Once upon a time, Northwestern was the team that people forgot when asked who the eleven teams in the Big Ten are. They might still be that team, but not for lack of trying. For the second year in a row, NU played in the most exciting bowl game of the year, this time falling just short of upsetting Auburn in the Outback Bowl. As Wisconsin is to basketball, Northwestern has become to football, as NU has fielded a series of overlooked and unrenowned players that have consistently outperformed their projections.
Unfortunately, Northwestern football mirrors Wisconsin basketball in another way: the lack of postseason success. Yes, Northwestern took its bowl opponent to overtime in both 2008 and 2009, but the bowl misery streak continues. Northwestern has gotten over a lot of humps—the mid-90s Rose Bowl teams did not usher in a period of purple dominance, but NU has at least become a mid-pack team most years. Perhaps it seems greedy to ask for more, but at some point, that success must be consummated in January (or, at least, late December) to be considered fully legitimate.
The problem extends beyond bowl season. Northwestern has scheduled pitifully in recent years, and has performed even worse. After losing to Duke in 2007, NU barely mustered a victory against the Blue Devils in 2008; this was their toughest out of conference test. Northwestern lost to Syracuse in 2009 (Syracuse went 3-8 against FBS competition) and needed every second to defeat winless Eastern Michigan. Northwestern faced two MAC teams last season with a combined 1-23 record, both at some, and won those games by a total of 13 points.
That general pattern has held true, even in the successful years—win small, lose nasty. Penn State went into Evanston and thrashed the Wildcats 34-13. Michigan State won by 10 in a game that wasn’t quite that close. The season before, the Wildcats lost to Michigan State by 17 and Ohio State by 35. These losses have always inculcated a sense that maybe, despite the records, Northwestern was never quite what the record might have led one to believe. On the other side of the ledger, Northwestern was quite fortunate to win several of their games. Purdue turned the ball over six times in a game Northwestern won by six points. Indiana gave up a 21 point lead to lose by one. Ricky Stanzi’s flimsy ankle gave way in the game at Iowa. An iffy interception on Illinois’s final drive cemented the victory in Champaign.
All of those wins are legitimate, but a play or two the other direction in each game could have meant 4-8, in a season where Ohio State did not appear on the schedule. This doesn’t seem like a 4-8 team, either, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be suspicious of the 8-4 record, either.
In the meantime, a steady procession has meant improvement in recruiting, but gains have been slow; perceptions of Northwestern as a doormat are still common. Claiming a few legitimate pelts will help. The win against Iowa last season was probably the biggest upset, but with Iowa’s starting QB going down early in that game, the best win for Northwestern last season was against a strong Wisconsin team. NU has parlayed weak schedules into strong final records, but if attitudes are going to change, they may need a “wow” moment similar to their victories against ND and Michigan in 1995.
As for this year’s team, as with Wisconsin Basketball, predicting anything worse than a middle of the pack finish is treacherous, although the team on paper (as always) seems weaker than that. NU loses surprisingly efficient QB Mike Kafka, but the NU offense has reached Texas Tech-levels of plug-and-chug at the QB position, dating back to Zak Kustok. The defense lost some talent as well, such as D-lineman Cory Wootten, but once again, for whatever reason, losses of individual players has not yet hurt this team (how long will that last?) But until Northwestern wins that next big game, preferably in a bowl, both Northwestern and Big Ten fans may be forgiven for thinking that waiting for the great Northwestern breakthrough might have the same results as waiting for Godot.
_________________ Fire Phil Emery
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