
Delaware State vs. North Carolina Central women's basketball tickets still available for Monday, February 24
Monday's MEAC slate includes the Delaware State Hornets (4-19) against the North Carolina Central Eagles (7-17) at 5:30 PM ET. Buy tickets for Delaware State vs. North Carolina Central Shop college basketball tickets at SeatGeek Shop college basketball tickets at StubHub Delaware State vs. North Carolina Central game information Date: Monday, February 24, 2025
Monday, February 24, 2025 Time: 5:30 PM ET
5:30 PM ET Location: Dover, Delaware
Dover, Delaware Venue: Memorial Hall Gym
Memorial Hall Gym Tickets: Buy tickets here Watch college basketball on Fubo! Delaware State leaders Kiarra Mcelrath: 12.9 PTS, 3.7 REB, 1.3 AST, 1.9 STL, 0.4 BLK
12.9 PTS, 3.7 REB, 1.3 AST, 1.9 STL, 0.4 BLK Mahogany Cottingham: 12.7 PTS, 2.3 REB, 1.9 AST, 1.4 STL, 0.1 BLK
12.7 PTS, 2.3 REB, 1.9 AST, 1.4 STL, 0.1 BLK Ericka Huggins: 6.8 PTS, 6.7 REB, 0.4 AST, 1.3 STL, 0.9 BLK
6.8 PTS, 6.7 REB, 0.4 AST, 1.3 STL, 0.9 BLK McKenzie Stewart: 4.9 PTS, 8.4 REB, 1.1 AST, 1.6 STL, 0.7 BLK
4.9 PTS, 8.4 REB, 1.1 AST, 1.6 STL, 0.7 BLK Najah Lane: 5.7 PTS, 1.7 REB, 2.8 AST, 1.0 STL, 0.0 BLK North Carolina Central leaders Morgan Callahan: 13.3 PTS, 7.4 REB, 1.4 STL, 1.2 BLK, 42.7 FG%
13.3 PTS, 7.4 REB, 1.4 STL, 1.2 BLK, 42.7 FG% Kyla Bryant: 13.9 PTS, 1.1 STL, 31.2 FG%, 24.5 3PT% (27-for-110)
13.9 PTS, 1.1 STL, 31.2 FG%, 24.5 3PT% (27-for-110) Shakiria Foster: 11.0 PTS, 1.5 STL, 39.6 FG%, 31.3 3PT% (30-for-96)
11.0 PTS, 1.5 STL, 39.6 FG%, 31.3 3PT% (30-for-96) Jada Tiggett: 5.5 PTS, 2.1 BLK, 39.8 FG%, 23.1 3PT% (3-for-13)
5.5 PTS, 2.1 BLK, 39.8 FG%, 23.1 3PT% (3-for-13) Aysia Hinton: 6.5 PTS, 35.0 FG%, 35.4 3PT% (40-for-113) Delaware State vs. North Carolina Central stats breakdown This year the Hornets are shooting 35.2% from the field, 8.2% lower than the Eagles concede.
The Eagles' 36.7% shooting percentage is 6.5% lower than the Hornets have conceded.
North Carolina Central is 2-0 against the spread and 5-1 overall when shooting higher than 43.2% from the field.
The Hornets and Eagles rebound at about the same rate, with the Hornets averaging 2.6 fewer rebounds per game.
The Hornets are 311th in rebounding in the country, and the Eagles are 204th.
The 55.1 points the Hornets average are 27.1 fewer than the Eagles allow.
