All of those comments are well and good, especially the OOC schedule one. We historically have had ADs that liked to schedule cupcake teams with maybe 1 viable game each year. I know the OOC for last year, this year and the next year have been pretty well set from the last AD and they are, aside from one team each year, laughable at best. USC's OOC in 2007 included such powerhouses as Idaho, Nebraska (), Notre Dame and Illinois. Those teams may have more name recognition than the OOC for Nebraska but they were all equally atrocious that year. National Rank is listed first ( ), then points/yardage and finally output against the target D in [ ]. So, discounting OOC the following stats can be found from NCAA.com:
2009 Nebraska Conference Opponents
Scoring O: (56) 28.4 [12]
Total O: (51) 391 [284]
Passing O: (37) 261.6 [198]
Rushing O: (79) 129.4 [86]
2007 USC Conference Opponents
Scoring O: (59) 28.1 [17]
Total O: (62) 390.5 [252]
Passing O: (57) 236.4 [166]
Rushing O: (62) 154.1 [86]
2006 USC Conf Opponents
Scoring O: (59) 23.7
Total O: (57) 343.5
Passing O: (50) 213.7
Rushing O: (64) 129.8
I used averages in all those numbers. Interestingly enough medians skew the results in favor of Nebraska moreso. I didn't do output for USC '06 due to a significantly lower offensive output of PAC-10 teams that year for scoring. 2 of the 4 categories are completely a wash and the other two are almost identically skewed to favor either, as should be expected. Nebraska gave up more passing and thus more total yards than USC in '07, however was much better at holding offenses to actually scoring less. Also what is interesting is, at least from the perspective of scoring defense, it seems each team's OOC schedule held the same weight, i.e. USC's scoring defense for the entire year was 16 ppg while Nebraska's was 11.
Yes, I have too much time on my hands. I also am not trying to prognosticate the outcome of the game. I know you are all sick of hearing about Ndamukong Suh and how "Nebraska's defense is the greatest thing since sliced bread." I don't think I'm going to go into an analysis of the stats of the defenses faced throughout the year, either, because that'd take me a little more time, partly because I just ate some beef stew and partly because I'm going to finish reading the paper here in a minute. I thought this warranted a little more attention because of those two comments and also the other thread about the Desert Swarm being >>>>>>> 2009 Nebraska D. I would love to dig up those stats but the most I could back to on NCAA.com was 1998.