green Wave defense will hit you repeatedly in the mouth, and while that was the case, with three sacks and a ton of quick pressure (23.3%) allowed, the Wildcats were able to exert their will in the ground games at times. Over 25% (26.5%) of their designed run production came before contact, with Evan Beerntsen proving a particularly ferocious force in run blocking.
15) Cincinnati Bearcats
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 80.3 (B-)
The Cincinnati Bearcats came up short against Nebraska in Week 1, but their woes were more execution and play-calling-related than they were with not having the time to operate efficiently on offense. Only two quarterbacks in the country had more time to work with before being pressured, with the Bearcats’ line carving out 5.33 seconds worth of freedom before being troubled.
The unit gave up zero “quick pressures” against Nebraska and didn’t allow a single sack. They were also impactful in the ground game, ranking sixth in the country for average yards before contact per designed run (2.04) as part of a dangerous rushing attack that saw five players average five yards or more per carry.
14) Rice Owls
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 80.4 (B-)
The Scott Abell era got underway with the Rice Owls providing one of the more eye-opening results of Week 1, defeating the Sun Belt runners-up from a year ago, Louisiana. Option football is now at the heart of the program’s offensive identity, and some of the system’s statistical peculiarities helped the Owls record one of the top grades in our college football OL rankings.
Only the Air Force Falcons had fewer dropbacks in Week 1 than Rice, who didn’t give up a single true dropback or quick pressure in the win while not allowing a sack. Meanwhile, only six teams ran more designed runs than the Owls (50), who averaged one yard before contact on each attempt. None of the five starters across the line, led by David Stickle, gave away a penalty.
13) Georgia State Panthers
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 80.6 (B-)
The Georgia State Panthers are expected to kick on in the second year under Dell McGee, but got kicked off the park in the season opener against the Ole Miss Rebels, mustering just seven points and 260 total yards of offense. That said, they put up 191 rushing yards behind an offensive line that received an adjusted grade boost due to the caliber of defense faced.
Despite giving up three “quick pressures,” the Panthers’ offensive line averaged 3.35 seconds before quarterbacks Cameran Brown and Christian Veilleux came under attack. Additionally, they gave up just one sack against a unit that ranked third in the nation with 55 sacks a year ago. Derrell Bailey Jr. led the way as a run blocker, receiving a top-20 individual grade (82.2) among all OTs.
12) Texas Tech Red Raiders
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 80.7 (B-)
After an offseason of attention due to their groundbreaking approach to revenue sharing, the Texas Tech Red Raiders got their season off to a predictable start, turning over an FCS opponent by something akin to a cricket score. It’s easy to point the finger and say that’s what they’re meant to do, but there were still some significant takeaways from the season opener.
Takeaways like the Red Raiders’ offensive line being solid in all phases, allowing zero sacks and just one quick pressure despite adapting to a turnstile of quarterbacks behind them. The Texas Tech offensive line carved open massive holes in the ground game, and no other line in college football tallied more than the Red Raiders’ 2.65 yards before contact per designed run.
11) Texas Longhorns
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 81.1 (B-)
Like several other teams in the top 25 of our college football OL rankings, the Texas Longhorns started the year with a vastly different-looking offensive line than the one that helped them to the College Football Playoff a year ago. Facing a dominant Ohio State Buckeyes defense isn’t the test you want as you gel, and there were some legitimate difficulties for the Longhorns.
Ohio State found a way to bring pressure without blitzing, with 42.9% of pressure coming without sending the house after Arch Manning. Yet, they only allowed quick pressure on 4.2% of true dropbacks and only gave up one sack. Although the running back room didn’t often take advantage, 30.9% of their per-carry yardage came before contact, a testament to the offensive line.
10) Fresno State Bulldogs
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 81.3 (B-)
After getting their 2025 season underway a week earlier than most of the 136 FBS programs, the Fresno State Bulldogs have had a week to gel and find cohesiveness, and it showed in their Week 1 beatdown of a strong Georgia Southern Eagles team. Matt Entz’s teams have always had the ground game at their heart, and the o-line paved the way for a mammoth night.
The Bulldogs ran for 351 yards with five touchdowns on 45 carries, averaging a remarkable 7.7 yards per designed run, 1.4 of that facilitated by exceptional run blocking. E.J. Warner probably hasn’t had an easier night in his career, with the line allowing pressure on just 10.5% of his dropbacks, not allowing a sack, and giving him an average of 3.25 seconds before pressure.
