BigGopher69
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no major bowl games so no
I wouldn't take their record if you had to also take their fan base apathy. Even in those good years they were back page news and games we played against them in good years or following good years were in front of empty stands. At least when we have a modicum of success our fans get jacked up. I wouldn't trade the season opener atmosphere of the TCU game after Kills good year for any game played at Ryan field in the last 10 years.
IMO, It's not even close. We were meh last year, lost to BG this year, and we are putting 40K into the stands and filling most of the endzone with students every game. Northwestern won the big ten west last year and I just bought tickets for $15 for 12 seats together lower level. There will be 12-15K fans at the NW game this weekend.I think a neutral observer would say the Minnesota "apathy" is pretty comparable to Northwestern, only slightly not as bad. Outside of the heat in 2019 and a year or so in Kill's program it's pretty much a draw in my opinion. There have been several Big 10 Gopher games with well under 30,000 (actually in house) in recent memory. Were there even 30,000 at the Maryland game last week in perfect weather? Barely, I guess. Maybe.
As for games at Ryan Field in the past 10 years, I am sure the atmosphere had to be at least as good when they hosted Notre Dame in 2018. They lost that one, but still they were on their way to Indy that season.
They are dumping a ton of money into Ryan Field to basically rebuild it, I like their outlook long term.
Yeah, I agree. I love the U but I think going to school in a college town would have been more fun.I love the University of Minnesota -- and I may be in the minority -- but I would rather go to college in a smaller town where everything was focused on the university. Additionally with the great things we have in the city we also have more crime which can be a deterrent to more rural prospective students.
I too, would push over your Grandma to watch the Gophers play in the Rose Bowl.I'd push over my Grandma to just get to watch the Gophers in one Rose Bowl before I croak.
I think it was 42kI think a neutral observer would say the Minnesota "apathy" is pretty comparable to Northwestern, only slightly not as bad. Outside of the heat in 2019 and a year or so in Kill's program it's pretty much a draw in my opinion. There have been several Big 10 Gopher games with well under 30,000 (actually in house) in recent memory. Were there even 30,000 at the Maryland game last week in perfect weather? Barely, I guess. Maybe.
As for games at Ryan Field in the past 10 years, I am sure the atmosphere had to be at least as good when they hosted Notre Dame in 2018. They lost that one, but still they were on their way to Indy that season.
They are dumping a ton of money into Ryan Field to basically rebuild it, I like their outlook long term.
For the Maryland game? Tickets sold...sure, in-house more like 30k, maybe as high as 35k.I think it was 42k
Looked quite full to me for most of the game… some ducked out early though.For the Maryland game? Tickets sold...sure, in-house more like 30k, maybe as high as 35k.
Hard to gauge, looked like a lot of room in the corners and in the shade. StarTribune article in 2019 had a statistic that 81.6% of tickets sold were actually used that season. Based on that I am quite confident in my 30-35k estimate. Probably right in the middle.Looked quite full to me for most of the game… some ducked out early though.
IMO, It's not even close. We were meh last year, lost to BG this year, and we are putting 40K into the stands and filling most of the endzone with students every game. Northwestern won the big ten west last year and I just bought tickets for $15 for 12 seats together lower level. There will be 12-15K fans at the NW game this weekend.
Fascinating question you asked. I'm going to extend your time series a few years further because that provides more illustration of your theme.It is true that Northwestern has been a solid program for a while. The big dips after the West championships are easier to take knowing that even before winning the division the Wildcats had some really good years. The dips are harder to take if you're looking more short term.
Here's NU's record going back farther; I'm sure most of us would take this seven-year span:
2015: 10-3, 7-2 (finished 23rd in AP poll)
2016: 7-6, 5-4
2017: 10-3, 7-2 (17th in AP poll)
2018: 9-5 overall, 8-1 conference, West champions (21st in AP poll)
2019: 3-9, 1-8
2020: 7-2, 6-1, West champions (10th in AP poll)
2021: 3-4, 1-3 so far
I wouldn't take their record if you had to also take their fan base apathy. Even in those good years they were back page news and games we played against them in good years or following good years were in front of empty stands.
Right. Iowa football is to Iowa what the Vikings are to most Minnesotans. Add to that Iowa has no other pro sports, and their only focus is on U of Iowa sports. Same for Nebraska.What you're calling fan base apathy may be mostly a function of numbers. The U of M had just over 31,000 undergraduates in the fall of 2019. Northwestern had just over 8,000 in the fall of 2020. Lower enrollment also translates in lower numbers of alumni. Of course, U of M's undergraduate enrollment is also going to be far more homegrown and that translates into a higher percentage of local alumni as well.
As someone who spent about a decade in Iowa during my younger days, I would call the average Minnesotan far more apathetic about Gopher football than the average Iowan (at least eastern Iowan) about Hawkeye football. I've lived and worked here for almost 20 years now and I probably can count the number of people on one hand (definitely less than two full hands anyway) who have brought up the Gophers to me in a conversation.
