GWG, do you understand all the stats you posted? I spent some time reading and don't fully agree with some of their methods to the madness in their rankings.
Biggest thing that doesn't make sense at the college level when ranking the OL, they only used RB carries to make that determination. Since Mitch was our third leading rusher that year, his carries would have had a positive impact on our ranking had those carries actually counted. College Football is different in that some teams use the QB often, others don't, but to say the QB doesn't count on running plays when you're running zone read schemes isn't right.
I then decided to look at the stats of just the BIG teams and see how the Gophers compared:
The Adj. Line Yards: MN finished 12, WI was 5 and Iowa was 3 but like I said above, the QB runs were not factored in.
In Standard Down Line Yards(how did the team do on standard running down and dist plays), MN was 6, WI was 5 and Iowa 2
Pass Down Line Yards(how did the team do on passing down running plays : MN was 8, WI was 13 and Iowa was 9
Opportunity Rate(The Percent of carries the line did it's job): MN was 4, WI was 11 and Iowa was 10
Power Success Rate: MN was 10, WI was 3 and Iowa 7
Stuff Rate(Percent of carries that had no gain or a loss): MN was 6, WI was 2 and Iowa was 4 Meaning WI had the least amount of those type of running plays
Adj. Sack Rate: MN was 6, WI was 9 and Iowa was 12
Standard down Sack rate: MN was 3, WI was 6 and Iowa 14
Pass Down Sack Rate: MN was 6, WI was 11 and Iowa 8
Ohio State was number 1 in every category dealing with rushing.
The one area that MN didn't do as well compared to WI and IA would be the the Power Success Category, From the stats, MN was a top half of the league in most OL categories, thus they were pretty good that year on the OL. Thanks for making the case