9) Southern Miss Golden Eagles
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 81.4 (B-)
What a difference a year makes. The Southern Miss Golden Eagles ended the 2024 season with the 132nd-ranked unit in our college football OL rankings with a 56.4 (F) PFSN College OLi grade. Charles Huff’s impact has been felt immediately and even if the result in the defeat to the Mississippi State Bulldogs wasn’t quite the result the head coach wanted, there is optimism.
Braylon Braxton, who followed Huff from the Marshall Thundering Herd, was sacked just once for a 3.1% sack rate, a stark contrast to 15.2% a year ago. There were improvements across the entire suite of data points that make up our offensive line metric, headlined by the quarterback having 4.6 seconds to work in before being pressured. The Eagles engineered 3.3 in 2024.
8) Coastal Carolina Chanticleers
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 81.5 (B-)
Although the game was essentially over by the half, there were some positive takeaways for the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers from their 48-7 defeat to the Virginia Cavaliers. Thomas Johnson, a versatile offensive lineman, was the highest-graded player at his position, drawing an 88.0 (B+) grade after allowing zero sacks or pressures and being an absolute animal in run blocking.
That set the tone for a unit that had a sack rate of just 3.1%, allowed just one “quick pressure”, and forced the Cavaliers to find creative ways to get after the quarterback with a low non-blitz pressure rate. Quarterback M.J. Morris had plenty of time in the pocket to diagnose the field, but didn’t make the most of those opportunities as the Chanticleers limped to 254 total yards.
7) Texas State Bobcats
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 81.6 (B-)
G.J. Kinne has made the Texas State Bobcats one of the most entertaining offenses in all of college football since arriving in San Marcos, and the team doesn’t look to be slowing down any time soon. When he first arrived, his scheme put a lot of stress on the offensive line, but in Year 3, they look to be one of the top units in the country in both pass protection and run blocking.
Second-year quarterback was named the starter soon before the Eastern Michigan game, and revelled in the opportunity to work behind a line that didn’t allow a “quick pressure” while ceding pressure on just 11.1% of true dropbacks. The unit, led by star guard Tellek Lockette, was also dominant in the ground game, finishing second with 2.46 yards before contact per designed run.
6) Jacksonville State Gamecocks
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 81.8 (B-)
The Charles Kelly era got off to a losing start, but that is nothing to be ashamed of for the Jacksonville State Gamecocks, who played the UCF Knights close in the Bounce House. Rich Rodriguez might be gone, but one of the hallmarks of his time in the FBS with the Gamecocks — producing stellar offensive linemen — is still alive and well in the CUSA outfit.
UCF has some dominant pieces on its defensive front despite some transfer portal losses, but Jacksonville State limited them to just one sack and three quick pressures. Neither Jeremiah Orr nor Lucas Mrachkovskiy was penalised, with the former credited with keeping quarterback Gavin Wimsatt relatively clean. Furthermore, 21.6% of their rushing production came before contact.
5) Tulane Green Wave
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 82.4 (B-)
As has become a standard in recent years, the Tulane Green Wave led the way for the Group of Five in Week 1, taking down the Northwestern Wildcats in dominant fashion. The Big Ten outfit was barely in the game, especially in the second half, and the Green Wave offensive line paved the way for a 421-yard outing that saw Jake Retzlaff make eye-catching plays.
Although the Wildcats were able to get some quick pressure (16.7%), they never sacked the new Tulane quarterback, who contributed 113 yards and a score to a ground game that averaged 6.6 yards per carry. In addition to their prowess in all phases, none of the five starting offensive linemen, led by Reese Baker, gave away a penalty in a truly comprehensive showing.
4) UTEP Miners
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 82.7 (B-)
Despite losing to the Utah State Aggies in Week 1, the UTEP Miners’ offensive line showcased a little something to make you believe that they’ll be much more competitive in CUSA this fall than they were a year ago. After a career that hasn’t lived up to its potential, that’s precisely what new quarterback Malachi Nelson needs to hear, as he looks to reinvent himself in 2025.
Every individual offensive lineman earned a grade over 75.0, as the unit only allowed an 11.1% pressure and 3.7% sack rate. Scotty Walden’s men were no pushovers, giving no easy wins for the Aggies’ defensive linemen, with just 5.3% of pressures coming without blitzing the former USC and Boise State quarterback. Joseph Immediato was a top-50 guard in Week 1.