The Eagles put up 10.9 fewer points per game (60.7) than the Hornets allow (71.6). Shop college basketball tickets at SeatGeek Shop college basketball tickets at StubHub
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In 2020, there were only two — Aaron Donald of the Los Angeles Rams and DeForest Buckner of the Indianapolis Colts. Donald might be the best interior defensive lineman ever to play the position(s), which tends to skew things from a historical perspective. Today, big contracts for the bigger guys are the norm. This was accentuated by a 2025 draft that may have been deeper at IDL than any class before it. Four IDL were selected in the top 21 picks in the draft — five in the first round — and 30 were selected overall. So, here's why NFL teams see interior defensive linemen as more important than ever before. The shortest distance between two points Obviously, the closer you are to the quarterback in terms of straight-line distance, the more quickly you can eliminate the gap between you and him to create pressure. 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Michigan's Mason Graham, selected fifth overall by the Cleveland Browns, lined up head over or to one side of the center 29% of the time last season, either over or outside the guard 60% of the time and either over or outside the tackles 11% of the time. Kenneth Grant, Graham's former linemate with the Wolverines, went 13th overall to the Miami Dolphins. Last season, Grant (who outweighed Graham by 35 pounds at 331 to 296 at the NFL Scouting Combine) spent 57% of his snaps beating up opposing centers and guards as an inside double-team soaker, but the rest of his time as a more aggressive 3-technique tackle, using his unusual agility to scream through gaps to the ball-carrier. Mason GrahamKirby Lee-Imagn Images 'I feel like the combination — he's a bigger dude, obviously he plays 0-technique and 3-techniques, but we're both very athletic players, and I feel like we work well with each other,' Graham told Athlon Sports when asked how it was to work with Grant. 'Having two big guys that are dominant inside, I feel like we help each other, and I feel like he's an awesome player.' Advertisement Then there's how you fit all those different types of talent into your fronts. There's a lot more to it than putting a big guy in a gap and telling him to hunt the quarterback. 'You start with what their measurables are,' Buffalo Bills general manager Brandon Beane told Athlon Sports about the requirements for evaluating multi-gap defensive line prospects. 'What does this guy look like? What are his features, arm length, size? What does he do best? Is he best as a rusher? Like, is this a guy you want to line up in a 3-tech role and get a one-on-one against a guard? Is this guy just a power, straight-up ass-kicker? He's going to walk his guy back into the pocket. Maybe he's not going to flip his hips, but he's going to condense the pocket and push the guard or the center into the quarterback's lap. 'You want different pieces for different guys. You don't want to always just be able to have run-stuffers and nobody who can get to the quarterback. And you can't just have a slew of guys that can't stop the run when it's December, it's cold, it's snowing and guys are just going to line up in the backfield. So, we want to be versatile with our skill sets and be able to attack in as many different ways as we can.' Which is really the name of the game when it comes to maximizing your interior defensive linemen. Back to the future When Buddy Ryan put together the Chicago Bears defenses that peaked in 1985 with perhaps the greatest defense in football history, one of his primary constructs was the 'Bear Front.' This was a five-man front with a nose tackle's head over the center, two larger defensive ends deployed as defensive tackles to the guards' outside shoulders and two faster edge defenders outside the tackles. The main idea was to force single-team blocks inside, because the center had to deal with the nose tackle in the middle of the line, and the guards couldn't help because they were each dealing with tackles to their outside alignments. Advertisement Last season, NFL defenses lined up in five-man fronts on 810 snaps. Five years before, in 2019, they did so 629 times. A few years before, in 2016, they did so 464 times. Five-man fronts are becoming more popular, and for the same reasons now that existed back in Ryan's day. When you have more defensive fronts in which there are three interior defensive linemen to two edge defenders … well, again, the math is clear, as is the value. Make way for the stuntmen Line stunts, in which one lineman acts as the looper to set up another lineman as the penetrator to the pocket, have also increased in number and importance in recent years. There were 6,236 stunts in the 2024 season, and of those, 1,242 — a full 20% — were stunts in which the interior defensive linemen were the only ones doing the stunting, while the edge defenders were going after the quarterback in more traditional ways. Since we began this article with the defending Super Bowl champion Eagles, let's end there as well. The Eagles didn't blitz the Chiefs once in Super Bowl LIX, but they did send 11 stunts after Mahomes. And against those 11 stunts, Mahomes completed 2-of-5 passes for 17 yards, two sacks, one offensive holding penalty, one interception returned for a touchdown and three quarterback scrambles. More often than not, it was Philadelphia's interior defensive linemen who were the tone-setters for the whole operation. Advertisement 'The four-man rush was key,' All-Pro linebacker Zack Baun said right after the Super Bowl win. 'We were getting pressure and collapsing the pocket. I was just in coverage, and I'm looking at the pocket just shrink on them, and the guys were eating up front for sure. With the guys we have, it's always enough.' It's not just that the Eagles have more advanced plans for their interior defensive linemen, to their great benefit — it's that the entire NFL sees the big men in the middle as true difference-makers more than ever before. All advanced metrics courtesy of Pro Football Focus and Sports Info Solutions. NFL team previews AFC East: Bills | Dolphins | Jets | Patriots AFC North: Bengals | Browns | Ravens | Steelers AFC South: Colts | Jaguars | Texans | Titans AFC West: Broncos | Chargers | Chiefs | Raiders NFC East: Commanders | Cowboys | Eagles | Giants NFC North: Bears | Lions | Packers | Vikings NFC South: Buccaneers | Falcons | Panthers | Saints NFC West: 49ers | Cardinals | Rams | Seahawks Advertisement Related: Athlon Sports 2025 NFL Preview Magazine Now Available Related: Saquon Barkley Leads the NFL's Running Back Renaissance This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 13, 2025, where it first appeared.
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