SelectionSunday
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anyone can see how this type of NC scheduling has benefitted wisconsin.
You mean like last season when it would have cost them a shot at a national title game appearance had either one of the Hail Mary games gone their way?
yes, precisely...why schedule an alabama or oregon in september...and lose to a superior team early...and essentially take yourself out of the nc hunt??
a football team gets more credit for beating up on a low-level mac team or an fcs team, as opposed to losing to an fbs heavyweight...not saying this is the way sit should be...it just is...
Wow, you missed the point entirely. Wisconsin was HURT by having a horrible creampuff sched. Had they won 1 more game in the B1G (either MSU or OSU, take your pick) they would have had their shot at a NC game appearance dashed by low BCS computer scores. The scores that dislike weak non-con scheduling.
Now, that's not a worry for the Gophers right now. But I'd argue that once you're past the point of bowl eligibility scheduling 1 quality non-con game is a good move for the program and fans. After all, one lower tier bowl is like the other so no loss there. It offers a quality road trip on the away leg of the home and home and it offers a good marketing piece on the home leg (a never-ending non-con slate of cupcakes is hard to stomach when you're paying for season tickets). It also has zero bearing on the conference season and thus doesn't hurt the team's chances at winning a division (or even for a good bowl game) if they have a good to great season.
As for the credit for beating a weak schedule thing getting more credit than losing to a heavyweight? I don't agree with that. Maybe it's true for power programs, but I think you'd find the Gophers pigeonholed as having "feasted on cupcakes" and dismissed for that reason (see: pretty much every Glen Mason season ever).
no, actually, you missed the point...
you will see what I mean when top 10 ranked michigan is down against alabama, 28-3, in the 2nd quarter of their nationally televised game on Labor Day weekend....
meanwhile, wisconsin will have drilled northern iowa earlier that same day, and they will surpass michigan in the following week's rankings.......that snickering sound you will be hearing will be coming from bret bielema, as he continues to follow the wisconsin model....
getting pounded in big non-conference games (like michigan vs. alabama) does NOT help as much as you suggest
And yet none of that has anything to do with the accuracy of my point RE: Wisconsin last season and their shot at the title game. Meanwhile, if Michigan gets it done in the conference season they will still represent the B1G in a BCS bowl (another point of mine).
So dinkything, if you think Big Ten teams shouldn't schedule any tough opponents you must love how Tubby schedules for basketball, right?
Then why in the world did you mention Michigan?if you're trying to change a culture of losing, then yes, it's best to schedule winnable games, imho....
Then why in the world did you mention Michigan?
Then why in the world did you mention Michigan?
And I'm not arguing that for this season it's good. Obviously it is. I'm speaking in general, and I did not critique you post on that point. I'm saying that with how far out the schedules have to be made you take the better opponent when you can get it. You never know how a team (yours or the opponent will be) but you should still look to get a pretty good BCS home and home going every year b/c of the overall benefits.that was after the thread took its detour....
my original point was the gophers have one of the easiest non-conference schedules...and that is a good thing, imho, as jerry kill tries to (re) build the program