3) Louisiana Ragin’ Cajuns
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 82.9 (B-)
Although the Cajuns will be Ragin’ at the opening-day defeat, Louisiana can at least take solace in the fact that the offensive line gives them a solid platform to work behind for the rest of the season. A substantial amount of the pressure faced by Walker Howard and Daniel Beale came against just one lineman, with three of the five starters earning 80+ grades in Week 0.
Led by Cooper Fordham, the offensive line engineered 3.88 seconds of time in the pocket before pressure, helping contribute to pressure on just 12.5% of true dropbacks by the quarterback room. The unit gave up just one sack, and paved the way for Elijah Davis and Zylan Perry in the ground game. 22.7% of Louisiana’s rushing production against Rice came before contact.
2) Florida Atlantic Owls
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 85.8 (B)
With Zach Kittley taking over as the head coach of the Florida Atlantic Owls, everyone knew coming into Week 1 that you could expect a high-volume passing attack. And so it came to pass against the Maryland Terrapins, with Caden Veltkamp and Zach Gibson combining to take 62 dropbacks, 10 more than any other offense in the country.
That amount of pass protection duty stresses an offensive line, and they allowed pressure on 18.9% of those dropbacks, with 9.4% being defined as quick pressure. While the three sacks allowed were more than almost any other team in the top 25 of our college football OL rankings, the sheer volume of dropbacks resulted in a 5.7% sack rate.
Remarkably, given the heavy volume of work, the Florida Atlantic line was penalised just twice. Vincent Fiacable (89.2), Scarlee Jean (85.4), and Ja’Kavion Nonar (81.7) all recorded individual grades over 80.
1) Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
- Week 1 PFSN College OLi Grade: 89.8 (B+)
The Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets vs. the Colorado Buffaloes was the standout game of the Friday slate in Week 1. Arguably, the Georgia Tech offensive line was the star of the show, allowing Haynes King to ruthlessly dispatch Deion Sanders’ team with a 45-yard touchdown run with 1:07 left on the clock in the fourth quarter. Brent Key’s team was dominant in the trenches.
No other team in the country gave up pressure on long dropbacks, a testament to the offensive line’s ability to hold blocks for a substantial amount of time. King had an average of 3.3 seconds per dropback before coming under pressure, which Colorado struggled to exert without sending the blitz (10.0% non-blitz pressure rate). King also wasn’t sacked once all night.
In the ground game, 34.4% of their total designed run production came before contact, another showcase of a dominant unit. It helps when the heart of your offensive line contains one of the most violent but athletic maulers, former Middle Tennessee standout Keylan Rutledge, one of three Georgia Tech players to draw an 80+ grade.
College Football OL Rankings | 26-136
26) Maryland Terrapins: 79.2 (C+)
27) Miami (FL) Hurricanes: 79.0 (C+)
28) Sam Houston State Bearkats: 79.0 (C+)
29) Syracuse Orange: 78.8 (C+)
30) Colorado Buffaloes: 78.8 (C+)
31) Appalachian State Mountaineers: 78.2 (C+)
32) TCU Horned Frogs: 78.0 (C+)
33) Akron Zips: 78.0 (C+)
34) Georgia Bulldogs: 77.9 (C+)
35) Minnesota Golden Gophers: 77.8 (C+)
36) Michigan State Spartans: 77.7 (C+)
37) Florida State Seminoles: 77.5 (C+)
