Martinez and the NFL

The Alabama's and Stanford's of the world are very physical and aggressive in their style of play still, same with Wisconsin.

But yeah, Oregon, ASU, Baylor and similar teams don't often outmatch you from a physicality standpoint. tOSU I believe does to a degree. That's why Oregon routinely loses when they get matched up in title games - their opponents are sometimes very physical, very punch-you-in-the-mouth teams that disrupt Oregon's pace.

Pace is huge to a team like Oregon, just like pace is huge for Golden State. The Cavs were wearing down the Warriors and playing the full shot clock in their victories, removing what the Warriors like to do. They've been unable to do that consistently, but, that's one formula for beating high scoring perimeter basketball teams or high scoring fast-paced football teams - punch them in the mouth and get physical with them and see how they hold up. The Cavs problem is just they just don't have any other scorers to go with the physicality.
I agree they are probably the most physical teams out there today. I still don't think they are as physical as teams in the past. Teams today are more athletic and try to run around other teams not through them.

 
Here's how I see the difference between the eras:

In Nebraska's Glory Days, our linemen were the rock stars and the so-called "skill" positions benefitted from that. Frazier and Frost wouldn't have become famous on other teams. Everyone looks better on a team where both sides of the line are winning the push.

In the Callahan and Pelini years, we had some genuine flash at the skill positions, but lost our pipeline of linemen. No amount of skill can prevail when both side of the line are losing the push.

Scheme, recruiting and attitude enjoyed a perfect storm between '81 - '83 and again in '93 - '97. But it's hard to pull off. "Offensive Identity" isn't really the problem. But maybe attitude is. For years Nebraska made a commitment to win games in the trenches. Should we decide to pass the ball even more, it's still going to hinge on how well we do in the trenches.

 
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Yes, TO lost, but he was never beaten. Bo's team flat out got road killed.
Osborne teams were flat out road killed on a fairly regular basis by Oklahoma and our ranked opponent in the bowl game. In one OU game, the Nebraska offense never crossed the 50 yard line. In other big games we were held to under 200 yards total offense, our bread and butter running game sniffed out and shut down, and the in-game adjustments -- more passing and a few trick plays -- were panicky failures. Defense got gashed pretty well too, if not quite at the Wisconsin levels.

I honestly wish I didn't remember this. But I do. And a painful visit to the statistical record confirms it.
NU in TOs day and of late- no comparison

TOs had MANY close calls against OU before he started dominating them regularly

TOs teams blew out inferior teams

A 25 year history is MANY more games than a 4 or 7 year gig, LOTS more opps to stumble, but the % was much less

AND in that span LOTS of wins over top 10 teams- Bo/Cally- not so much or not at all

Few last minute or last play heroics needed to beat inferior teams

His teams werent getting taken into the 4th quarter or last play by DIAA teams or bottom of the barrel- obviously weaker teams

Against evenly matched teams- TOs teams usually won- rarely if ever got blown out by them

That wasnt the case with the last 2 head coaches
I agree it didn't happen as much as Guy remembers, but it did happen more than Lo thinks it did.

 
Oregon plays fast and with pace, but that doesn't mean they lack physicality. They aren't the same as Stanford or Bama, but they're not soft either.

 
Yes, TO lost, but he was never beaten. Bo's team flat out got road killed.
Osborne teams were flat out road killed on a fairly regular basis by Oklahoma and our ranked opponent in the bowl game. In one OU game, the Nebraska offense never crossed the 50 yard line. In other big games we were held to under 200 yards total offense, our bread and butter running game sniffed out and shut down, and the in-game adjustments -- more passing and a few trick plays -- were panicky failures. Defense got gashed pretty well too, if not quite at the Wisconsin levels.

I honestly wish I didn't remember this. But I do. And a painful visit to the statistical record confirms it.
NU in TOs day and of late- no comparison

TOs had MANY close calls against OU before he started dominating them regularly

TOs teams blew out inferior teams

A 25 year history is MANY more games than a 4 or 7 year gig, LOTS more opps to stumble, but the % was much less

AND in that span LOTS of wins over top 10 teams- Bo/Cally- not so much or not at all

Few last minute or last play heroics needed to beat inferior teams

His teams werent getting taken into the 4th quarter or last play by DIAA teams or bottom of the barrel- obviously weaker teams

Against evenly matched teams- TOs teams usually won- rarely if ever got blown out by them

That wasnt the case with the last 2 head coaches
I agree it didn't happen as much as Guy remembers, but it did happen more than Lo thinks it did.
Uhm....it happened exactly as much as I remember.