Maybe Vanderbilt has the same situation in the SEC?
I wonder if Wildcat fans celebrated the conference success in 2018 or spent all season griping about the Akron loss. It seems we have a sizable contingent of fans that won’t ever let go of the Bowling Green loss regardless of how the rest of the season goes.Northwestern went 1-2 out of conference in 2018 with a loss to Akron in the same season they won the division.
I tend to agree with you. In the 1990s Williams Arena rocked, even though the Gophers were .500 (conference) in most of those years (before 1997), with the nice tournament runs in 89 and 90. But they showed they could beat anybody in the country at home, they were never bad and it was always fun. Over the long term, I'd probably take a team that was always good, even if it didn't end in a championship.Fascinating question you asked. I'm going to extend your time series a few years further because that provides more illustration of your theme.
2012: 10-3 (finished 17th in AP poll)
2013: 5-7
2014: 5-7
2015: 10-3, 7-2 (finished 23rd in AP poll)
2016: 7-6, 5-4
2017: 10-3, 7-2 (17th in AP poll)
2018: 9-5 overall, 8-1 conference, West champions (21st in AP poll)
2019: 3-9, 1-8
2020: 7-2, 6-1, West champions (10th in AP poll)
2021: 3-4, 1-3 so far
Northwestern is the only team in the Big Ten (and probably one of the very, very few in college football) where you can see this much year-to-year variation in records. Most teams likely are either consistently good with an occasional mediocre or losing year (like Iowa), consistently poor/mediocre with an occasional successful year (like Indiana), or perhaps mediocre/poor for a stretch and then more successful in an adjacent period (like Iowa State).
I guess my answer to your question would be: NO. I would prefer not having many lows at all to having more lows but greater highs when they come. A lot of posters on this site seem to really value winning the Western Division but I have mixed feelings about that because that feat normally gets one a date with Ohio State and another loss on the schedule. I'd rather fewer bad moments than very occasional high moments with greater prestige. Prestige isn't much my thing anyway.
I tried to search around for what I thought would be my preferred pattern over Northwestern's. I'm not sure I could find one in the Big Ten but I wanted a team playing in a conference with 9 conference games for comparability. Here's what I came up with:
View attachment 14994
This is the eight year tenure of Dana Holgorsen at West Virginia (he's now the coach at Houston). The first year (2011) they were in the Big East but the remaining years were in the Big 12. His WV team finished the season ranked in only 3 of those years (2011, 2016, and 2018), he won 10 games only twice over the eight years (one of those was in the Big East), but he had only one losing season and that was also the only one without bowl eligibility. In 5 of those 8 years he had a winning conference record and fell just short in two others but he had only one 7 win conference season.
Well done.Fascinating question you asked. I'm going to extend your time series a few years further because that provides more illustration of your theme.
2012: 10-3 (finished 17th in AP poll)
2013: 5-7
2014: 5-7
2015: 10-3, 7-2 (finished 23rd in AP poll)
2016: 7-6, 5-4
2017: 10-3, 7-2 (17th in AP poll)
2018: 9-5 overall, 8-1 conference, West champions (21st in AP poll)
2019: 3-9, 1-8
2020: 7-2, 6-1, West champions (10th in AP poll)
2021: 3-4, 1-3 so far
Northwestern is the only team in the Big Ten (and probably one of the very, very few in college football) where you can see this much year-to-year variation in records. Most teams likely are either consistently good with an occasional mediocre or losing year (like Iowa), consistently poor/mediocre with an occasional successful year (like Indiana), or perhaps mediocre/poor for a stretch and then more successful in an adjacent period (like Iowa State).
I guess my answer to your question would be: NO. I would prefer not having many lows at all to having more lows but greater highs when they come. A lot of posters on this site seem to really value winning the Western Division but I have mixed feelings about that because that feat normally gets one a date with Ohio State and another loss on the schedule. I'd rather fewer bad moments than very occasional high moments with greater prestige. Prestige isn't much my thing anyway.
I tried to search around for what I thought would be my preferred pattern over Northwestern's. I'm not sure I could find one in the Big Ten but I wanted a team playing in a conference with 9 conference games for comparability. Here's what I came up with:
View attachment 14994
This is the eight year tenure of Dana Holgorsen at West Virginia (he's now the coach at Houston). The first year (2011) they were in the Big East but the remaining years were in the Big 12. His WV team finished the season ranked in only 3 of those years (2011, 2016, and 2018), he won 10 games only twice over the eight years (one of those was in the Big East), but he had only one losing season and that was also the only one without bowl eligibility. In 5 of those 8 years he had a winning conference record and fell just short in two others but he had only one 7 win conference season.