DJ Durkin's first season in 2022 was similar to John Chavis' first season in 2015 because both defenses allowed more rushing yards than passing yards per game but managed to finish 28th or betting in scoring defense.
2015: 4th in pass defense (166.3 passing yards allowed per game), 107th in run defense (213.7 rushing yards allowed per game), 51st in total defense (380.0 total yards allowed per game) and 28th in scoring defense (22.00 points allowed per game).
2022: 1st in pass defense (156.2 passing yards allowed per game), 124th in run defense (208.8 rushing yards allowed per game), 54th in total defense (365.0 total yards allowed per game) and 25th in scoring defense (21.17 points allowed per game.
2023: Unlike Chavis, Durkin's run defense improved dramatically from 124th (208.8 rushing yards allowed per game) to 13th (108.8 rushing yards allowed per game) in his second year. His pass defense dropped to 37th (207.4 passing yards allowed per game). The scoring defense slipped from 25th (21.17 points allowed per game) to 34th (22.8 points allowed per game) because we allowed 5 defensive or special teams touchdowns (one each to Miami, Auburn, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Mississippi State), and one safety to Alabama for a combined 37 non-offensive opposing points.
Durkin's defense held Auburn to 3 (7 more from fumble return) points, Arkansas to 15 (7 more from pick-6) points, South Carolina to 17 points, and Mississippi State to 3 (7 more from kickoff return) points. Also, his defense held Alabama to 24 (2 more from safety) points and Tennessee to 13 (7 more from punt return) points to keep us competitive from start to finish in those losses. However, Durkin's defense allowed 41 (7 more from punt return) points to Miami, 38 points to Ole Miss, and 42 points to LSU.
In summary, DJ Durkin refused to adjust his scheme to the talent of our roster that would maximize our defensive strengths. I am glad Jay Bateman's defense has been great so far, allowing just 47 points across 3 SEC games for an average of just 15.67 points allowed per SEC game.