38) Kentucky Wildcats: 77.2 (C+)
39) Old Dominion Monarchs: 77.2 (C+)
40) Wyoming Cowboys: 77.2 (C+)
41) Utah State Aggies: 77.1 (C+)
42) New Mexico Lobos: 77.0 (C+)
43) Virginia Cavaliers: 77.0 (C+)
44) Penn State Nittany Lions: 76.6 (C)
45) Miami (OH) RedHawks: 76.5 (C)
46) Navy Midshipmen: 76.2 (C)
47) Michigan Wolverines: 76.1 (C)
48) Texas A&M Aggies: 76.1 (C)
49) Connecticut Huskies: 76.1 (C)
50) Georgia Southern Eagles: 76.0 (C)
51) UAB Blazers: 75.9 (C)
52) San Jose State Spartans: 75.8 (C)
53) BYU Cougars: 75.8 (C)
54) Mississippi State Bulldogs: 75.5 (C)
55) Colorado State Rams: 75.4 (C)
56) Arizona State Sun Devils: 75.3 (C)
57) Kansas Jayhawks: 75.2 (C)
58) Missouri State Bears: 75.2 (C)
59) Baylor Bears: 75.1 (C)
60) Ball State Cardinals: 75.1 (C)
61) Virginia Tech Hokies: 75.0 (C)
62) Notre Dame Fighting Irish: 74.9 (C)
63) Memphis Tigers: 74.7 (C)
64) Louisville Cardinals: 74.6 (C)
65) Oregon Ducks: 74.6 (C)
66) Western Michigan Broncos: 74.6 (C)
67) Alabama Crimson Tide: 74.5 (C)
68) Temple Owls: 74.4 (C)
69) Ohio State Buckeyes: 74.4 (C)
70) James Madison Dukes: 74.3 (C)
71) Mississippi Rebels: 73.9 (C)
72) Troy Trojans: 73.5 (C)
73) Iowa State Cyclones: 73.5 (C)
74) Utah Utes: 73.3 (C)
75) Auburn Tigers: 73.2 (C)
76) Wake Forest Demon Deacons: 72.9 (C-)
77) Missouri Tigers: 72.9 (C-)
78) Kennesaw State Owls: 72.9 (C-)
79) Florida Gators: 72.8 (C-)
80) Oregon State Beavers: 72.8 (C-)
81) Washington Huskies: 72.3 (C-)
82) Charlotte 49ers: 72.2 (C-)
83) Air Force Falcons: 72.0 (C-)
84) Tulsa Golden Hurricane: 71.9 (C-)
85) USC Trojans: 71.7 (C-)
86) Tennessee Volunteers: 71.7 (C-)
87) Ohio Bobcats: 71.7 (C-)
88) South Carolina Gamecocks: 71.6 (C-)
89) Clemson Tigers: 71.5 (C-)
90) Wisconsin Badgers: 71.5 (C-)
91) Delaware Fightin Blue Hens: 71.4 (C-)
92) Rutgers Scarlet Knights: 70.8 (C-)
93) Marshall Thundering Herd: 70.8 (C-)
94) Eastern Michigan Eagles: 70.8 (C-)
95) UNLV Rebels: 70.7 (C-)
96) San Diego State Aztecs: 70.7 (C-)
97) Buffalo Bulls: 70.7 (C-)
98) East Carolina Pirates: 70.6 (C-)
99) Arkansas Razorbacks: 70.4 (C-)
100) Vanderbilt Commodores: 69.8 (D+)
101) Duke Blue Devils: 69.6 (D+)
102) Boston College Eagles: 69.5 (D+)
103) Kansas State Wildcats: 69.5 (D+)
104) Nevada Wolf Pack: 69.4 (D+)
105) North Carolina State Wolfpack: 69.4 (D+)
106) North Carolina Tar Heels: 69.3 (D+)
107) UCF Knights: 69.1 (D+)
108) Central Michigan Chippewas: 69.0 (D+)
109) California Golden Bears: 68.3 (D+)
110) Arkansas State Red Wolves: 68.3 (D+)
111) Western Kentucky Hilltoppers: 67.8 (D+)
112) USF Bulls: 66.8 (D)
113) Iowa Hawkeyes: 66.6 (D)
114) Liberty Flames: 66.5 (D)
115) Illinois Fighting Illini: 65.7 (D)
116) South Alabama Jaguars: 65.6 (D)
117) Houston Cougars: 64.8 (D)
118) West Virginia Mountaineers: 64.3 (D)
119) Florida International Golden Panthers: 64.0 (D)
120) Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders: 63.8 (D)
121) Army Black Knights: 63.7 (D)
122) Louisiana Tech Bulldogs: 63.5 (D)
123) North Texas Mean Green: 63.5 (D)
124) Oklahoma Sooners: 63.1 (D)
125) Louisiana-Monroe Warhawks: 63.1 (D)
126) Purdue Boilermakers: 62.8 (D-)
127) SMU Mustangs: 62.8 (D-)
128) Pittsburgh Panthers: 62.4 (D-)
129) UCLA Bruins: 62.4 (D-)
130) Oklahoma State Cowboys: 61.8 (D-)
131) Northern Illinois Huskies: 61.4 (D-)
132) New Mexico State Aggies: 60.4 (D-)
133) Washington State Cougars: 57.1 (F)
134) Bowling Green Falcons: 57.0 (F)
135) Kent State Golden Flashes: 56.9 (F)
136) Stanford Cardinal: N/A
