Echeese,
Those are some pretty selective statistics for Offense, and I was including 2012 as well not just the one year.
There are much better stats out there to judge a teams offense and defense. Efficiency ratings on footballoutsiders.com is the best IMO. Looking at just yards and scoring doesn't tell the whole story.
Louisville was a top 25 offense across the board in offensive efficiency in 2013 and top 30 in 2012.
Click on the link if interested. The ones to look at are "S&P+ Offense" and "FEI Ratings Offense". Here is a description of each:
The S&P+ Ratings are a college football ratings system derived from the play-by-play data of all 800+ of a season's FBS college football games (and 140,000+ plays). There are three key components to the S&P+:
Success Rate: A common Football Outsiders tool used to measure efficiency by determining whether every play of a given game was successful or not. The terms of success in college football: 50 percent of necessary yardage on first down, 70 percent on second down, and 100 percent on third and fourth down.
EqPts Per Play (PPP): An explosiveness measure derived from determining the point value of every yard line (based on the expected number of points an offense could expect to score from that yard line) and, therefore, every play of a given game.
Drive Efficiency: As of February 2013, S&P+ also includes a drive-based aspect based on the field position a team creates and its average success at scoring the points expected based on that field position.
Opponent adjustments: Success Rate and PPP combine to form S&P, an OPS-like measure for football. Then each team's S&P output for a given category (Rushing/Passing on either Standard Downs or Passing Downs) is compared to the expected output based upon their opponents and their opponents' opponents. This is a schedule-based adjustment designed to reward tougher schedules and punish weaker ones.
The S&P+ figures used in the tables below only look at the plays that took place while a game was deemed competitive. Garbage-time plays and possessions have been filtered out of the calculations. The criteria for "garbage time" are as follows: a game is not within 28 points in the first quarter, 24 points in the second quarter, 21 points in the third quarter, or 16 points in the fourth quarter
http://www.footballoutsiders.com/stats/ncaaoff
The Fremeau Efficiency Index (FEI) considers each of the nearly 20,000 possessions every season in major college football. All drives are filtered to eliminate first-half clock-kills and end-of-game garbage drives and scores. A scoring rate analysis of the remaining possessions then determines the baseline possession efficiency expectations against which each team is measured. A team is rewarded for playing well against good teams, win or lose, and is punished more severely for playing poorly against bad teams than it is rewarded for playing well against bad teams.
OFEI: Offensive FEI, the opponent-adjusted efficiency of the given team's offense.
OE: Offensive Efficiency, the raw unadjusted efficiency of the given team's offense, a measure of its actual drive success against expected drive success based on field position.
FD: First Down rate, the percentage of offensive drives that result in at least one first down or touchdown.
AY: Available Yards, yards earned by the offense divided by the total number of yards available based on starting field position.
Ex: Explosive Drives, the percentage of each offense's drives that average at least 10 yards per play.
Me: Methodical Drives, the percentage of each offense's drives that run 10 or more plays.
Va: Value Drives, the percentage of each offense's drives beginning on its own side of the field that reach at least the opponent's 30-yard line.
OSOS Pvs: Offensive Strength of Schedule to date, the likelihood that an elite offense (two standard deviations better than average) would have an above-average OE rating against each of the defenses faced thus far.
OSOS Fut: Offensive Strength of Schedule remaining, the likelihood that an elite offense (two standard deviations better than average) would have an above-average OE rating against each of the defenses remaining on the schedule.
http://www.footballoutsiders.com/stats/ncaaoff