That's kind of what I was thinking.How are we mentioned as easiest with trips to tOSU, Wiscy, Iowa and a home game against Oregon. Yet Iowa doesn't even have a marquee ooc matchup and isn't mentioned?
Because if you mention Iowa in your article or tweet it doesn't move the needle, in Iowa or nationally.That's kind of what I was thinking.Our conference games are about a wash compared to them, except they have their toughest ones at home and ours are away.How are we mentioned as easiest with trips to tOSU, Wiscy, Iowa and a home game against Oregon. Yet Iowa doesn't even have a marquee ooc matchup and isn't mentioned?
Doesn't seem quite right.
Oh yeah. Silly me, I forgot that sports writers don't actually report factual data.Because if you mention Iowa in your article or tweet it doesn't move the needle, in Iowa or nationally.That's kind of what I was thinking.Our conference games are about a wash compared to them, except they have their toughest ones at home and ours are away.How are we mentioned as easiest with trips to tOSU, Wiscy, Iowa and a home game against Oregon. Yet Iowa doesn't even have a marquee ooc matchup and isn't mentioned?
Doesn't seem quite right.
If you mention Nebraska it moves the needle both here and nationally, and you get a bunch of irate Nebraska fans tweeting back at you about their schedule, which moves the needle even further.
SPN’s Sports Analytics Team released its preseason Football Power Index last week, and the Big Ten took a bit of whooping.
Only three conference teams landed in the Top 25 of the rankings. The highest was Michigan at No. 11 -- significantly further down the food chain than most early preseason rankings expect the Wolverines to be.
Poor rankings led to poor schedule strength. The five weakest schedules among Power 5 schools next season belong to Big Ten teams, according to the FPI. Only four Big Ten schedules are ranked in the Top 50 (none higher than
Ohio State at No. 31) despite an East Division with three playoff contenders and some marquee non-conference games like Wisconsin vs. LSU and Ohio State vs. Oklahoma.
It’s important to remember the FPI is a statistical ranking determined by numbers and not people, but it does beg the question:
Why do the numbers hate the Big Ten?
http://espn.go.com/blog/bigten/post/_/id/132157/why-does-the-fpi-hate-the-big-ten
chuckle, you must have found your soapbox! I remember husker fans used to give KSU crap for hanging a hat on a division title, now some huskers fans do it.Turned a corner? I think you mean pulled out of a ditch that was last season.they have us at 25th after the poor season last year? maybe they think Nebraska has turned a corner and is on an upswing?
NU was probably around the same last preseason (and underperformed based on the metrics) and has been in that range probably most of the past 15 years. Many fans think we should fire coaches who have us in the 9/10 win, ~50% division titles, and 15-30 ranking range.
To me, that's the interesting debate. If RIley matches but doesn't outperform the last staff in terms of on the field performance, should we fire them in 7 years? I don't think so. But that's probably for another thread.
Anyway, it could be moot as Riley will likely be retiring in about 7 years regardless.
And arguably their patience paid off, because they have two conference championships during the last 10 years of Snyder's tenure.chuckle, you must have found your soapbox! I remember husker fans used to give KSU crap for hanging a hat on a division title, now some huskers fans do it.Turned a corner? I think you mean pulled out of a ditch that was last season.they have us at 25th after the poor season last year? maybe they think Nebraska has turned a corner and is on an upswing?
NU was probably around the same last preseason (and underperformed based on the metrics) and has been in that range probably most of the past 15 years. Many fans think we should fire coaches who have us in the 9/10 win, ~50% division titles, and 15-30 ranking range.
To me, that's the interesting debate. If RIley matches but doesn't outperform the last staff in terms of on the field performance, should we fire them in 7 years? I don't think so. But that's probably for another thread.
Anyway, it could be moot as Riley will likely be retiring in about 7 years regardless.
I think preseason rankings are silly. However, this ranks by prediction of games won. Not how the teams will actually end up ranked.That they have preseason FPI rankings shows just how garbage of a metric it really is.
SPN’s Sports Analytics Team released its preseason Football Power Index last week, and the Big Ten took a bit of whooping.
Only three conference teams landed in the Top 25 of the rankings. The highest was Michigan at No. 11 -- significantly further down the food chain than most early preseason rankings expect the Wolverines to be.
Poor rankings led to poor schedule strength. The five weakest schedules among Power 5 schools next season belong to Big Ten teams, according to the FPI. Only four Big Ten schedules are ranked in the Top 50 (none higher than
Ohio State at No. 31) despite an East Division with three playoff contenders and some marquee non-conference games like Wisconsin vs. LSU and Ohio State vs. Oklahoma.
It’s important to remember the FPI is a statistical ranking determined by numbers and not people, but it does beg the question:
Why do the numbers hate the Big Ten?
http://espn.go.com/blog/bigten/post/_/id/132157/why-does-the-fpi-hate-the-big-ten
Because if you mention Iowa in your article or tweet it doesn't move the needle, in Iowa or nationally.That's kind of what I was thinking.Our conference games are about a wash compared to them, except they have their toughest ones at home and ours are away.How are we mentioned as easiest with trips to tOSU, Wiscy, Iowa and a home game against Oregon. Yet Iowa doesn't even have a marquee ooc matchup and isn't mentioned?
Doesn't seem quite right.
If you mention Nebraska it moves the needle both here and nationally, and you get a bunch of irate Nebraska fans tweeting back at you about their schedule, which moves the needle even further.
And arguably their patience paid off, because they have two conference championships during the last 10 years of Snyder's tenure.chuckle, you must have found your soapbox! I remember husker fans used to give KSU crap for hanging a hat on a division title, now some huskers fans do it.Turned a corner? I think you mean pulled out of a ditch that was last season.they have us at 25th after the poor season last year? maybe they think Nebraska has turned a corner and is on an upswing?
NU was probably around the same last preseason (and underperformed based on the metrics) and has been in that range probably most of the past 15 years. Many fans think we should fire coaches who have us in the 9/10 win, ~50% division titles, and 15-30 ranking range.
To me, that's the interesting debate. If RIley matches but doesn't outperform the last staff in terms of on the field performance, should we fire them in 7 years? I don't think so. But that's probably for another thread.
Anyway, it could be moot as Riley will likely be retiring in about 7 years regardless.
Of course there was a period when KSU chased the "pro style" approach and brought in Ron Prince for gods sake (remember when he was the next hot coach?). They didn't have any winning seasons during those years, despite the B12N being way down.
My point is that the FPI, BPI, and whatever other garbage PIs ESPN puts out are supposed to be mathematical formulas. You can't have data when zero games have been played because there is no data to go off of except last year's results, which if we are going off of those then why not just re-post the final rankings from last year? Garbage metric.I think preseason rankings are silly. However, this ranks by prediction of games won. Not how the teams will actually end up ranked.That they have preseason FPI rankings shows just how garbage of a metric it really is.
I think that's the case.