Our rushing offense was 23rd that year (208.9).
Our passing offense was 80th (153.9).
Our scoring offense was 26th (27.7).
Our TOTAL offense was 53rd out of 107 teams, so we were almost precisely an AVERAGE offense. That's funny to me because it always felt we were BELOW average.
But there's ALWAYS a second side to any statistic in sports.
We faced the following defenses:
Auburn - #11 rush defense, #7 pass defense, #5 total
Ole Miss - #3 rush, #6 pass, #6 total, #16 scoring
Miami - #8 rush, #5 pass, #8 total, #3 scoring
Florida - #25 rush
Tennessee - #26 total, #15 scoring
Southern Miss - #8 pass defense, #27 scoring defense (17.7 ppg)
La Tech - #10 scoring defense
Miss St - #17 scoring defense
Everyone looks at Auburn's 5-5-1 record and says, "They were lousy," but the fact is their defense was REALLY good. They gave up a lot of their points because their offense kept turning the ball over in their own side of the field. The "worst" scoring defense was faced was Tulane (98).
SCORING DEFENSE STATS 1992 (WHAT WE GOT)
Miami - 11.5 (34, granted, we had a Pick Six but we also got robbed 4 points on a dumb penalty)
La Tech - 15.2 (13)
Tennessee - 15.7 (17)
Ole Miss - 15.8 (31)
Miss St - 16.0 (30)
USM - 17.7 (17)
Auburn - 18.6 (17)
Arkansas - 19.0 (38)
S Carolina - 21.8 (48)
Florida - 22.8 (28)
LSU - 23.7 (31)
Vandy - 25.2 (25)
Tulane - 31.7 (37)
So.....three times we were held BELOW a team's average point surrendered (I don't count Vandy since you can't score .2 points, round down). But we were not held MUCH BELOW it, so those are essentially average performances. On the other hand, we doubled (or nearly doubled) the average surrender four times and TRIPLED it in a national championship game where the other team knew we were running it and still couldn't stop it.
What I'm saying is this: viewed in the context of the schedule, the 1992 offense wasn't nearly as bad as everyone remembers/thinks it was. It wasn't exactly the 1999 Rams, but it wasn't the 2000 Ravens, either.
Well, on offense it wasn't.