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Gordon

Goodbye & Good Riddance To 2012 Big Ten FB

By Gordon — December 2nd, 2012 at 1:57 AM — 47 comments

As I start this, the clock has just expired on one of the worst seasons ever for Big Ten football.

The season ended with another embarrassment for the conference, summing up a season of negative momentum and catastrophe.  The 7-5 Wisconsin Badgers, 4-4 in the conference, are your 2012 Big Ten champions.  Your Big Ten champions won the conference by showing up in the title game, and getting grouped in with two ineligible teams.  Hurrah.

This game, one where the Badgers blew out the scoreboard and blew away a national television audience to other games, seemed like an appropriate end to it all.  Sloppy football, in the most generic of settings, with every other option more attractive.

How did we get this way?  A couple of reasons, all of which can be turned around.

First, there's Ohio State and Penn State's ineligibility.  With these two banned teams doing so well, they essentially knocked off all the legitimate schools on their way to useless records.  Since neither school counts in the BCS standings, the Buckeyes and Nittany Lions created a scenario where the talking point was constantly 'the Big Ten has no schools in the top 10/15/20...but would have one if Ohio State was eligible!'

Looking at the week-to-week polls, Ohio State's victories knocked Big Ten contenders out of the polls, and out of the national discussion in the process.  In week 5, a Michigan State team that had dropped from 10 to 20 after a loss to Notre Dame faced Ohio State, and the Buckeyes' 1-point win dropped Sparty out for good.

The next week, Ohio State beat a 21st-ranked Nebraska team, knocking them out of polls for a month or so.

Meanwhile, Penn State struggled early (taking them out of any polls), but lit up the Big Ten schedule.  Their 3-0 start inside the conference included Northwestern's first loss, a crippling blow in the rankings for the Wildcats.

If these two teams came out struggling in 2012, the perception of the conference is that of a strong conference with traditional winners and new blood, plus two longtime powers that will come back soon.  But with their success this year, Ohio State and Penn State created wins that couldn't really be celebrated and losses that really made an impact.

Second, Notre Dame.  The Fighting Irish are 12-0, with two early wins over Michigan and Michigan State.  Typically, both of our in-state teams can beat up on the Fighting Irish in at least one of the two games, and get a momentum-building win on a national stage.  That didn't happen this year.

On top of that, both Michigan and Michigan State lost to Notre Dame before they became the nation's darlings.  Notre Dame won in East Lansing as the underdogs, with a #20 ranking against the #10 Spartans.  The Fighting Irish beat Michigan as the #11 team in the country two weeks later, just out of top-10 status.  No honor to be gained at the time with those losses.

Third, all out-of-conference play killed the Big Ten.

It wasn't Michigan losing badly to Alabama.  It was Michigan losing to Alabama after Wisconsin barely beat Northern Iowa.  It was Wisconsin getting upset by Oregon State, despite that unranked Oregon State team going 6-0 to start the year.  It was Penn State starting 0-2, Iowa dropping a couple early, and the week-to-week consistency of a surprisingly tough schedule beating the dregs of the conference.

Even though Louisiana Tech finished 9-3 and Illinois finished 2-10, it still looks bad for the conference at the time.

Even though Wisconsin lost to Oregon State and barely beat Utah State, two opponents who ended with great seasons, it looked bad in the national dialogue.

And having the flagship program, Michigan, start 2-2 seems to be a bad sign of things to come.

There aren't that many great games in September, so any kind of storyline gets beaten into the ground.  And by the time conference play began, the Big Ten had a rough month through a stretch of shockingly tough opponents, with the effects showing all year.

Lastly, legitimate scheduling hurt the conference.

The vast majority of the nation's football fans only look at the top 25.  When there's no Big Ten teams in the top 10, and barely any outside of the bottom, there's a bad perception.  Sure, it's only perception, but that really is the only thing keeping this sport together.

By having a tradition-based conference where so many good teams play each other, teams are bound to drop a game or two.  Of the top conference teams, here's who they lost to:

Nebraska - Ohio State

Michigan - Nebraska, Ohio State

Northwestern - Penn State, Nebraska, Michigan

Ohio State - None, but they're ineligible, so are always mentioned with a verbal asterisk

Penn State - Ohio State, Nebraska

Wisconsin - Nebraska, Michigan State, Ohio State, Penn State

Of the top six teams, only one lost to a team outside this group, Wisconsin to Michigan State.

It was the same in the SEC, where the top three teams in each division went undefeated against everyone else.

Problem is, a loss in the Big Ten means that you're not as good as you thought.  But a loss in the SEC means that the SEC is just a great conference that's so tough to win in.  Perception, perception, perception.

Once again, when looking back, Big Ten teams played the toughest schedule.  At the time though, it just looked like a weak conference.

----

All of these problems can easily be fixed next year.

It starts by taking care of business in September, and getting that momentum going for the conference schedule.  In the second week of the season, Michigan hosts Notre Dame.  One week later, Nebraska hosts UCLA.  Those two potential wins, over 2012's most talked-about comeback teams, could set the tone for the season.

Next, having Ohio State come off probation is huge.  The Big Ten needs to get teams in that BCS discussion when the time comes around, and the obvious candidates are Michigan, Nebraska, and either Ohio State or Wisconsin.  The either/or is due to those two teams playing in late-September, knocking one out of the national championship discussion.

In a perfect world for the Big Ten, Michigan and Nebraska go undefeated for two months, both open up in the top 10 of the BCS, play a game with national implications, then end the season with Michigan aiming to knock off Ohio State, and Nebraska awaiting their potential shot after that.  That's the best case scenario for the Big Ten, and it only happens when Ohio State is eligible.

Last (or first), the conference has to win some bowl games.  If Wisconsin can upset Stanford like they upset Nebraska, it's good for the conference.  If Michigan can take out Johnny Football, it's good for the conference.

Since everything comes down to perception, those wins to end the year can start some positive talk for the conference, or at least shut up the naysayers for eight months of offseason chatter.

This was a rough year for the Big Ten.  Conclusively 4th out of the major conferences.  Shut out of national title discussion.  It was a perfect storm of suck.

But hey, next year starts tomorrow.  And there's always basketball.

  • 47 comments

Stat Dump - Hypothetical Big Ten division championships and title games, 1969-2011

By Gordon — November 21st, 2012 at 3:05 AM — 24 comments
Filed under:
  • Big Ten
  • Big Ten Championship Game
  • football
  • football

Now that the Big Ten is in full meltdown expansion mode, a lot of people are asking about The Game and its impact on the Big Ten championship game, now and in the future.  How often both teams appear, how The Game affects the division champions for better and for worse, and everything affliated with it.

The biggest complaint has been a schedule that has Michigan and Ohio State playing each other every year, with weaker teams having guaranteed rivalries against each other.  As it turns out, due to regularly dominant teams...Michigan and Ohio State typically come out on top anyway.

I looked at the Big Ten standings and results from 1969-2011.  1969 is the arrival of Bo Schembechler, the start of the modern M/O rivalry.  And in 2012, Ohio State is ineligible to win the division, the first time that's happened as the game was being played.

