Irish Boy wrote:
Northwestern
You are talking about Northwestern here, which I would argue is a distinctly different team than the rest in the conference. The fact that they are playing an easy schedule is probably not a negative -- the interest in the program is not very high when they hang a 2-9 record up. They played BC this year, which is a reasonably good school. Army is a reasonably good school. The fact that they can beat reasonably good schools is probably good enough for Northwestern at this point. I don't really mind what Fitzgerald has done so far, I think he has been as good as any average coach would be. One benefit of having him as head coach is that you can fire up your supporters since he is "one of their own" and has been doing at least an average job since taking over.
Honestly, do we ever think Northwestern will challenge for a NCAA championship? Unless they greatly reduce their academic standards, I don't see this happening. You talk about Northwestern as if they were the same as a Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, or a Nebraska. Fact is they aren't. They are not the major state school, so they'll never have the same cache that Illinois has in that regard. You play down the fact that they've been to three straight bowls due to bowl dilution... fine, they are diluted, but that lets look at teams that were worse than .500 at bowl time over the last three years -- Minnesota, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Purdue. That is nearly half of the conference.
Your claim that NU is losing on average of 52-15 is correct however, let's compare it to some other teams. How about Minnesota? They lost on an average of 40-11. What about Michigan? 35-16. This should not be surprising since the #1 team in the Big Ten is always going to be ranked in the top 10 in the country by any standard. Also, your analysis is based on 5 games in 5 years -- small sample size. For someone who hates the playoffs, I would imagine that would carry over to any sort of analysis based on a small sample size. Of course, that is the problem when applying game performance to football -- there aren't enough events to generate as meaningful a statistical analysis as baseball or even basketball.
I will tell you now that Northwestern football will not be a national champion as long as the system stays as it currently is. I hope and believe that NU can be competitive in football without sacrificing their academic and athletic ideals. Maybe every once in 20 years they will win the Big Ten, but at least they won't have to deal with the fallout of trying to game the system as most teams in the conference have.