fmlizard
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For sure. I think that’s a given.
They are going to adopt a 5 locked 5 random schedule
Minnesota will play Iowa, wisconsin, Michigan, Nebraska + 1 every year
Cycle through the other 10 home and home every 4 years.
This is the only way you can build a schedule that has only small chances for 3 way ties of teams that doesn’t play each other.
Also the only way USC plays penn state and Ohio state every year without having them in the same “division”
I predict:
Illinois - northwestern, Purdue, Indiana, Maryland, Ohio state
Indiana - purdue, Illinois, Rutgers, Maryland, Michigan state
Iowa - Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska, northwestern, USC
Maryland - penn state, Rutgers, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan
Michigan - Ohio state, Michigan state, Minnesota, Maryland, Rutgers
Michigan state - Michigan, penn state, northwestern, Indiana, Minnesota
Minnesota - Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, Michigan state
Nebraska - Iowa, UCLA, USC, Minnesota, wisconsin
Northwestern - Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, Michigan state, Purdue
Ohio state - penn state, Michigan, USC, UCLA, Illinois
Penn state - Maryland, Rutgers, Ohio state,
Michigan state, USC
Purdue - Illinois, Indiana, UCLA, Rutgers, northwestern
Rutgers - penn state, Maryland, Indiana, Purdue, Michigan
UCLA - Nebraska, wisconsin, USC, Purdue, Ohio State
USC - Penn State, Nebraska, Iowa, Ohio State, UCLA
Wisconsin - Minnesota, Iowa, northwestern, Nebraska, UCLA
This would be a death knell for Gopher football based on anything we know today. Our problem with a protected rivalry system is that most of Minnesota's rivals are good at football. We've got the top historical programs (ex OSU) among our rivals. It's not like Minnesota can't beat these teams, but the steady, annual grind of upper tier foes when other teams are playing lower tier foes is a lot to overcome.
If they passed this, they will rejoice at Indiana, Purdue, Illinois, Northwestern...who just so happen to have nearby rivalries with traditionally lower-end opponents. Minnesota would be the biggest loser.
It's been my position for years that Indiana should promote the end of divisions more than any other school because it gets them out of the East and into a bunch of protected games with (traditionally) lower-division programs like Purdue and Illinois.