The standings are from the regular Big Ten schedule, without it being weighted for divisional matchups.  Division winners were the two teams that finished highest in the Big Ten standings, as divided up by the current divisions.  (If a 4th place team was the highest of a current division's teams, they were the appointed division champions.)  Ties were broken with head-to-head matchups, and if the teams did not play each other, I split the division title.

----

First off, here's how the Big Ten championship games would have looked like, under the current divisions.

1969 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1970 - Michigan/Northwestern vs Ohio State
1971 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1972 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1973 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1974 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1975 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1976 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1977 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1978 - Michigan State vs Purdue
1979 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1980 - Michigan vs Ohio State/Purdue
1981 - Iowa vs Ohio State
1982 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1983 - Michigan vs Illinois
1984 - Iowa vs Ohio State
1985 - Iowa vs Illinois
1986 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1987 - Michigan State vs Indiana
1988 - Michigan vs Illinois
1989 - Michigan vs Illinois
1990 - Iowa vs Illinois
1991 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1992 - Michigan vs Ohio State
1993 - Michigan vs Ohio State/Wisconsin
1994 - Michigan vs Penn State
1995 - Northwestern vs Ohio State
1996 - Northwestern vs Ohio State
1997 - Michigan vs Penn State
1998 - Michigan vs Ohio State/Wisconsin
1999 - Michigan State vs Wisconsin
2000 - Northwestern vs Purdue
2001 - Michigan vs Illinois
2002 - Iowa vs Ohio State
2003 - Michigan vs Ohio State
2004 - Michigan vs Wisconsin
2005 - Michigan vs Penn State
2006 - Michigan vs Ohio State
2007 - Michigan vs Ohio State
2008 - Michigan State vs Penn State
2009 - Iowa vs Ohio State
2010 - Michigan State vs Wisconsin
2011 - Michigan State vs Wisconsin
 
Lots of Michigan/Ohio State games, but most of the other memorable Big Ten teams win some division titles.  The mid '90s Northwestern teams get two, the most recent Michigan State teams won three, and even Anthony Thompson's Indiana team has a division title under this setup.  Having Michigan and Ohio State in separate divisions does create a lot of rematches, but just about every deserving and memorable Big Ten team makes an appearance over the course of these games.
 
In a couple games, Michigan and Ohio State played themselves into potentially huge rematches.  2006 is the most glaring example, but 1973's tie game within the Ten-Year War would have merited a rematch, along with 1992's tie game.  And, just as the 1970's was the big 2 and little 8, nine straight years featured a title game rematch.

----

With that in mind, let's first look at the potential for rematches.

Going by the eventual matchups, 20 seasons would have featured Michigan/Ohio State rematches for the Big Ten title, or about 47% of the time.  16 of those, or 38% of the time, were outright victories with no tiebreakers.

Those seasons are as follows:  1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1986, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1998, 2003, 2006, 2007

Michigan would have won the Legends division title in 28 seasons, with 27 of those outright.  Michigan won more division titles than any other team, pulling ahead of Ohio State for two reasons.  The first is that Nebraska, a division rival, does not factor into these seasons at all, winning zero titles in their one eligible year.  The second is that Minnesota, a longtime doormat, also won zero division titles over 43 seasons.  In comparison, every team in the Leaders division won a division title, with five of the six (all but Indiana) winning at least three titles.

Michigan's division titles are as follows:  1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007

Ohio State won a division title in 26 seasons, with 23 of those outright.  The Buckeyes had a much stronger division to contend with, but much of their faults were somewhat of their own doing, from timely losses over the years.

Ohio State's division titles are as follows:  1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009

In only 9 seasons, the Big Ten championship game would not feature either Michigan or Ohio State, with 8 of those without any tiebreakers.  In only 19% of the time, a Big Ten championship game did not feature either Michigan or Ohio State.  Those seasons, with a matchup, are below.

1978 - Michigan State vs Purdue
1985 - Iowa vs Illinois
1987 - Michigan State vs Indiana
1990 - Iowa vs Illinois
1999 - Michigan State vs Wisconsin
2000 - Northwestern vs Purdue
2008 - Michigan State vs Penn State
2010 - Michigan State vs Wisconsin
2011 - Michigan State vs Wisconsin
 
----
 
Dividing up the division titles, here are the rankings of how those would be distributed.  The first list is how many divisions were won by all of the Big Ten together, and the second is sorted by division setup.
 
Michigan       27.5
Ohio State     24.5
Michigan State 6
Iowa           6
Illinois       6
Wisconsin      5
Penn State     4
Northwestern   3.5
Purdue         2.5
Indiana        1
 
Michigan       27.5
Michigan State 6
Iowa           6
Northwestern   3.5
 
Ohio State     24.5
Illinois       6
Wisconsin      5
Penn State     4
Purdue         2.5
Indiana        1
 
While there's a clear separation between Michigan/Ohio State and everyone else, there is also a large group in the middle of the conference, and a small group at the very bottom.
 
Michigan State, Iowa, Illinois, Penn State, and Wisconsin all ended up with 4 to 6 division titles, forming the clear middle ground of the conference.  The average Big Ten team finished with 4 or 6 division titles, with one or two eras of glory over the seasons.
 
On the very bottom, the conference's bottom feeders won even less frequently.  Each division had a team with around 3 titles, and a team with 0-1 titles.  Again though, everything is still balanced.
 
(While this is all speculation, Penn State's arrival in the Big Ten allowed them to rack up 4 division titles in about 20 years.  If Nebraska came in around the same time, we would have seen a similar pattern in the Legends division, with the Cornhuskers taking a couple titles away from Michigan.  Both divisions would almost literally balance each other out.)
 
----
 
Lastly, so you can see the methodology and how each division played out, every year's results are listed below.  Included are the standings, the Michigan/Ohio State result, the potential Big Ten championship matchup, and a brief recap of the circumstances surrounding it all.
 
There are a lot of great potential matchups out there, over the years.  Enjoy.
 
