I don't know what conclusions to draw from this, but the seasons strike me as very similar to date with the Wisconsin game remaining.
'22 season at this point: 7-4 record, 3 B1G losses as favorites- Purdue, @Illinois, Iowa
'23 season at this point: 5-6 record, 3 B1G losses as favorites- @Northwestern, Illinois,@Purdue
The two win difference is accounted for by replacing Colorado with North Carolina in the non-conference portion of the schedule and Michigan and Ohio State replacing Penn State and Rutgers in the crossover games.
We are currently small underdogs against Wisconsin when we'd likely be a favorite had we not had some of the bad losses on our scehdule which is exactly the point we were at last season. Wisconsin was favored by 3 last year and is favored by 2.5 this year.
PJ has tried to paint '22 as a good year and bemoaned our injuries this year, but it really doesn't track other than purely counting wins. We'd likely have been 5-6 going in to the Wisconsin game last year if we had this years schedule. The entire West (with the exception of maybe Northwestern?) is worse than they were last year. I think the loser of Minnesota and Wisconsin will take the crown for the team that fell off the most. I feel like Wisconsin (even thought they were my pick in the West if it wasn't going to be Minnesota), can point to a new coach, new systems, and a QB injury. Iowa would certainly trade injury luck with us this year though they have been incredibly fortunate in late close games which hasn't been the case for Minnesota.
The killer is those 3 losses each year as favorites. That's a 1/3 of the conference schedule. Why is your veteran/deep team doing this in '22 if the reason for it this year is youth and lack of depth?
Nothing can be done to change the results of those games now, but I hope internally the discussion of "why?" is going deeper than just youth/depth.
'22 season at this point: 7-4 record, 3 B1G losses as favorites- Purdue, @Illinois, Iowa
'23 season at this point: 5-6 record, 3 B1G losses as favorites- @Northwestern, Illinois,@Purdue
The two win difference is accounted for by replacing Colorado with North Carolina in the non-conference portion of the schedule and Michigan and Ohio State replacing Penn State and Rutgers in the crossover games.
We are currently small underdogs against Wisconsin when we'd likely be a favorite had we not had some of the bad losses on our scehdule which is exactly the point we were at last season. Wisconsin was favored by 3 last year and is favored by 2.5 this year.
PJ has tried to paint '22 as a good year and bemoaned our injuries this year, but it really doesn't track other than purely counting wins. We'd likely have been 5-6 going in to the Wisconsin game last year if we had this years schedule. The entire West (with the exception of maybe Northwestern?) is worse than they were last year. I think the loser of Minnesota and Wisconsin will take the crown for the team that fell off the most. I feel like Wisconsin (even thought they were my pick in the West if it wasn't going to be Minnesota), can point to a new coach, new systems, and a QB injury. Iowa would certainly trade injury luck with us this year though they have been incredibly fortunate in late close games which hasn't been the case for Minnesota.
The killer is those 3 losses each year as favorites. That's a 1/3 of the conference schedule. Why is your veteran/deep team doing this in '22 if the reason for it this year is youth and lack of depth?
Nothing can be done to change the results of those games now, but I hope internally the discussion of "why?" is going deeper than just youth/depth.