when you have your starters in with a 30 plus point lead, 69 points on the board, and its the 4th quarter. that is the very definition of running up the score. i'm not getting into if it was right or not. but no one can argue that fact. that is exactly what it is.
and I will also put forth this fact. TO never did that. he never had his starters in the 4th quarter.....ever.
Bull crap on that. When an offense is on the field their job is to score points. Is Mangino supposed to tell his players to just fall down? I don't give a crap if they are the starters, they earned the right to play. I would expect the Nebraska offense to do the same thing if they had the ability. It's not the Jayhawks fault Nebraska is coached by a loser of a defensive coordinator. And if the defense didn't play like crap with their missed tackles and missed assignments, the beatdown wouldn't have been that bad...
I joined just to comment on this thread. You, sir, are soooo wrong in thinking Kansas was running up the score.when you have your starters in with a 30 plus point lead, 69 points on the board, and its the 4th quarter. that is the very definition of running up the score.
and I will also put forth this fact. TO never did that. he never had his starters in the 4th quarter.....ever.
But when the water boy scores the last three touchdowns in that ISU game it really shouldn't be considered running up the score, although KU's waterboy could probably score on coz.I remember going to an NU/ISU game in 1995 or 1996 I believe and the score was 77-0. Now do you call that not running up the score? That was the case of one of the best football teams ever against a horrible ISU team and defense. Same principle applies today. Also keep in mine how many short fields KU had today....many!
But when the water boy scores the last three touchdowns in that ISU game it really shouldn't be considered running up the score, although KU's waterboy could probably score on coz.I remember going to an NU/ISU game in 1995 or 1996 I believe and the score was 77-0. Now do you call that not running up the score? That was the case of one of the best football teams ever against a horrible ISU team and defense. Same principle applies today. Also keep in mine how many short fields KU had today....many!
I'm not denying that some teams (Mizzou included) have run up the score on Nebraska this year, but I think teams like Mizzou and Kansas have done it to make a national statement and get national attention. Not having a tradition of a good team means we often struggle to get noticed by the national media, and running up a big margin on a team like Nebraska at least gets us press, which helps with recruiting. I also think the difference between Nebraska running up the score in the past and teams running it up now has a lot to do with the different dynamic of a passing game versus the power running game Nebraska had. One is obviously better at eating up the clock than the other. Mizzou has gotten into trouble in the past with safe leads that evaporated once we started trying to run the clock down.But when the water boy scores the last three touchdowns in that ISU game it really shouldn't be considered running up the score, although KU's waterboy could probably score on coz.I remember going to an NU/ISU game in 1995 or 1996 I believe and the score was 77-0. Now do you call that not running up the score? That was the case of one of the best football teams ever against a horrible ISU team and defense. Same principle applies today. Also keep in mine how many short fields KU had today....many!
which begs the question... is everyone going to be ok with it when we get back to being old nebraska? because we would have beat some of those teams by much more than 100 playing starters that long......so then thats ok, right?
I'm not denying that some teams (Mizzou included) have run up the score on Nebraska this year, but I think teams like Mizzou and Kansas have done it to make a national statement and get national attention. Not having a tradition of a good team means we often struggle to get noticed by the national media, and running up a big margin on a team like Nebraska at least gets us press, which helps with recruiting. I also think the difference between Nebraska running up the score in the past and teams running it up now has a lot to do with the different dynamic of a passing game versus the power running game Nebraska had. One is obviously better at eating up the clock than the other. Mizzou has gotten into trouble in the past with safe leads that evaporated once we started trying to run the clock down.But when the water boy scores the last three touchdowns in that ISU game it really shouldn't be considered running up the score, although KU's waterboy could probably score on coz.I remember going to an NU/ISU game in 1995 or 1996 I believe and the score was 77-0. Now do you call that not running up the score? That was the case of one of the best football teams ever against a horrible ISU team and defense. Same principle applies today. Also keep in mine how many short fields KU had today....many!
which begs the question... is everyone going to be ok with it when we get back to being old nebraska? because we would have beat some of those teams by much more than 100 playing starters that long......so then thats ok, right?
I have never seen one poster argue so long and hard on a message board that it was the responsibility of the other team's offense to stop themselves.
...and they paid us back the next year by breaking our winning streak.Nebraska 84 - Minnesota 13 (1983)
Nebraska 77 ASU 28 (1995)