1969
Michigan, 6-1
Ohio State, 6-1
Purdue, 5-2
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Both division titles were clinched earlier
 
1970 
Ohio State, 7-0
Michigan, 6-1
Northwestern, 6-1
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan/Northwestern vs Ohio State
 - Michigan would have won division with a win, but fell into a tie (the two teams did not play)
 - Ohio State already clinched division
 
1971
Michigan, 8-0
Ohio State, 5-3
Illinois, 5-3
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Michigan already clinched division
 - Ohio State would have tied Penn State with a loss, but would have won division with tiebreakers
 
1972
Michigan, 7-1
Ohio State, 7-1
Purdue, 6-2
Michigan State, 5-2-1
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Michigan already clinched division
 - Ohio State won division with a win
 
1973
Michigan, 7-0-1
Ohio State, 7-0-1
Minnesota, 6-2
 - Tie game
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Both teams had clinched divisions earlier
 
1974
Michigan, 7-1
Ohio State, 7-1
Michigan State, 6-1-1
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Both teams clinched divisions earlier
 
1975
Ohio State, 8-0
Michigan, 7-1
3 4-4 teams
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Both teams clinched divisions earlier
 
1976
Michigan, 7-1
Ohio State, 7-1
4 4-4 teams
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Both teams clinched divisions earlier
 
1977
Michigan, 7-1
Ohio State, 7-1
Michigan State, 6-1-1
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Michigan won division with their win
 - Ohio State clinched division earlier
 
1978 
Michigan, 7-1
Michigan State, 7-1
Purdue, 6-1-1
Ohio State, 6-2
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan State vs Purdue
 - Michigan tied for division lead with win, but lost to Michigan State earlier in the year
 - Ohio State lost division with their loss
 
1979
Ohio State, 8-0
Purdue, 7-1
Michigan, 6-2
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Michigan clinched division earlier
 - Ohio State clinched division with a win, would have gone to tiebreakers with a loss
 
1980
Michigan, 8-0
Ohio State, 7-1
Purdue, 7-1
Iowa, 4-4
Minnesota, 4-5
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State/Purdue
 - Michigan already clinched division
 - Ohio State tied for division lead, two teams did not play
 
1981
Ohio State, 6-2
Iowa, 6-2
Michigan, 6-3
Illinois,  6-3
Wisconsin, 6-3
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Iowa vs Ohio State
 - Yes, those standings are correct.  Ohio State and Iowa only played eight conference games, and everyone else played nine.
 - Michigan would have won the division with a win, by a half-game
 - Ohio State would have lost their division by a half-game with a loss
 
1982
Michigan, 8-1
Ohio State, 7-1
Iowa, 6-2
Illinois, 6-3
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Both teams clinched divisions earlier
 
1983
Illinois, 9-0
Michigan, 8-1
Iowa, 7-2
Ohio State, 6-3
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Illinois
 - Michigan clinched division with win, but had head-to-head tiebreaker
 - Ohio State finished out of the race
 
1984
Ohio State, 7-2
Illinois, 6-3
Purdue, 6-3
Iowa, 5-3-1
Wisconsin, 5-3-1
Michigan, 5-4
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Iowa vs Ohio State
 - Michigan would have won division with a victory
 - Ohio State clinched division with a win, but had head-to-head tiebreaker
 
1985
Iowa, 7-1
Michigan, 6-1-1
Illinois, 5-2-1
Ohio State, 5-3
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Iowa vs Illinois
 - Michigan needed a win plus an Iowa loss to clinch division
 - Ohio State needed a win to clinch division
 
1986 
Michigan, 7-1
Ohio State, 7-1
Iowa, 5-3
Minnesota, 5-3
Indiana, 3-5
Illinois, 3-5
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Both teams clinched division earlier
 
1987
Michigan State, 7-0-1
Iowa, 6-2
Indiana, 6-2
Michigan, 5-3
Ohio State, 4-4
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan State vs Indiana
 - Both teams finished out of the race
 
1988
Michigan, 7-0-1
Michigan State, 6-1-1
Iowa, 4-1-3
Illinois, 5-2-1
Indiana, 5-3
Purdue, 3-5
Ohio State, 2-5-1
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Illinois
 - Michigan clinched division with win, but had head-to-head tiebreaker
 - Ohio State finished out of the race
 
1989
Michigan, 8-0
Illinois, 7-1
Michigan State, 6-2
Ohio State, 6-2
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Illinois
 - Michigan clinched division earlier
 - Ohio State could have won into division tie, but lost head-to-head tiebreaker
 
1990
Iowa, 6-2
Michigan State, 6-2
Illinois, 6-2
Michigan, 6-2
Ohio State, 5-2-1
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Iowa vs Illinois
 - Michigan won into three-way tie, but Iowa beat both Michigan and Michigan State
 - Ohio State lost division title with loss to Michigan
 
1991
Michigan, 8-0-0
Iowa, 7-1
Ohio State, 5-3
Indiana, 5-3
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Michigan clinched division with win
 - Ohio State fell into division tie, but beat Indiana
 
1992
Michigan, 6-0-2
Ohio State, 5-2-1
Michigan State, 5-3
Illinois, 4-3-1
 - Tie Game
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Both teams clinched division earlier
 
1993 
Ohio State, 6-1-1
Wisconsin, 6-1-1
Penn State, 6-2
Indiana, 5-3
Michigan, 5-3
Illinois, 5-3
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State/Wisconsin
 - Michigan won very weak division
 - Ohio State fell into tie with Wisconsin, where both teams tied during the season
 
1994
Penn State, 8-0
Ohio State, 6-2
Michigan, 5-3
Michigan State, 4-4
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Penn State
 - Michigan already clinched division
 - Ohio State finished out of the race
 
1995
Northwestern, 8-0
Ohio State, 7-1
Michigan, 5-3
Penn State, 5-3
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Northwestern vs Ohio State
 - Both divisions were clinched earlier
 
1996
Ohio State, 7-1
Northwestern, 7-1
Penn State, 6-2
Iowa, 6-2
Michigan, 5-3
Michigan State, 5-3
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Northwestern vs Ohio State
 - Both divisions were clinched earlier
 
1997
Michigan, 8-0
Ohio State, 6-2
Penn State, 6-2
Purdue, 6-2
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Penn State
 - Michigan already clinched division
 - Ohio State fell into three-way tie, Penn State won by beating the two other teams
 - Ohio State would have won division with a win
 
1998 
Ohio State, 7-1
Wisconsin, 7-1
Michigan, 7-1
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State/Wisconsin
 - Michigan already clinched division
 - Ohio State tied for division lead, the two teams did not play during the season
 
1999 
Wisconsin, 7-1
Michigan, 6-2
Michigan State, 6-2
Minnesota, 5-3
Penn State, 5-3
Illinois, 4-4
Purdue, 4-4
Ohio State, 3-5
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan State vs Wisconsin
 - Michigan tied for division lead, but lost to Michigan State
 - Ohio State finished out of the race
 
2000
Michigan, 6-2
Northwestern, 6-2
Purdue, 6-2
Ohio State, 5-3
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Northwestern vs Purdue
 - Michigan tied for division lead, but lost to Northwestern
 - Ohio State could have tied for division lead, but lost to Purdue earlier
 
2001
Illinois 7-1
Michigan 6-2
Ohio State 5-3
Iowa 4-4
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Illinois
 - Michigan clinched division earlier
 - Ohio State finished out of the race
 
2002
Ohio State 8-0
Iowa 8-0
Michigan 6-2
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Iowa vs Ohio State
 - Both division titles were clinched earlier
 
2003
Michigan 7-1
Ohio State 6-2
Purdue 6-2
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Michigan clinched division earlier
 - Ohio State fell into a division tie, but beat Purdue
 
2004
Iowa 7-1
Michigan 7-1
Wisconsin 6-2
Northwestern 5-3
Ohio State 4-4
Purdue 4-4
Michigan State 4-4
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Wisconsin
 - Michigan fell into a division tie, but beat Iowa
 - Ohio State finished out of the race
 
