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Year 4 Expectations


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The term "re-build" continues to be used when assessing the current staff and effort.

 

My trouble with this term is that it infers that either at the end of the prior regime or the beginning of this regime, that a true bottom was reached (i.e. poor culture, losses vs. wins, poor fundamentals / technique, lack of discipline, etc.) and that we are ascending from those depths.

 

Heading into Year 4, do we feel that we are in our ascendancy?  As far as Items 2, 3, and 4 above, I am not certain much has changed in 4 seasons (Riley - Final Year & Frost 3 Years).  I know Item 1 is debatable (via attrition), but what tangible evidence is there that we have ascended from the depths? 

 

You probably could have sold me on ascendance following Year 1 of this regime (many close losses to competitive teams and wins against the bottom of the league).  Years 2 and 3 have definitely been a setback to that progress.

 

Separately, the news that former players were added as unpaid advisors was certainly good for a news cycle and I suppose will rekindle hope. The question is, will hope alone alter our present reality?

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27 minutes ago, All Hail Herbie said:

The term "re-build" continues to be used when assessing the current staff and effort.

 

My trouble with this term is that it infers that either at the end of the prior regime or the beginning of this regime, that a true bottom was reached (i.e. poor culture, losses vs. wins, poor fundamentals / technique, lack of discipline, etc.) and that we are ascending from those depths.

 

Heading into Year 4, do we feel that we are in our ascendancy?  As far as Items 2, 3, and 4 above, I am not certain much has changed in 4 seasons (Riley - Final Year & Frost 3 Years).  I know Item 1 is debatable (via attrition), but what tangible evidence is there that we have ascended from the depths? 

 

You probably could have sold me on ascendance following Year 1 of this regime (many close losses to competitive teams and wins against the bottom of the league).  Years 2 and 3 have definitely been a setback to that progress.

 

Separately, the news that former players were added as unpaid advisors was certainly good for a news cycle and I suppose will rekindle hope. The question is, will hope alone alter our present reality?

Normal time line for best case scenario complete re-build-

Year one - start recruiting your players.  Try to get buy in from those players you identify as potential fits for your future roster  Start installing your system.

Year two- continue recruiting your players and encourage those that don't fit to leave.  Begin development for your recent recruits and those who you plan to keep. Start refining your system as the roster allows.  Wins are hard to come by at this point but the teaching process is well under way.  

Year three - continue recruiting your players.  Continue development and start refining the details leading up to the season.  This is where the fruits of your labor start to show.  You are a young team but full of potential and starting to win more games.  You make a bowl game and compete well in many tougher contests.  Players and fans start to get excited about the future.

Year four - Your system is fully in place and the players who know your system are really helping new players along.  Your in contention to compete for championships.  You may not get there during this season but the players and fans all believe it's possible.

 

Now take Scott's time line and throw out most of the year 3 development and detail teaching.  It wasn't allowed to happen, period.  Also, remove a larger than normal percentage of the recruits to attrition due to the pandemic.  Add in extraordinarily long recruiting dead period and consider our teams proximity to recruits. 

 

It really becomes easier to understand if you can step back and really look at the situation.  

 

This coming season will be more like a normal year three without the continuity in learning from a standard year 2. 

 

I think it is reasonable to expect what a best case scenario year three would be for this upcoming season.  We will win more games, compete better against the tough opponents, and make a bowl game.  

  

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1 hour ago, All Hail Herbie said:

The term "re-build" continues to be used when assessing the current staff and effort.

 

My trouble with this term is that it infers that either at the end of the prior regime or the beginning of this regime, that a true bottom was reached (i.e. poor culture, losses vs. wins, poor fundamentals / technique, lack of discipline, etc.) and that we are ascending from those depths.

 

Heading into Year 4, do we feel that we are in our ascendancy?  As far as Items 2, 3, and 4 above, I am not certain much has changed in 4 seasons (Riley - Final Year & Frost 3 Years).  I know Item 1 is debatable (via attrition), but what tangible evidence is there that we have ascended from the depths? 