I never said the Osborne and Pelini eras were comparable, just countering the assertion that "Tom Osborne may have lost, but was never beaten."

Osborne was beaten - and beaten badly enough to get some of the same grief given Pelini. That's just a fact.

If anyone wants to take a painful trip down memory lane, I'll go fetch the stats.

 
Uhm....it happened exactly as much as I remember.

I never said the Osborne and Pelini eras were comparable, just countering the assertion that "Tom Osborne may have lost, but was never beaten."

Osborne was beaten - and beaten badly enough to get some of the same grief given Pelini. That's just a fact.

If anyone wants to take a painful trip down memory lane, I'll go fetch the stats.
I didn't take it as you comparing the two eras either so I'm not sure where the ire from others is coming from.

The truth is this - some of TO's teams did get beaten up on and badly. I think the big difference we can all agree on is that many of TO's worst losses came at the hands of very good teams. The losses weren't to a 7 win team to the tune of 70-31. They were to big time opponents. In fact, only one loss of 11 points or more during TO's time came against an unranked Oklahoma. Here's some stats gathered by CleetusVanDamme on 247sports. Losses by only 10 points or more.

45-10 v. Oklahoma in 1990

38-7 v. #3 Oklahoma in 1977

27-0 v. #3 Oklahoma in 1973

35-10 v. #7 Oklahoma in 1975

45-21 v. #2 Georgia Tech in 1990

41-17 v. #5 Florida St. in 1989

22-0 v. #1 Miami in 1991

27-7 v. #5 Oklahoma in 1985

23-3 v. #2 Miami in 1988

19-0 v. #17 Arizona St.

20-3 v. #1 Alabama in 1978

27-12 v. #9 Colorado in 1990

36-21 v. #4 Washington in 1991

29-14 v. #2 Washington in 1992

28-14 v. #6 Oklahoma in 1974

41-28 v. #5 UCLA in 1988

27-14 v. #3 Florida St. in 1992

Notes

17 career losses by 11 points or more

11 career losses by 17 points or more

9 career losses by 20 points or more

6 losses by 24 points or more

2 losses by 31 points or more

Only one loss of 11 points or more occurred v. an unranked team (Oklahoma.)

His 4 worst losses came at the hands of Oklahoma

Oklahoma showed up on this list a total of 6 times

Wash, FSU, and Miami each showed up twice

5 of these losses came in bowl games

The late 80's to early 90's was the worst period

 
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Even Osbornes win in '78 to finally break the ice was a fluke win, unless you don't count 5+ turnovers committed by OU being a fluke, including the most critical one as they were mounting the comeback inside NUs territory and coughing it up for the last time with about a minute to play. Followed that up by choking against Mizzou the following week before OU got a rematch in the bowl game and paid us back in dominating fashion.

It wasnt until '79 that NU consistently played OU competitively before rattling off a streak of wins in the 80s and through the 90s. There were some ugly losses in the 70s during TOs first years, which does raise comparisons of Pelini/TO first 7-8 years.

 
Uhm....it happened exactly as much as I remember.

I never said the Osborne and Pelini eras were comparable, just countering the assertion that "Tom Osborne may have lost, but was never beaten."

Osborne was beaten - and beaten badly enough to get some of the same grief given Pelini. That's just a fact.

If anyone wants to take a painful trip down memory lane, I'll go fetch the stats.
I didn't take it as you comparing the two eras either so I'm not sure where the ire from others is coming from.

The truth is this - some of TO's teams did get beaten up on and badly. I think the big difference we can all agree on is that many of TO's worst losses came at the hands of very good teams. The losses weren't to a 7 win team to the tune of 70-31. They were to big time opponents. In fact, only one loss of 11 points or more during TO's time came against an unranked Oklahoma. Here's some stats gathered by CleetusVanDamme on 247sports. Losses by only 10 points or more.

