BleedGopher
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per Forde:
THE NEBRASKA COROLLARY
The hurricane of response to Bo Pelini (11) and his potty-mouthed, two-year-old dissertation on Nebraska fans has blown over. But what’s left behind is the bigger-picture reality: Can Pelini (or anyone) ever win again at a Tom Osborne, national-title level?
Using the recruiting criteria discussed above, the odds are against it.
Osborne worked a miracle in Lincoln, growing a powerhouse out of a talent puddle. He raided bigger states for skill-position players and ran them behind corn-fed (and sometimes steroid-fed) linemen from the heartland. Nebraska could sell America’s first deluxe weight room, built in an era when ticket revenue was a differentiating factor in terms of what schools could afford in terms of facilities.
Today, thanks to TV money and deep-pocketed boosters, all the power programs have great facilities. Nebraska doesn’t have anything special to sell in the Sun Belt, and those kids are too far removed from Lincoln to make all-important unofficial (unpaid) campus visits where the early recruiting foundation is laid.
Combine those factors with some clear recruiting misses in recent years – especially on defense – and the Cornhuskers are held captive in good-but-not-great territory. Which is not where the passionate and loyal fan base aspires to be.
Heading into their game against South Dakota State, the starting lineup averaged a 3.0 star rating and was frightfully young on the defensive side with five players from the 2012 and ’13 recruiting classes. Just seven starters are Nebraska products, including walk-on twins Jake and Spencer Long. The rest are a hodgepodge from eight different states.
The Cornhuskers don’t have a Louisville-style pipeline to Florida or anywhere else. What they mostly have are a core of moderately-sought-after Midwestern players and a few expatriates from warm-weather hotbeds who may be good enough to compete in the Big Ten, but aren’t likely to revive the Osborne glory days anytime soon.
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/ncaaf-...nd-where-they-get-their-talent-044110856.html
Go Gophers!!
THE NEBRASKA COROLLARY
The hurricane of response to Bo Pelini (11) and his potty-mouthed, two-year-old dissertation on Nebraska fans has blown over. But what’s left behind is the bigger-picture reality: Can Pelini (or anyone) ever win again at a Tom Osborne, national-title level?
Using the recruiting criteria discussed above, the odds are against it.
Osborne worked a miracle in Lincoln, growing a powerhouse out of a talent puddle. He raided bigger states for skill-position players and ran them behind corn-fed (and sometimes steroid-fed) linemen from the heartland. Nebraska could sell America’s first deluxe weight room, built in an era when ticket revenue was a differentiating factor in terms of what schools could afford in terms of facilities.
Today, thanks to TV money and deep-pocketed boosters, all the power programs have great facilities. Nebraska doesn’t have anything special to sell in the Sun Belt, and those kids are too far removed from Lincoln to make all-important unofficial (unpaid) campus visits where the early recruiting foundation is laid.
Combine those factors with some clear recruiting misses in recent years – especially on defense – and the Cornhuskers are held captive in good-but-not-great territory. Which is not where the passionate and loyal fan base aspires to be.
Heading into their game against South Dakota State, the starting lineup averaged a 3.0 star rating and was frightfully young on the defensive side with five players from the 2012 and ’13 recruiting classes. Just seven starters are Nebraska products, including walk-on twins Jake and Spencer Long. The rest are a hodgepodge from eight different states.
The Cornhuskers don’t have a Louisville-style pipeline to Florida or anywhere else. What they mostly have are a core of moderately-sought-after Midwestern players and a few expatriates from warm-weather hotbeds who may be good enough to compete in the Big Ten, but aren’t likely to revive the Osborne glory days anytime soon.
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/ncaaf-...nd-where-they-get-their-talent-044110856.html
Go Gophers!!