2005
Penn State, 7-1
Ohio State, 7-1
Wisconsin, 5-3
Iowa, 5-3
Michigan, 5-3
Northwestern, 5-3
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Penn State
 - Michigan had clinched division earlier due to beating Northwestern and Iowa
 - Ohio State tied for division lead, but lost to Penn State
 
2006
Ohio State, 8-0
Wisconsin, 7-1
Michigan, 7-1
Penn State, 5-3
Purdue, 5-3
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Michigan already clinched division
 - Ohio State would have tied Wisconsin with loss, those teams did not play in 2006
 
2007
Ohio State, 7-1
Illinois, 6-2
Michigan, 6-2
Wisconsin, 5-3
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan vs Ohio State
 - Michigan already clinched division
 - Ohio State would have tied Illinois with a loss, and Illinois would have won division with tiebreakers
 
2008
Penn State, 7-1
Ohio State, 7-1
Michigan State, 6-2
Iowa, 5-3
Northwestern, 5-3
Minnesota, 3-5
Wisconsin, 3-5
Illinois, 3-5
Purdue, 2-6
Michigan, 2-6
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan State vs Penn State
 - Michigan finished out of the race
 - Ohio State tied for division lead, but lost to Penn State
 
2009
Ohio State, 7-1
Iowa, 6-2
Penn State, 6-2
Wisconsin, 5-3
Northwestern, 5-3
Michigan State, 4-4
Purdue, 4-4
Minnesota, 3-5
Illinois, 2-6
Michigan, 1-7
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Iowa vs Ohio State
 - Michigan finished out of the race
 - Ohio State would have tied Penn State with a loss, but would have won division with tiebreakers
 
2010
Michigan State, 7-1
Wisconsin, 7-1
Ohio State, 7-1
Iowa, 4-4
Illinois, 4-4
Penn State, 4-4
Michigan, 3-5
 - Ohio State wins
 - BTC: Michigan State vs Wisconsin
 - Michigan finished out of the race
 - Ohio State tied for division lead, but lost to Wisconsin
 
2011
  Legends Division
Michigan State, 7-1
Michigan, 6-2
  Leaders Division
Wisconsin, 6-2
Penn State, 6-2
Purdue, 4-4
Ohio State, 3-5
 - Michigan wins
 - BTC: Michigan State vs Wisconsin
 - Both teams eliminated from divisions earlier
  • 24 comments

B1G's Major OOC Games For 2013 - A Primer

By Gordon — November 11th, 2012 at 11:54 PM — 28 comments
Filed under:
  • 2013
  • football
  • football
  • previews

Since there's been a lot of discussion in various threads about conference strength, where the Big Ten can improve, voter perception of the conference affecting all of the teams...here's the quick guide to the major out-of-conference games coming up for the 2013 season.  Some teams still have open dates, and some games are bigger than others, but this should do.

Here are the relatively big games for 2013.  No gametimes have been announced, nothing but dates and matchups.

I realize this is very early, but this kind of thing will come in handy once further discussion of conference comparison and the Big Ten's relatively disappointing 2012 rears its ugly head again.

August 31st - Penn State at Syracuse (in MetLife Stadium, NY)

The first significant Big Ten game of 2013 features a surprisingly good Penn State team against an alright Syracuse team.  Given the big-time venue (chosen because Syracuse wants to take hold of the NYC market), this game could get some attention.  If Penn State wins, it's a small boost to the conference, while a loss would be pretty bad, yet not disastrous.

September 7th - Notre Dame at Michigan

Big for a variety of reasons, this would be Notre Dame's first major game of 2013, where they could be defending a national championship.  (Michigan opens with Central Michigan, Notre Dame opens with Temple.)  It's the last scheduled Mich-ND matchup in Michigan Stadium, and this will be on the national radar all summer.

This one has an outside chance of becoming a featured game of the week, with College GameDay, ESPN, and all of that.  This one will be anticipated all summer, and it will turn into one of the year's great games.

Notre Dame will play at Purdue on September 14th and against Michigan State on the 21st, for their only games against Big Ten opponents.

September 14th - UCLA at Nebraska

One of the biggest out-of-conference games, this one could feature the defending Big Ten champion against a highly ranked Pac-12 team.  This game will likely go on a prime television timeslot, maybe even College GameDay.  Nebraska's result here would be the focal point of any conference recap for the rest of the season, so the Cornhuskers have to win this for everyone else.

September 14th - Ohio State at California

Ohio State could be coming off of an undefeated season, and this is their first big game of 2013.  The Buckeyes should win this game, and should win it big.  Obviously, I hope they do not, but this should be a conference win.

Cal will also play Northwestern to open 2013, making the Golden Bears a weird litmus test for the Big Ten next year.  If California has a great season, and the Big Ten beats them twice, we must have a great conference.  And vice versa.

September 14th - Wisconsin at Arizona State

Another Big Ten/Pac12 matchup, but this one should go to Wisconsin, even on the road.  If the Badgers lay another egg in a Pac12 stadium, this season could feature even more "what happened to the Big Ten?" columns.

September 14th - Washington at Illinois (in Soldier Field)

Illinois is having a terrible season, and Washington is on the upswing, but this one is only important if Washington starts the season with some hyped momentum.

September 21st - Missouri at Indiana

While both of these teams are around the 6-win mark, this is still an SEC/Big Ten matchup in a Big Ten stadium.  It doesn't come around too often, and an Indiana win would be huge for that program and the conference.  It's the only Big Ten/SEC game of 2013, and might have even been scheduled back when it was a Big Ten/Big 12 game.

November 9th - BYU at Wisconsin

It's a late-seaosn game designed to keep Wisconsin humming on all cylinders as the season comes to a close, and a relevant Badgers team will be making the last case for the Big Ten before bowl season.  With another catastrophe like this season, the game becomes the last chance for the conference to salvage itself within the polls.  With an improved season, this becomes a great day to showcase how we've "turned things around".

That's pretty much it.  September 14th could be D-Day for the Big Ten, shaping the conference for the rest of the season.

A full, team-by-team, out-of-conference schedule is below.  Teams in capitals are from auto-qualifier conferences (and ND), teams in italics are anything below FBS.  Therefore, a win over a capitalized team is a good one, and a loss to an italicized team is a disaster that clearly means we aren't as good as the SEC, or something like that.

