The Penn State backfield is about as crowded as a Beaver Stadium concession line on Saturday.

Through the first three games, at least four different Penn State running backs have 12 carries, and none of them have more than 21. In fact, the running back position is so balanced and spread so thin, Nittany Lions quarterback Sean Clifford leads the team with 25 rushing attempts.

Based on what Penn State coach James Franklin said Wednesday night, it doesn’t sound like this four-back rotation is going to change. At least it won’t until someone distinguishes themself from the rest of the group.

Junior running back Journey Brown leads the team with 21 carries and 175 rushing yards, which comes out to an astonishing 8.3 yards per attempt.

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But that’s not the best on the team. The best average among backs with at least 12 carries on the team belongs to freshman Devyn Ford, who possesses a 9.8 rushing yards per carry average. He has 117 yards on 12 attempts.

Fellow freshman Noah Cain hasn’t been too shabby either, rushing for 86 yards on 16 carries. Cain also leads all backs with four rushing touchdowns.

Sophomore running back Ricky Slade is the one struggling the most. He has 21 yards on 12 attempts this year.

Together, the Penn State backfield had accumulated 426 rushing yards and scored 10 touchdowns in three games.

In addition to his backfield, Franklin addressed the Penn State kicking situation Wednesday night. He said sophomore Jake Pinegar will attempt all field goals inside of 50 yards while junior Jordan Stout will specialize in field goals longer than that.

Pinegar is 3-for-3 on field-goal attempts this season, and Stout is 2-for-2. Pinegar has kicked all 18 of Penn State’s extra points and has made all of them.