45-10 v. Oklahoma in 1990

38-7 v. #3 Oklahoma in 1977

27-0 v. #3 Oklahoma in 1973

35-10 v. #7 Oklahoma in 1975

45-21 v. #2 Georgia Tech in 1990

41-17 v. #5 Florida St. in 1989

22-0 v. #1 Miami in 1991

27-7 v. #5 Oklahoma in 1985

23-3 v. #2 Miami in 1988

19-0 v. #17 Arizona St.

20-3 v. #1 Alabama in 1978

27-12 v. #9 Colorado in 1990

36-21 v. #4 Washington in 1991

29-14 v. #2 Washington in 1992

28-14 v. #6 Oklahoma in 1974

41-28 v. #5 UCLA in 1988

27-14 v. #3 Florida St. in 1992

Notes

17 career losses by 11 points or more

11 career losses by 17 points or more

9 career losses by 20 points or more

6 losses by 24 points or more

2 losses by 31 points or more

Only one loss of 11 points or more occurred v. an unranked team (Oklahoma.)

His 4 worst losses came at the hands of Oklahoma

Oklahoma showed up on this list a total of 6 times

Wash, FSU, and Miami each showed up twice

5 of these losses came in bowl games

The late 80's to early 90's was the worst period
No ire from me. We just have different views of what often is, and yes a lot of his big loses were to OU. Trust me I remember TO's early teams. If I had a nickle for every time my older brother said he wasn't Devaney, I would have a lot nickels. Some of those games were worse than they look also. That 1988 loss to UCLA wasn't even that close. NU scored a couple of late TD to make it look closer. They were down 27 pts at one point in the second half. Terry Donahue called off the dogs.

 
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Uhm....it happened exactly as much as I remember.

I never said the Osborne and Pelini eras were comparable, just countering the assertion that "Tom Osborne may have lost, but was never beaten."

Osborne was beaten - and beaten badly enough to get some of the same grief given Pelini. That's just a fact.

If anyone wants to take a painful trip down memory lane, I'll go fetch the stats.
I didn't take it as you comparing the two eras either so I'm not sure where the ire from others is coming from.

The truth is this - some of TO's teams did get beaten up on and badly. I think the big difference we can all agree on is that many of TO's worst losses came at the hands of very good teams. The losses weren't to a 7 win team to the tune of 70-31. They were to big time opponents. In fact, only one loss of 11 points or more during TO's time came against an unranked Oklahoma. Here's some stats gathered by CleetusVanDamme on 247sports. Losses by only 10 points or more.

45-10 v. Oklahoma in 1990

38-7 v. #3 Oklahoma in 1977

27-0 v. #3 Oklahoma in 1973

35-10 v. #7 Oklahoma in 1975

45-21 v. #2 Georgia Tech in 1990

41-17 v. #5 Florida St. in 1989

22-0 v. #1 Miami in 1991

27-7 v. #5 Oklahoma in 1985

23-3 v. #2 Miami in 1988

19-0 v. #17 Arizona St.

20-3 v. #1 Alabama in 1978

27-12 v. #9 Colorado in 1990

36-21 v. #4 Washington in 1991

29-14 v. #2 Washington in 1992

28-14 v. #6 Oklahoma in 1974

41-28 v. #5 UCLA in 1988

27-14 v. #3 Florida St. in 1992

Notes

17 career losses by 11 points or more

11 career losses by 17 points or more

9 career losses by 20 points or more

6 losses by 24 points or more

2 losses by 31 points or more

Only one loss of 11 points or more occurred v. an unranked team (Oklahoma.)

His 4 worst losses came at the hands of Oklahoma

Oklahoma showed up on this list a total of 6 times

Wash, FSU, and Miami each showed up twice

5 of these losses came in bowl games

The late 80's to early 90's was the worst period
An 11 point loss is not a blowout

Losing to the #1 or #1 - 2-3 ranked team at the time isnt awful

There are some real blue Blood top teams on that list, Bama, Washington at the time, OU, FSU, Miami

Getting blown out by Wisconsin or even by your definition Iowa or Minnesota is awful

NU played in better bowl game- better opponents than Pelini/Callahan

No comparison at all- teams-coaches were night and day apart

NU was a feared National Power more often than not mentioned in the hunt for the National Title at some point in the season- 12 of 25

Under Pelini/Callahan- the National Title talk would have been zero

2 losses by 31 points or more in 307 games- take that all day long

Osbone lost by 31- ,065% of the time

Bo lost by 31+ 5.3% of the time- almost 10X as much as TO

TO lost 17 games of 307 by 11 or more- 5.5 % of the time

Bo lost 15 games of 94 by 11 or more - almost same number of losses in 213 fewer games- 16% of the time- almost 3X as much as TO

No comparison

 
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Uhm....it happened exactly as much as I remember.