 

Michigan
8/31 - Central Michigan
9/07 - NOTRE DAME
9/14 - Akron
9/21 - at CONNECTICUT
 
Michigan State
8/31 - Western Michigan
9/07 - USF
9/14 - Youngstown State
9/21 - at NOTRE DAME
 
Nebraska
8/31 - Wyoming
9/07 - at Southern Miss
9/14 - UCLA
9/21 - South Dakota State
 
Northwestern
8/31 - at CALIFORNIA
9/07 - SYRACUSE
9/14 - Western Michigan
9/21 - Maine
 
Iowa
8/31 - Northern Illinois
9/07 - Missouri State
9/14 - at IOWA STATE
9/21 - Western Michigan
 
Minnesota
8/29 - UNLV
9/14 - Western Illinois
9/21 - San Jose State
TBA - at New Mexico State
 
Ohio State
8/31 - Buffalo
9/07 - San Diego State
9/14 - at CALIFORNIA
9/21 - Florida A&M
 
Penn State
8/31 - SYRACUSE (in East Rutherford, NJ)
9/07 - Eastern Michigan
9/14 - VIRGINIA
9/21 - Kent State
 
Wisconsin
8/31 - UMass
9/07 - Tennessee Tech
9/14 - at ARIZONA STATE
11/09 - BYU
 
Indiana
8/31 - Indiana State
9/07 - Navy
9/14 - Bowling Green
9/21 - MISSOURI
 
Purdue
8/31 - at CINCINNATI
9/07 - Indiana State
9/14 - NOTRE DAME
9/28 - Northern Illinois
 
Illinois
8/31 - Southern Illinois
9/07 - CINCINNATI
9/14 - WASHINGTON (in Chicago)
9/28 - Miami (OH)
 
Behold!  Make your weekend plans now!
  • 28 comments

Michigan's Lost Classics - Michigan at Penn State, 1999

By Gordon — July 11th, 2012 at 8:22 PM — 14 comments
Filed under:
  • football
  • football
  • Video

There's been some complaints recently on the message board about how BTN always shows the same cycle of classic Michigan games.  Last year's games against Notre Dame, Nebraska, and Ohio.  A game from the 1997 season.  An old Rose Bowl.  Some original programming to top it off.

Someone speculated that lots of people go into the decision-making process for these games, from network execs to AD's.  Obviously, some games are probably off the list to be shown.

This is one of those games.

Going into the tail end of the 1999 season, Michigan was looking like a team for the ages.  Despite two mid-season losses, the Wolverines were in the process of ending the season strong, at 4-2 in the conference and 8-2 overall.  Senior quarterback Tom Brady and Anthony Thomas led the offense, with Dhani Jones and Rob Renes on D.

Penn State, on the other hand, was going into their final home game reeling.  After starting the season 9-0, Minnesota upset the Nittany Lions on the last play of their game, leaving Happy Valley with a huge upset.  Still, Penn State was in the hunt for a Big Ten championship, making their game against Michigan one of 1999's last big matchups.  Penn State and Wisconsin were the Big Ten's leaders, with Michigan closely behind.  This game would essentially knock someone out of the race for a championship, and possibly a BCS appearance as well.

Of course, despite all of these circumstances surrounding the game, there was another subplot that factored heavily into ABC's coverage.  This game was Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky's last home game, making the TV coverage Jerry Sandusky-themed.  That's right.  It's a Jerry Sandusky-themed broadcast.

Needless to say, the Big Ten won't be taking this game for a visual victory lap any time soon.

Watch and enjoy.  The first half is in the first link, the second half is in the second.  And as always, go Blue.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DVdmavookY8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LWu3rrP-lfM

 

  • 14 comments

What Should We All Have Had From 2001-10?

By Gordon — June 9th, 2011 at 12:36 AM — 49 comments
Filed under:
  • football
  • football
  • Jim Tressel
  • Lloyd Carr
  • revisionist history

One of the pressing topics around the whole implosion of Ohio State University Football is how that team dominated the Big Ten illegally.  The team won games they shouldn't, with the most obvious being the 2011 Sugar Bowl.  Ohio State shouldn't have played as well in that game, and frankly shouldn't have been in it at all.

Everyone seems to be talking about what Ohio State's record books will look like when all this is done.  Seasons getting voided, players getting wiped out, all of that.

With that in mind, I'd like to take a look back at what truly should have been.  What seasons should have gone differently for the various schools tormented by Tressel?  What teams got screwed out of bowl games, out of national championships, out of huge victories?  There's many victims of Ohio State's illegal run besides us here in Ann Arbor.

Let's take a look back, year-by-year.  Here are the basic ground rules to keep in mind:

- Ohio State wouldn't have realistically lost every game.  At worst, they'd have been a version of the 2009-10 Wolverines:  losing many games, but not completely out of it.  So, close games in Columbus will now tip towards the visitor, and fairly close by the Buckeyes will also  go towards their opponents.  I'd assume that Ohio State would still be pretty good, just not great.  Or, if they were amazing, simply great.

- I'm not going to go back to look for specific players, instead the entire team will be downgraded.  Specifically, i don't want to wade through Ohio State game logs to figure out how much of an effect a replacement RB would have had over Maurice Clarett, for example.

- Except when it ties into Michigan, no frivolous extraneous circumstances.  So, no jobs will be saved by a miracle win over the Buckeyes that leads to a random Big Ten coach keeping his job.  I don't want to open up too much alternate history.

- I'm mainly focusing on the Big Ten championship race, and the national championship race, when applicable.  No September non-conference wins that led to some opponent winning another conference.

- No recruiting alternate histories.  The only players that would be added to different games are the guys that picked the school in the first place.  This opens up one scenario later on.  Existing transfers can still happen though.  Ohio State gets the same general recruits they had before, only they are universally downgraded.  The assumption is that Ohio State, even in bad times, would still get some great players, as they are Ohio State.

- Things in bold are major changes.

Okay, on to the games...

 

2001
 
Ohio State's actual schedule
 
Sep 8 Akron            W  28-14
Sep22 at UCLA          L   6-13
Sep29 at Indiana       W  27-14
Oct 6 Northwestern     W  38-20
Oct13 Wisconsin        L  17-20
Oct20 San Diego State  W  27-12
Oct27 at Penn State    L  27-29
Nov 3 at Minnesota     W  31-28
Nov10 Purdue           W  35-9
Nov17 Illinois         L  22-34
Nov24 at Michigan      W  26-20
Jan 1 South Carolina   L  28-31 (Outback Bowl)
 
Ohio State's revised schedule
 
Sep 8 Akron            W
Sep22 at UCLA          L
Sep29 at Indiana       W
Oct 6 Northwestern     W
Oct13 Wisconsin        L
Oct20 San Diego State  W
Oct27 at Penn State    L
Nov 3 at Minnesota     L
Nov10 Purdue           W
Nov17 Illinois         L
Nov24 at Michigan      L
 
A rough start for Jim Tressel.  As he takes over a program in crisis, he can only manage five wins, dropping Ohio State out of bowl contention.  Games that were turned into losses were a squeaker win at Minnesota, and the season finale at Michigan.  Both wins cause great concern going into the offseason, as the pressure builds for 2002.
 
