You're missing my point, I don't care about the overall stats and I am not comparing us to anyone else, the numbers were just a reference. I am simply looking at what we've given up the last 5 games to guage how we will do against Iowa.
OK, going by your evaluation. You use the 4 games we just lost. Let's look at Iowa's losses. Iowa is usually considered to have a very good run defense and this is who we play next.
UCLA 211 yards rushing
Mich St 212 yards rushing
OSU 203 yards rushing
ISU 204 yards rushing
Absolutely, and that is a great data point. This was just the blackshirts thread, so I was only talking about our defense to start with. I think both teams should be able to run the ball in this one, and hopefully our passing game makes the difference overall as they simply can't throw it well.Wouldn't you also need to compare iowa's offense to the teams we played to guage how we will do against iowa?
runningblind said:Absolutely, and that is a great data point. This was just the blackshirts thread, so I was only talking about our defense to start with. I think both teams should be able to run the ball in this one, and hopefully our passing game makes the difference overall as they simply can't throw it well.
I think they will have a bit of success passing, specifically due to that over aggressiveness you noted. We will be all about stopping the run, and it will lull our secondary to sleep on a few. I also think they still will be able to run it even though we know it is coming, but hope I am wrong there.This is strictly about the Nebraska defense. If Iowa is one dimensional and can't pass, that plays into Nebraska's hand. That's why you have to compare what the 5 previous offense do compared to what Iowa's does. Four of those offenses were able to exploit our weakness and take advantage of the over aggressiveness. Will Iowa be able to do what those other offenses did?
No you count the games but you also look at it subjectively. Almost half of our schedule ranks in the bottom 20 offensively in the nation. It was a cakewalk of a schedule, outside of Ohio state and Indiana the only other offense we played with a pulse was Colorado who doesn’t run the ball.BigRedBuster said:So, we are supposed to not count our easier games while comparing to team’s stats that include their easier games?
So we should be thankful the defense has underperformed and been inconsistent? Got itHilltop said:If the defense would have taken a big step forward this year like many of you expected, we would still be watching Satt stink on Saturdays for another year.... and Tony would be the top HC prospect going into the firing season. It could be worse guys.
Moiraine said:The problem with your approach is all of the top defenses also played s#!tty opponents that made their stats look better. We probably are one of the top 25 rush defenses in reality, but we're not elite. The way you're looking at it isn't a good way to judge how good the defense is, because probably 90% of the teams you're comparing us too have let conference opponents rush for more on them.
I agree with your point. But I think @runningblind's point was that the trend is decidedly in the wrong direction. Probably not 60th. But probably closer to that than 25th.
TeamRankings.com lets you look at stats over everyone's last three games (though really annoying that they don't change the ranking number to correlate). Over that time, we are 61st in rushing yards allowed per game and 107th in yards allowed per attempt.
It all depends on where you cut off "recent". If you go back 4 games our rushing defense stats will look much better because we shut down OSU's rushing game. Go back 5 games and the stats will look worse because you are including Indiana.
teachercd said:The propaganda that iowa has a good defense just needs to stop.
They play crap teams and iowa shortens the game because they suck on offense.
What they have is a "patient" defense.