 

You probably could have sold me on ascendance following Year 1 of this regime (many close losses to competitive teams and wins against the bottom of the league).  Years 2 and 3 have definitely been a setback to that progress.

 

Separately, the news that former players were added as unpaid advisors was certainly good for a news cycle and I suppose will rekindle hope. The question is, will hope alone alter our present reality?

 

I feel as if I'm beating my head against a wall. 

 

Riley's last team was 103rd in SP+. That sure seems like rock bottom to me!

 

Year 1: Up to 49th in SP+ with a veteran roster, but blow a bunch of close games early in the year so don't finish with a good record.

Year 2: Slight step back to 55th with one of the most inexperienced teams in the country as attrition hits us hard. You're correct that it's a step back but also not a massive step back.

Year 3: Up to 32nd and look significantly more competitive against our toughest competition, but record isn't good because we play one of the toughest schedules in country and decide to start a WR at quarterback for a game.

 

If you want to only look at the record you don't see progress. But again, there's a difference between a bad record and a bad team.

 

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13 minutes ago, J-MAGIC said:

 

I feel as if I'm beating my head against a wall. 

 

Riley's last team was 103rd in SP+. That sure seems like rock bottom to me!

 

Year 1: Up to 49th in SP+ with a veteran roster, but blow a bunch of close games early in the year so don't finish with a good record.

Year 2: Slight step back to 55th with one of the most inexperienced teams in the country as attrition hits us hard. You're correct that it's a step back but also not a massive step back.

Year 3: Up to 32nd and look significantly more competitive against our toughest competition, but record isn't good because we play one of the toughest schedules in country and decide to start a WR at quarterback for a game.

 

If you want to only look at the record you don't see progress. But again, there's a difference between a bad record and a bad team.

 

You keep posting the analytics. Analytics are great, but at the end of the day you need to win football games. No coach is given a job because their teams SP+ rankings were impressive. SP+ improved, but we stayed the same relative to our peers - t5th in the West, t5th in the West, 5th in the West. If our SP+ continues to improve, but relative to the B1G West we finish 5th the next two years Frost will be out of a job. College Football is results driven, not analytics driven. 

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2 minutes ago, FrantzHardySwag said:

You keep posting the analytics. Analytics are great, but at the end of the day you need to win football games. No coach is given a job because their teams SP+ rankings were impressive. SP+ improved, but we stayed the same relative to our peers - t5th in the West, t5th in the West, 5th in the West. If our SP+ continues to improve, but relative to the B1G West we finish 5th the next two years Frost will be out of a job. College Football is results driven, not analytics driven. 

 

I agree, but that was in response to people saying there has been no progress. At some point the progress needs to be reflected in the wins, but let's not pretend there's no evidence of improvement at all. Not all 4 win teams are created equal, and the ones with a better SP+ are the ones I'd bet on to improve from 4 wins. 

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2 minutes ago, Husker in WI said:

 

I agree, but that was in response to people saying there has been no progress. At some point the progress needs to be reflected in the wins, but let's not pretend there's no evidence of improvement at all. Not all 4 win teams are created equal, and the ones with a better SP+ are the ones I'd bet on to improve from 4 wins. 

I get that, they probably are a better football team than when Frost took over. But in the world of CFB, progress or success will never be measured by analytics. Could we use it as a sign of things to come, yeah, I could buy that. My point is, when the things that matter (Wins, Standings) show no progress - It's hard for me to be happy about progress in something irrelevant to our goals. Guess I'm just sick of the moral W's, improving SP+ is great, but lets see some progress relevant to what Frost is trying to accomplish. 

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6 minutes ago, FrantzHardySwag said:

I get that, they probably are a better football team than when Frost took over. But in the world of CFB, progress or success will never be measured by analytics. Could we use it as a sign of things to come, yeah, I could buy that. My point is, when the things that matter (Wins, Standings) show no progress - It's hard for me to be happy about progress in something irrelevant to our goals. Guess I'm just sick of the moral W's, improving SP+ is great, but lets see some progress relevant to what Frost is trying to accomplish. 