Actual Big Ten standings
 
#12 Illinois        7–1 10–2
#20 Michigan        6–2  8–4
    Ohio State      5–3  7–5
    Iowa            4–4  7–5
    Purdue          4–4  6–6
    Indiana         4–4  5-6
    Penn State      4–4  5–6
    Michigan State  3–5  7–5
    Wisconsin         3–5  5–7
    Minnesota         2–6  4–7
    Northwestern    2–6 4–7
 
Revised Big Ten standings
 
# 8 Michigan        7–1  9–3
#10 Illinois        7–1 10–2
    Iowa            4–4  7–5
    Purdue          4–4  6–6
    Indiana         4–4  5-6
    Penn State      4–4  5–6
    Michigan State  3–5  7–5
    Minnesota       3–5  5–6
    Wisconsin       3–5  5–7
    Ohio State      3–5  5–7
    Northwestern    2–6 4–7
 
Under this new history, Michigan and Illinois would have shared the Big Ten championship in 2001, and Michigan would have represented the conference in the BCS (thanks to a victory over Illinois).  That year, since the Wolverines wouldn't have contended for the national title, Michigan would play LSU in the Sugar Bowl (like Illinois did).  Since both Michigan and LSU pasted Illinois by similar scores during the season, it would've been a good game.
 
There were no national changes.  Both Miami and Nebraska had no contact with Ohio State during the season in any way.
 
2002
 
Ohio State's actual schedule
 
Aug24 Texas Tech        W 45-21
Sep 7 Kent State        W 51-17
Sep14 Washington State  W 25-7
Sep21 at Cincinnati     W 23-19
Sep28 Indiana           W 45-17
Oct 5 at Northwestern   W 27-16
Oct12 San Jose State    W 50-7
Oct19 at Wisconsin      W 19-14
Oct26 Penn State        W 13-7
Nov 2 Minnesota         W 34-3
Nov 9 at Purdue         W 10-6
Nov16 at Illinois       W 23-16
Nov23 Michigan          W 14-9
Jan 3 Miami             W 31-24 (Fiesta Bowl NC)
 
Ohio State's revised schedule
 
Aug24 Texas Tech        W
Sep 7 Kent State        W
Sep14 Washington State  W
Sep21 at Cincinnati     L
Sep28 Indiana           W
Oct 5 at Northwestern   W
Oct12 San Jose State    W
Oct19 at Wisconsin      W
Oct26 Penn State        L
Nov 2 Minnesota         W
Nov 9 at Purdue         L
Nov16 at Illinois       W
Nov23 Michigan          L
Jan 1 Auburn            W (Capital One Bowl)
 
Here's where things get interesting.  Yes, Ohio State does have a rebound year in 2002.  Unfortunately, it's not as glorious of one.  The Buckeyes end the season at 9-4, playing on New Year's Day against Auburn, where they beat the Tigers.  To start the season, Ohio State was picked to rapidly improve, and the team hit all their reasonable targets, except for a letdown upset in Cincinnati.  In that game, only a late interception gave Ohio State the original win, so I made that a loss this time around.  Also, the Krenzel bomb on 4th down can't set up a win against Purdue, Penn State ends up being solid enough to beat the Buckeyes, and a Michigan juggernaut pulls out a close one in Columbus.  Other than that, Jim Tressel gets nine wins, Maurice Clarett becomes a Heisman hopeful for future seasons (as he's not dominating enough to get any pro ideas), and Ohio State becomes a team right on the brink of winning a big one.
 
Actual Big Ten standings
 
# 1 Ohio State      8–0 14–0
# 8 Iowa            8–0 11–2
# 9 Michigan        6–2 10–3
#16 Penn State      5–3  9–4
    Purdue          4–4  7–6
    Illinois        4–4  5–7
    Minnesota       3–5  8–5
    Wisconsin       2–6  8–6
    Michigan State  2–6  4–8
    Northwestern    1–7  3–9
    Indiana         1–7  3–9
 
Revised Big Ten standings
 
# 4 Iowa            8–0 11–2
# 6 Michigan        7–1 11–2
#12 Penn State      6–2 10–3
    Purdue          5–3  8–5
#20 Ohio State      5–3 11–3
    Illinois        4–4  5–7
    Minnesota       3–5  8–5
    Wisconsin       2–6  8–6
    Michigan State  2–6  4–8
    Northwestern    1–7  3–9
    Indiana         1–7  3–9
 
The big winner here is Iowa.  The Hawkeyes become the 2002 Big Ten champions, and cause a huge logjam at the top of the BCS standings.  Iowa would go on to play Washington State in the Rose Bowl, and Michigan would go on to play future rival USC in the Orange Bowl, taking Ohio State's BCS spot.  Penn State would move up to the Outback Bowl, and Ohio State would settle for the Capital One Bowl.
 
Nationally, Miami becomes the consensus #1 team in the nation as the last undefeated power.  However, there suddenly becomes a controversy over who is the #2 team.  The Georgia Bulldogs play for the national title.  As they were originally the #3 team in the country, Georgia uses a win in the SEC Championship Game to vault over fellow one-loss Iowa to play for the national championship.  In the end though, the Miami Hurricanes are 2002 National Champions.
 
2003
 
Ohio State's actual schedule
 
Aug30 Washington       W 28-9
Sep 6 San Diego State  W 16-13
Sep13 NC State         W 44-38 3OT
Sep20 Bowling Green    W 24-17
Sep27 Northwestern     W 20-0
Oct11 at Wisconsin     L 10-17
Oct18 Iowa             W 19-10
Oct25 at Indiana       W 35-6
Nov 1 at Penn State    W 21-20
Nov 8 Michigan State   W 33-23
Nov15 Purdue           W 16-13 OT
Nov22 at Michigan      L 21-35
Jan 2 Kansas State     W 35-28 (Fiesta Bowl)
 
Ohio State's revised schedule
 
Aug30 Washington       W
Sep 6 San Diego State  W
Sep13 NC State         L
Sep20 Bowling Green    W
Sep27 Northwestern     W
Oct11 at Wisconsin     L
Oct18 Iowa             W
Oct25 at Indiana       W
Nov 1 at Penn State    W
Nov 8 Michigan State   W
Nov15 Purdue           W
Nov22 at Michigan      L
 
Jan 1 Georgia          L (Capital One Bowl)
 
Looking at Ohio State's schedule, the 2003 Buckeyes had so many games that they just barely won.  It's really quite amazing that they even managed the actual season that they did.  With that in mind, there's only one other loss I could tack onto this season, what was a triple-OT win over North Carolina State.  Triple-OT is close enough to fall the other way, even if this team now has Maurice Clarett.  Other wins that could come into question were ones over Purdue, Penn State, and San Diego State.  Again, I'm trusting that Clarett would've given them a little bit more of an edge to compensate for what I'm taking away.  Tressel would still play in January, only in Orlando, instead of in the BCS.
 
Of course, Maurice Clarett is still a total bonehead, and leaves college for the NFL draft after the season.
 
Actual Big Ten standings
 
# 6 Michigan        7–1 10–3
# 4 Ohio State      6–2 11–2
#18 Purdue          6–2 9–4
# 8 Iowa            5–3 10–3
#20 Minnesota       5–3 10–3
    Michigan State  5–3 8–5
    Wisconsin       4–4 7–6
    Northwestern    4–4 6–7
    Penn State      1–7 3–9
    Indiana         1–7 2–10
    Illinois        0–8 1–11
 
Revised Big Ten standings
 
# 6 Michigan        7–1 10–3
#16 Ohio State      6–2 10–3
#18 Purdue          6–2 9–4
# 8 Iowa            5–3 10–3
#20 Minnesota       5–3 10–3
    Michigan State  5–3 8–5
    Wisconsin       4–4 7–6
    Northwestern    4–4 6–7
    Penn State      1–7 3–9
    Indiana         1–7 2–10
    Illinois        0–8 1–11
 
Michigan wins the Big Ten in 2003, just like in real life.  The last game of the season, as per tradition, ultimately decides the title, as Chris Perry wins the running back battle over Clarett.
 
