Undone
All-American
I kinda get the feeling that nobody is going to play their full schedule in any of the conferences
DON'T JINX IT, MAN!
I kinda get the feeling that nobody is going to play their full schedule in any of the conferences
DON'T JINX IT, MAN!
I am not counting on NU playing until the opening kickoff on 10/24.All I'm saying is that it's 2020 and I'm not planning on anything to go as expected
If they 100% wanted to play...they would start on the 17th and there would not be a 21 day isolation for players testing positive and built in bye weeks.I am not counting on NU playing until the opening kickoff on 10/24.
All I'm saying is that it's 2020 and I'm not planning on anything to go as expected
That’s exactly what it’s like. If they really wanted to give it a chance to work out they would’ve had it start on the 10th or 17th.If they 100% wanted to play...they would start on the 17th and there would not be a 21 day isolation for players testing positive and built in bye weeks.
This situation is more like the old "Okay, Junior, you can go to the lake with your friends this weekend IF you get an A on your math test"
Meanwhile, Junior has a 32% in math.
Yeah but they have more chances at more games. They started like over a month before we willI kinda get the feeling that nobody is going to play their full schedule in any of the conferences
Exactly. But they had to adopt some dumb rules and late timeline to get the no votes to yes to be unanimous. I would rather roll with the 9 who want to play and follow the other conference leadThat’s exactly what it’s like. If they really wanted to give it a chance to work out they would’ve had it start on the 10th or 17th.
I predict that team will be a 4-4 Michigan team. All the NFL players have declared for the NFL and the projected starting QB, Dylan McCaffrey, just opted out to transfer, leaving a QB who was a project and another who was a last minute take because the higher ranked recruit was declared medically unfit to play before he ever stepped on campus. See you fellas in the +1 game.4-4 minimum with the bonus game at the end which will match us against one of the lower teams in the east.
So, I have no inside information on what the schedule is going to be, but there's two pieces of information that we can go from to extrapolate what it might be.
The first is that the Big Ten announced it would use the original schedule, minus one conference game, for the abbreviated 8-game season.
The second is that Bill Moos as stated that he hopes the Big Ten will allow our Iowa game to be moved to Black Friday.
That tells us they're likely our opponent the weekend of 11/28, meaning the schedule likely looks like this:
10/24 - Purdue (Lincoln)
10/31 - Northwestern (Evanston)
11/7 - Illinois (Lincoln)
11/14 - Ohio State (Columbus)
11/21 - Penn State (Lincoln)
11/28 - Iowa (Lincoln) **11/27**
12/5 - Wisconsin (Madison)
12/12 - Minnesota (Lincoln)
This is the exact schedule we had originally, minus Rutgers. As discussed earlier in the thread, that would give us the most watchable games against the most compelling teams, with the intent of driving as many eyeballs to TVs as possible.
If this is the case, that means we start the season against two teams that finished with fewer than five wins, Purdue and Northwestern, who went 4-8 and 3-9 last year. Amazingly, one of those four wins for Purdue was against us, so hopefully that's some good motivation.
Next up would be Illinois, whom we beat last year but who made a bowl game (which they lost), finishing 6-7. But Lovie Smith has the Illini trending upward, and if you recall, they hit like a ton of bricks in that game last year. We had to mount a comeback after trailing 35-24 late in the third quarter.
Then we would hit a gauntlet of five straight teams who won 10 or more games last year. Ohio State, Penn State, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota, who finished last season a combined 55-12. Nebraska played four of these teams last year and went 0-4, losing by an average of 37-15.
WHAT'S THE SCHEDULE?
As of now, it's an eight-game regular-season model — four home, four away at campus sites — starting the weekend of Oct. 23-24. The starting date allows Big Ten teams to play eight straight weeks, leading up to the Big Ten championship game on Dec. 19.
The schedule will be based on the original nine-game Big Ten schedule — pre-COVID-19. That means Purdue should have home games against Iowa, Wisconsin, Northwestern and one team from the East Division. The Boilermakers are expected to play at Nebraska, Minnesota, Illinois and Indiana. The Old Oaken Bucket matchup should be a protected crossover game.
So....yes...I understand and agree that we have to prove ourselves on the field before fans get too crazy....yada yada yada.So, I have no inside information on what the schedule is going to be, but there's two pieces of information that we can go from to extrapolate what it might be.
The first is that the Big Ten announced it would use the original schedule, minus one conference game, for the abbreviated 8-game season.
The second is that Bill Moos as stated that he hopes the Big Ten will allow our Iowa game to be moved to Black Friday.
That tells us they're likely our opponent the weekend of 11/28, meaning the schedule likely looks like this:
10/24 - Purdue (Lincoln)
10/31 - Northwestern (Evanston)
11/7 - Illinois (Lincoln)
11/14 - Ohio State (Columbus)
11/21 - Penn State (Lincoln)
11/28 - Iowa (Lincoln) **11/27**
12/5 - Wisconsin (Madison)
12/12 - Minnesota (Lincoln)
This is the exact schedule we had originally, minus Rutgers. As discussed earlier in the thread, that would give us the most watchable games against the most compelling teams, with the intent of driving as many eyeballs to TVs as possible.
If this is the case, that means we start the season against two teams that finished with fewer than five wins, Purdue and Northwestern, who went 4-8 and 3-9 last year. Amazingly, one of those four wins for Purdue was against us, so hopefully that's some good motivation.
Next up would be Illinois, whom we beat last year but who made a bowl game (which they lost), finishing 6-7. But Lovie Smith has the Illini trending upward, and if you recall, they hit like a ton of bricks in that game last year. We had to mount a comeback after trailing 35-24 late in the third quarter.
Then we would hit a gauntlet of five straight teams who won 10 or more games last year. Ohio State, Penn State, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota, who finished last season a combined 55-12. Nebraska played four of these teams last year and went 0-4, losing by an average of 37-15.
So, I have no inside information on what the schedule is going to be, but there's two pieces of information that we can go from to extrapolate what it might be.
The first is that the Big Ten announced it would use the original schedule, minus one conference game, for the abbreviated 8-game season.
The second is that Bill Moos as stated that he hopes the Big Ten will allow our Iowa game to be moved to Black Friday.
That tells us they're likely our opponent the weekend of 11/28, meaning the schedule likely looks like this:
10/24 - Purdue (Lincoln)
10/31 - Northwestern (Evanston)
11/7 - Illinois (Lincoln)
11/14 - Ohio State (Columbus)
11/21 - Penn State (Lincoln)
11/28 - Iowa (Lincoln) **11/27**
12/5 - Wisconsin (Madison)
12/12 - Minnesota (Lincoln)
This is the exact schedule we had originally, minus Rutgers. As discussed earlier in the thread, that would give us the most watchable games against the most compelling teams, with the intent of driving as many eyeballs to TVs as possible.
If this is the case, that means we start the season against two teams that finished with fewer than five wins, Purdue and Northwestern, who went 4-8 and 3-9 last year. Amazingly, one of those four wins for Purdue was against us, so hopefully that's some good motivation.
Next up would be Illinois, whom we beat last year but who made a bowl game (which they lost), finishing 6-7. But Lovie Smith has the Illini trending upward, and if you recall, they hit like a ton of bricks in that game last year. We had to mount a comeback after trailing 35-24 late in the third quarter.
Then we would hit a gauntlet of five straight teams who won 10 or more games last year. Ohio State, Penn State, Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota, who finished last season a combined 55-12. Nebraska played four of these teams last year and went 0-4, losing by an average of 37-15.
I was feeling all excited until I read this and now I am just hoping we've improved a lot.