Some Pac-12 numbers for your review.

Number to the left is national rank.

Scoring offense

2. Oregon, 59.8 points per game

3. UCLA, 52.7

11. Arizona State, 44.3

19. Utah, 42.0

20. Oregon State, 41.6

T21. Stanford, 41.3

Total offense

2. UCLA, 614.3 yards per game

3. Oregon, 599.3

5. Washington, 574.0

15. Arizona State, 505.0

16. Utah, 504

19. California, 498.3

Note: Ten Pac-12 offenses average more than 400 yards per game. But Cal shows how yards aren't the end-all. It ranks 10th in the conference in scoring with 29.2 points per game. It would seem we'll see a lot of offense Thursday night when UCLA visits Utah. But you know what should raise the most eyebrows? Stanford averaging 41.3 points per game. The Cardinal averaged 27.9 ppg last year and won the Pac-12.

Rushing offense

1. Oregon, 332.5 yards per game

9. Arizona, 291.5

11. Washington, 288.8

13. UCLA, 284.3

Passing offense

2. Oregon State, 420.6

4. California, 373.0

7. Arizona State, 358.8

12. UCLA, 330.0

14. Washington State, 327.4

25. Colorado, 295.7

Note: On the downside -- Of this group, only UCLA is running the ball well, too. The other five are the bottom five in the conference in rushing, though at No. 8, Arizona State is respectable with 146.2 yards rushing per game.

Scoring defense

T4. Oregon, Washington, 10.8 points per game

12. Arizona, 14.3

29. UCLA, 18.0

Total defense

13. Washington, 288.0

19. USC, 306.8

23. Oregon, 320.5

25. Washington State, 323.8

Yards yielded per play (FBS foes only)

3. Washington, 3.80 yards per play

T4. Oregon, 3.82

18. UCLA, 4.42

19. Arizona, 4.47

23. Stanford, 4.64

29. USC, 4.81

31. Washington State, 4.83

Pass efficiency defense

2. Washington

9. Oregon

13. Arizona

22. USC

Note: What's becoming increasingly clear is Washington's Justin Wilcox is not just a good defensive coordinator, he ranks among the nation's best. He has transformed the Huskies. Of course, the Huskies face Stanford, Oregon and Arizona State over the next three weeks. That will be three HUGE tests for Wilcox and his defense.

Rushing

1. Bishop Sankey, Washington, 151.8

3. Ka'Deem Carey, Arizona, 143.7

5. Jordan James, UCLA, 141.3

17. Tre Madden, USC, 116.6

Note: Three of the nation's top five rushers in the Pac-12? Pretty impressive. It will be interesting to see if James and Madden remain among the nation's top rushers. If the Bruins and James continue to run well, Noel Mazzone's offense will be tough to stop. If the Trojans run the ball as effectively as they did at Arizona State, the passing game with Cody Kessler might get some room to breathe.

Pass efficiency

11. Kevin Hogan, Stanford

12. Keith Price, Washington

15. Travis Wilson, Utah

16. Brett Hundley, UCLA

17. Sean Mannion, Oregon State

21. Marcus Mariota, Oregon

Note: Again, Hogan atop this list should worry all Pac-12 teams. Mannion's 21 TD passes is four more than anyone else in the country, and his second interception of the season, thrown against Colorado, bounced off his receiver's chest. It's not unreasonable to say that if the Beavers hadn't lost to Eastern Washington in the opener, Mannion would be getting a raised eyebrow or two as a Heisman Trophy candidate.

Receiving yards per game

1. Paul Richardson, Colorado, 162.3

2. Brandin Cooks, Oregon State, 161.4

14. Jaelen Strong, Arizona State, 108.3

22. Dres Anderson, Utah, 101.0

Note: Strong is looking every bit like the budding star coach Todd Graham predicted he'd be. Cooks decisively won the battle with Richardson last weekend. If you're looking for a WR to replace USC's Marqise Lee in the Biletnikoff discussion, Cooks is your guy. He's not only stepped out of Markus Wheaton's shadow, he's starting to look like he's better than Wheaton.

Random notes: Stanford and Arizona are tied for second in the nation in tackles for a loss allowed, surrendering just 3.25 per game. Oregon is tied for eighth at 3.75. ... The much-maligned Oregon State defense is 15th in the nation in third down percentage (0.286). The Beavers are also eighth in the nation with eight interceptions. ... UCLA is No. 1, Washington No. 3 and Stanford No. 7 in the nation in third-down conversion percentage on offense. ... Eight of the top 25 players in all-purpose yards come from the Pac-12.