The big change here is Ohio State's national ranking.  That loss to NC State proved to be a constant weight on the season, dragging down the Buckeyes.  By not beating Michigan for the conference championship, Ohio State drops out of BCS consideration.  The Buckeyes' spot in the BCS goes to Tennessee, the second-place finisher in the SEC.  The Volunteers defeat Kansas State in the Fiesta Bowl, just like Ohio State did.
 
Nationally, there is no effect on the controversial split title.  LSU beats Oklahoma in the official title game, while #1 ranked USC defeats Michigan in the Rose Bowl.  Ultimately, Michigan couldn't vault into that top-two due to Ohio State's subpar performance, and the Wolverines couldn't get part of the split title with their loss.  A rivalry begins to develop between Michigan and USC, with two straight bowl games.  LSU and USC are still national champions for 2003.
 
2004
 
Ohio State's actual schedule
 
Sep 4 Cincinnati         W  27-6
Sep11 Marshall           W  24-21
Sep18 at NC State        W  22-14
Oct 2 at Northwestern    L  27-33
Oct 9 Wisconsin          L  13-24
Oct16 at Iowa            L   7-33
Oct23 Indiana            W  30-7
Oct30 Penn State         W  21-10
Nov 6 at Michigan State  W  32-19
Nov13 at Purdue          L  17-24
Nov20 Michigan           W  37-21
Dec29 Oklahoma State     W  33-7   (Alamo Bowl)
 
Ohio State's revised schedule
 
Sep 4 Cincinnati         W
Sep11 Marshall           L
Sep18 at NC State        W
Oct 2 at Northwestern    L
Oct 9 Wisconsin          L
Oct16 at Iowa            L
Oct23 Indiana            W
Oct30 Penn State         L
Nov 6 at Michigan State  W
Nov13 at Purdue          L
Nov20 Michigan           W
 
Ohio State was a really crappy football team in 2004, and the ensuing chaos only makes them intolerably bad.  The Buckeyes are given losses against Marshall, and against Penn State, both games that should've gone the other way.  That drops the team from 7-4 to 5-6, and out of bowl contention.  Jim Tressel immediately becomes Embattled Jim Tressel.  Poorly designed websites are launched, and Utah coach Urban Meyer is called for.  The victory over Michigan still stands, as I remember that game.  Michigan would have lost to anyone that day.
 
Actual Big Ten standings
 
# 8 Iowa            7–1 10–2
#14 Michigan        7–1  9-3
#17 Wisconsin       6–2  9–3
    Northwestern    5–3  6–6
#20 Ohio State      4–4  8–4
    Purdue          4–4  7–5
    Michigan State  4–4  5–7
    Minnesota       3–5  7–5
    Penn State      2–6  4–7
    Illinois        1–7  3–8
    Indiana         1–7  3–8
 
Revised Big Ten standings
 
# 8 Iowa            7–1 10–2
#14 Michigan        7–1  9-3
#17 Wisconsin       6–2  9–3
    Northwestern    5–3  6–6
    Purdue          4–4  7–5
    Michigan State  4–4  5–7
    Minnesota       3–5  7–5
    Penn State      3–5  5–6
    Ohio State      3–5  5–6
    Illinois        1–7  3–8
    Indiana         1–7  3–8
 
No real changes here.  Michigan and Iowa tie for the Big Ten championship.  Michigan goes to the Rose Bowl, and loses to Texas.  Iowa loses out on the BCS.  USC defeats Oklahoma for the championship, just like in real life.  Nothing to change here.  Move along.
 
2005
 
Ohio State's actual schedule
 
Sep 3 Miami (OH)       W 34-14
Sep10 Texas            L 22-25
Sep17 San Diego State  W 27-6
Sep24 Iowa             W 31-6
Oct 8 at Penn State    L 10-17
Oct15 Michigan State   W 35-24
Oct22 at Indiana       W 41-10
Oct29 at Minnesota     W 45-31
Nov 5 Illinois         W 40-2
Nov12 Northwestern     W 48-7
Nov19 at Michigan      W 25-21
Jan 2 Notre Dame       W 34-20  (Fiesta Bowl)
 
Ohio State's revised schedule
 
Sep 3 Miami (OH)       W
Sep10 Texas            L
Sep17 San Diego State  W
Sep24 Iowa             W
Oct 8 at Penn State    L
Oct15 Michigan State   W
Oct22 at Indiana       W
Oct29 at Minnesota     W
Nov 5 Illinois         W
Nov12 Northwestern     W
Nov19 at Michigan      L
Jan 1 Auburn           W (Capital One Bowl)
 
As I'm trying hard not to look like a homer, this season was the hardest one to do. Obviously, some change had to be made.  Unfortunately, every Ohio State win was pretty resounding...except for one.  Therefore, the tables get turned on Ohio State in 2005.  Last year, it was the Buckeyes spoiling Michigan despite being in a down year.  This time, it's the other way around.  Michigan beats Ohio State in the Big House, knocking the Buckeyes out of the BCS.  Jim Tressel still can't win in Ann Arbor, and a national crisis is averted as Brady Quinn's sister doesn't have to choose between Notre Dame and Ohio State.
 
Actual Big Ten standings
 
# 3 Penn State      7–1 11–1
# 9 Ohio State      7–1 10–2
#15 Wisconsin       5–3 10–3
    Michigan        5–3  7–5
    Northwestern    5–3  7–5
    Iowa            5–3  7–5
    Minnesota       4–4  7–5
    Purdue          3–5  5–6
    Michigan State  2–6  5–6
    Indiana         1–7  4–7
    Illinois        0–8  2–9
 
Revised Big Ten standings
 
# 3 Penn State      7–1 11–1
    Michigan        6–2  8–4
# 9 Ohio State      6–2  9–3
#15 Wisconsin       5–3 10–3
    Northwestern    5–3  7–5
    Iowa            5–3  7–5
    Minnesota       4–4  7–5
    Purdue          3–5  5–6
    Michigan State  2–6  5–6
    Indiana         1–7  4–7
    Illinois        0–8  2–9
 
The big change here is that Penn State becomes the undisputed Big Ten champion.  Ohio State falls to third place, losing a tie-breaker with Michigan.  Michigan jumps up to second place, finishing at 8-4, and playing in the Outback Bowl on New Year's Day.  Taking the Buckeyes' place in the BCS is Oregon, who defeats Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl.
 
Nationally, #2 Texas defeats #1 USC, as no changes are made there.

(More To Come tomorrow, as I do 2006-2010 then.)

  • 49 comments

The journey of hockey.

