The other day a commenter asked me what I thought the Big Ten needed to do to get back on track. Well, I've only thought about that question every day since the end of last season, so as you might suspect, I have a few ideas.First off, let's put all the cards on the table. What is "broken" in the Big Ten? The league suffers under the perception/reality that, while its teams look very good against each other, they fold up in competition with teams from other conferences, specifically the Big 12, SEC and Pac 10.
Why? Because the Big Ten has become synonymous with a slow, plodding, and most of all boring style of football. Does this sound familiar to some of you? It should.
It's exactly what people were saying about Nebraska football about 16 or 18 years ago.
Consider the stats: Between 1980 and 1993, the Huskers didn't miss going to a bowl game. How did they do in those games? Over the same stretch, they went 4-10. Ouch. From 1987 to 1993, they lost seven straight. Double ouch. That stretch included four Orange Bowls and two Fiesta Bowls. Mommy!
By the early 1990s, Nebraska was generally considered a team that dominated its shockingly weak conference but couldn't run with college football's elite any more. Like I said ... sound familiar? I'm looking at you, Buckeye fans.
So what did Dr. Tom Osborne do about it?
He went out and got himself some faster players, that's what. He didn't fire his assistants, he didn't bring in some trendy new offensive scheme, he just got quicker. Osborne and his staff grabbed fast players like Tommie Frazier out of Bradenton, Fla., and Ahman Green out of Omaha. He didn't just look for speed at the skill positions, however. The whole team began to emphasize quickness.
What did he get for his trouble? How about back-to-back undefeated national championship seasons in 1994 and 1995? How about a brutal filleting of the Florida Gators in the 1996 Fiesta Bowl (62-24, and the game wasn't as close as the score might lead you to believe)? How about a third national title after the 1997 season?
The point is, Osborne listened to his critics. He didn't claim that they didn't know what they were talking about, that his team just needed to try a little harder, that these things go in cycles, that the Titanic couldn't possibly sink, and so on. He looked at the film and said, "You know what? We are a little slower than the other teams. I think I need some faster players." That was the only change he made.
That's something I think the Big Ten can learn from. The schemes aren't fundamentally broken; it's still possible to win in college football without selling out to the spread. What I don't see, though, is a willingness to make the personnel and recruiting adjustments necessary to make these schemes prosper again. There's still too much emphasis on just being bigger and stronger than the other guy. A lot of that is because of how Ohio State and Michigan have historically dominated the conference with a big, physical style of football. Unless the schedule gods have smiled on your team by letting them skip one or both of those schools, you haven't been able to win the conference without beating one or both of them.
So perhaps the first team to make this small philosophical adjustment will be the first to go and make something good happen nationally. Or maybe the overdog himself, Jim Tressel, needs to take Nebraska's experience to heart. In Terrelle Pryor, he already has a quarterback who is essentially Frazier with a better arm. All he needs is a little more quickness all the way down the depth chart, and some of these loudmouth SEC and Big 12 fans will be forced to drink a tall, cool glass of humility. Again.











Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Does Oklahoma get a free pass ? What is there record in BCS title games, or even BCS games ?
ohio state and michigan invented the loudmouth arrogant fans and it has been sweet delight to see their less than mediocre teams(when playing outside the Little 10) flounder for the last several years
Oh you mean when MICH kicked the CRAP out of FLA after tebow won the Heisman... you mean THAT poor team?
Or the Ohio State Team that has more pros playing and starting in the NFL than any team but USC... that mediocre team... you are an assclown... everytime you blog you say really stupid things... please ask you mom if you are allowed to hit post reply next time.
Ohio State and Michigan must have invented you then.
Ahman Green is from Omaha. Lawrence Phillips is from Los Angeles.
You're right, and I've corrected the story. Thanks and my apologies. I was really hoping to write about Nebraska football in that era without mentioning Phillips, too ...
For one of the few times that I can remember I must agree with the author. Admittedly I am a bruised but proud member of the Buckeye Nation, Mark Hasty got this one right.
t goes further than your thimble sized brain can handle I guess, so I ran a few numbers for you from ESPNU RISE TOP 150 over the last four and next two years of high school recruits for the TOP FOOTBALL programs. Here is the tale of the tape......
Florida 55
Southern Cal. 48
Texas 48
Georgia 42
Notre Dame 38
L.S.U. 34
Miami 30
Michigan 30
Alabama 28
Oklahoma 26
Florida State 23
Ohio State 21
Penn State 14
Now you tell me how do you compete without putting in some extra work. With numbers like these it is not a fair fight from the beginning. So how do you beat the numbers? Hard work and captains practices and by watching HOURS and HOURS of film. Why? Pride!!!! Respect!!!! And Alumni that whine and withhold donations IF YOU DO NOT WIN!!!!!!!!!!