I do agree there, I'm just optimistic the wins will turn around this year because of the underlying improvements implied by SP+ and things. But yeah, this year it needs to start actually showing in the W's. And if it doesn't in the next 2 years, no SP+ rating will justify the record. 

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8 minutes ago, FrantzHardySwag said:

I get that, they probably are a better football team than when Frost took over. But in the world of CFB, progress or success will never be measured by analytics. Could we use it as a sign of things to come, yeah, I could buy that. My point is, when the things that matter (Wins, Standings) show no progress - It's hard for me to be happy about progress in something irrelevant to our goals. Guess I'm just sick of the moral W's, improving SP+ is great, but lets see some progress relevant to what Frost is trying to accomplish. 

You were one of the ones posting so much about the effects of Covid but yet now you don't even consider it's effect on a team trying to rebuild.  I don't understand.  Shutting a program down for half a year during a rebuild is going to have a really negative impact on what you can produce on the field.  

 

Nobody is saying Frost should get a free pass but he sure gets more slack from me than some of the veteran programs out there that also stunk this year.  

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2 minutes ago, Hilltop said:

You were one of the ones posting so much about the effects of Covid but yet now you don't even consider it's effect on a team trying to rebuild.  I don't understand.  Shutting a program down for half a year during a rebuild is going to have a really negative impact on what you can produce on the field.

Referring to my posts on the medical effects of covid, and it's impact on society (generally curious if that's what you're referencing)? Either way, I stated I'm judging Frost on his progress relative to our peers - in this case our peers were dealt the exact same s#!tty hand we were dealt this season. Whatever you attribute last season to, the time for tangible progress is here. 

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54 minutes ago, J-MAGIC said:

 

I feel as if I'm beating my head against a wall. 

 

Riley's last team was 103rd in SP+. That sure seems like rock bottom to me!

 

Year 1: Up to 49th in SP+ with a veteran roster, but blow a bunch of close games early in the year so don't finish with a good record.

Year 2: Slight step back to 55th with one of the most inexperienced teams in the country as attrition hits us hard. You're correct that it's a step back but also not a massive step back.

Year 3: Up to 32nd and look significantly more competitive against our toughest competition, but record isn't good because we play one of the toughest schedules in country and decide to start a WR at quarterback for a game.

 

If you want to only look at the record you don't see progress. But again, there's a difference between a bad record and a bad team.

 

 

There is a difference between a bad record and a bad team, but the truth is Nebraska was both the last two seasons.  The record, the metrics and the eyeball test tend to support this. The Huskers entered this unprecedented pandemic year with more returning starters than most, including its top 2 quarterbacks, running backs, tight end and receiver, coaching staff and scheme, and they generally played like the 101st ranked scoring offense in the NCAA. When a surprisingly healthy Nebraska team played a COVID decimated Minnesota squad down to its third and fourth stringers, the Gophers not only played like a better team, but like the team that wanted it more. SP+ doesn't address the fact that at the end of the year we were slightly better than Rutgers in head-to-head competition. 

 

It's also hard to see progress when the team plays worse in the second half of the game, which Nebraska did almost every game. There appeared to be no adjustments or motivation coming out of the locker room.

 

I don't count the first season against Frost, as the team that finished 4-2 actually did show a lot of promise. That's the main reason 2019 was a disappointment.

 

If you're tired of beating your head against the wall, think of it this way: If Mike Riley hadn't been fired, and proceeded to coach these exact same players to the exact same results for the past three seasons, would you still call that 2017 season rock bottom? 

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14 minutes ago, Guy Chamberlin said:

If you're tired of beating your head against the wall, think of it this way: If Mike Riley hadn't been fired, and proceeded to coach these exact same players to the exact same results for the past three seasons, would you still call that 2017 season rock bottom? 

 

I would, absolutely. These past 3 teams have been incredibly frustrating with their ability to shoot themselves in the foot, 2017 (at least the second half) just didn't even look like they belonged or wanted to be on the field. 2018-2020 were not good teams. 2017 was an abomination, despite ending up with a similar record.

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