By Gordon — April 10th, 2011 at 12:05 AM — 12 comments
Filed under:
  • 2011 frozen four
  • hockey
  • Michigan hockey
  • Red Berenson
  • Shawn Hunwick

And with that, the 2010-2011 Michigan Wolverines hockey season is over.

One bad turnover, one quick pass-and-shoot, and Minnesota-Duluth has won the national championship.

On one hand, I should be feeling disappointed. I should feel terrible right now. Instead, while I'm not ecstatic, there's an inner sense of contentment.

In hockey, like life, it is not necessarily the ending that is as important as the journey to get there, especially in college hockey.  This is not the end of anyone's story, but merely the closing of a chapter, as we turn the page to next season, next job, and next life milestone.  This is especially true in college hockey, as any team is merely a waystation for what is to come in life.  Every member of that roster came into Michigan with different circumstances, and will leave changed for the better, win or lose.

It's with this outlook that I can't help but be satisfied with the season.  This season was left better than it was approached, and that has to leave a great impression.

Before this season, the Michigan fanbase could expect greatness from the team only if everyone played as well as they could, and I do mean everyone. There was no surefire star on this team, no obvious future NHL'er that could carry the team all year. Instead, Michigan was a very good team from top to bottom, and greatness had to come from hard work, solid play, and a little luck.

If things came together, this story would go down as a great one. If not, this squad risked the same ignominy that the football team has had recently. Remarkably though, Michigan's stories, big and small, were as epic as we could have hoped.

----

Shawn Hunwick was not supposed to be a Michigan goalie. He certainly was not even supposed to become a full-time starter. Summing this up is today's New York Times article on him, titled "Walk-On Goalie Is on Brink of Title". Not "Shawn Hunwick, Walk-On Goalie Is on Brink of Title." Merely "Walk-On Goalie". Walk-on players, of any stripe, aren't supposed to get much playing time, much less at such a crucial position. That article isn't just amazed at what Hunwick has done, it's astonished that a walk-on could be the winning goalie for a national championship. Any walk-on would be amazing, especially in this role.

Meanwhile, Hunwick barely played during his freshman year, did not play during his sophomore year, and ended up backstopping a miracle run in 2010 before coming in during the biggest regular season game in school history during the warmups, and never giving up the job since.  At the end of the season, Shawn had a tournament run for the ages, with game after game of fantastic goaltending.  Is that anything to be disappointed about?

----

Carl Hagelin was not supposed to be a team MVP at the University of Michigan.  No Swede had ever played in Ann Arbor before, as the Swedish path to pro hockey wove through various national elite leagues.  Carl's first trip to Ann Arbor was even as an afterthought, tagging along with his brother to Red Berenson's summer hockey camp.  Eventually, Hagelin settled on Michigan to continue his hockey career, coming in as a fairly unheralded recruit, and the first ever Swede to play for Michigan.

Four years later, the Michigan Hockey Pep Band was playing the Swedish national anthem before Senior Night.  The student section was signing a giant Swedish flag with good luck messages.  And Carl Hagelin ended his career at Yost Ice Arena as a team legend, with a last-second overtime goal to keep CCHA championship dreams alive.  Over the course of four years, Hagelin has developed into a remarkable player, with team records for speed (60-0 on team races up the Michigan Stadium steps), team scoring championships, a team MVP award, being named the CCHA's top defensive forward, and being named an All-American.

At this time next year, around the time that new banners go up, and old banners get updated, there will be a Carl Hagelin plaque hanging in the north hallway of Yost.  Is that anything to be disappointed about?

----

Four months ago, we were all somewhat worried about Michigan Hockey.  The team was underachieving, as every weekend brought a loss on Friday night, before a consoling win on Saturday.  There weren't that many strong weekends for the Wolverines, as it looked like a repeat of 2009-2010's struggles.  Only, how many streaks could one team go on?  Would this be where the luck ran out?

The fulcrum of the season, for better or worse, looked to be the Big Chill, coming up that weekend.  Years of preparation went into this game, with everything seemingly ready except for the host team.

It took a last second injury to place Shawn Hunwick between the pipes for Michigan that day, and he did not give up a goal.  From that point on, he was rolling, for that game, for that season.

Just over the halfway mark of the first period, freshman Jon Merrill, until that point just known as a big recruit, scored to put Michigan up 1-0.  He'd score another later on, as Michigan romped to an eventual 5-0 win, and Michigan started on the first real winning stretch of the season.  Nine wins in ten games put us in contention for a CCHA title, and brought another GLI championship to Ann Arbor.

----

Two months ago, Michigan was again reeling.  The season seemed to have slipped away with two brutal losses in Oxford, Ohio.  The Wolverines came into a weekend series at Miami with a chance to put the Redhawks away, and instead came out of it in 3rd place.  4-2, and 3-0.  Two crucial losses, with no games left to play against the teams above us in the standings.

Michigan came back to Yost needing to win with outside luck for a championship.  In the first weekend, the Wolverines held onto two games against Ohio State, both by one goal, both with great defense at the end.  Meanwhile, Miami split a series with Lake Superior State, and began running out of games, ultimately getting passed by two teams.

In the second weekend, Michigan started off on Friday with a blowout win over Western, 6-3.  Michigan played with desperation, scoring two goals in the first period, two goals early in the second, and keeping Western at arms length.  Despite all of that, every point was crucial, as Notre Dame kept winning to stay in 1st place.

On Saturday night, it wouldn't be so easy for Michigan.  Western jumped out to a 3-1 lead, Michigan fought back to tie the game at 3, and Western punched back with a goal early in the 3rd period for a 4-3 lead.

Over that last period, Michigan played like their season came down to it.  After chance after chance barely missing, Carl Hagelin came into the Western zone, fired a random shot on net, and the puck squeaked into the bottom corner.  4-4.  Tie game.  At that point, I firmly believe that Michigan willed that puck in.  The players, the fans, everyone.  Everyone in that building willed the puck into the net, and there was nothing that could be done about it.  Five minutes later, the same thing.  One last rush before losing any hope of three points, and Carl's last shot won it.  Michigan had to win this game, and we won on our last gasp.

Naturally, Michigan would win during the last weekend of CCHA play, and have Notre Dame lose, at home, on Saturday night, on three goals that were waived off, to finally win the conference title.  What a way to end the regular season.

Can either of those two parts of the season be considered a disappointment?

----

Sure, we didn't win the national championship.  We lost in overtime, of the very last game of the year.  Still though, three straight tournament games where we hung on by the closest of margins, and all of them were victories?  I guess we couldn't make it four straight, but three straight victories like that ain't that bad.

At the end of the day though, this Michigan Hockey team was a remarkably fun one to watch.  The journey of this season was one to remember, even if the ending was not absolutely perfect.  Even before the tournament, the season was filled with great performances, unbelievable games, and a roster full of players that will go down as greats.

Looking back, any Michigan Hockey fan has to be satisfied.  This season was one to remember, and one to remember with pride, joy, and fondness.

And as always, go Blue.

  • 12 comments
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