I never said the Osborne and Pelini eras were comparable, just countering the assertion that "Tom Osborne may have lost, but was never beaten."

Osborne was beaten - and beaten badly enough to get some of the same grief given Pelini. That's just a fact.

If anyone wants to take a painful trip down memory lane, I'll go fetch the stats.
I didn't take it as you comparing the two eras either so I'm not sure where the ire from others is coming from.

The truth is this - some of TO's teams did get beaten up on and badly. I think the big difference we can all agree on is that many of TO's worst losses came at the hands of very good teams. The losses weren't to a 7 win team to the tune of 70-31. They were to big time opponents. In fact, only one loss of 11 points or more during TO's time came against an unranked Oklahoma. Here's some stats gathered by CleetusVanDamme on 247sports. Losses by only 10 points or more.

45-10 v. Oklahoma in 1990

38-7 v. #3 Oklahoma in 1977

27-0 v. #3 Oklahoma in 1973

35-10 v. #7 Oklahoma in 1975

45-21 v. #2 Georgia Tech in 1990

41-17 v. #5 Florida St. in 1989

22-0 v. #1 Miami in 1991

27-7 v. #5 Oklahoma in 1985

23-3 v. #2 Miami in 1988

19-0 v. #17 Arizona St.

20-3 v. #1 Alabama in 1978

27-12 v. #9 Colorado in 1990

36-21 v. #4 Washington in 1991

29-14 v. #2 Washington in 1992

28-14 v. #6 Oklahoma in 1974

41-28 v. #5 UCLA in 1988

27-14 v. #3 Florida St. in 1992

Notes

17 career losses by 11 points or more

11 career losses by 17 points or more

9 career losses by 20 points or more

6 losses by 24 points or more

2 losses by 31 points or more

Only one loss of 11 points or more occurred v. an unranked team (Oklahoma.)

His 4 worst losses came at the hands of Oklahoma

Oklahoma showed up on this list a total of 6 times

Wash, FSU, and Miami each showed up twice

5 of these losses came in bowl games

The late 80's to early 90's was the worst period
An 11 point loss is not a blowout

Losing to the #1 or #1 - 2-3 ranked team at the time isnt awful

There are some real blue Blood top teams on that list, Bama, Washington at the time, OU, FSU, Miami

Getting blown out by Wisconsin or even by your definition Iowa or Minnesota is awful

NU played in better bowl game- better opponents than Pelini/Callahan

No comparison at all- teams-coaches were night and day apart

NU was a feared National Power more often than not mentioned in the hunt for the National Title at some point in the season- 12 of 25

Under Pelini/Callahan- the National Title talk would have been zero
I never said 11 points was a blowout, and as I stated in my post, I agree that there is no comparison between eras.

Again, as Guy stated and as I'm stating, we're simply pointing out TO did lose some bad games. Yes, they often came to far better opponents and yes there are a million other factors at play here. That doesn't change the fact TO still had some bad losses. We can him and hum the specifics and all the variables. A poster said TO lost but was never beaten - this information contradicts that.

 
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Some bad losses?

2 losses by 31 or more in 307 - games, 25 years isnt worth talking about

ONCE every 153 games

BO OTOH- 5 times in 94 games- ONCE every 19 games or so

Same for 17 losses by 11 or more in 307 games- thats about 1 in every 20 games compared to Bo which was 1 of every 6 games

Like you- I dont agree that an 11 point loss is a blowout

 
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2 losses by 31 or more in 307 games isnt worth talking about

Same for 17 losses by 11 or more in 307 games- thats about 1 in every 20 games compared to Bo which was 1 of every 6 games
This doesn't change the fact that the losses happened. Someone made a claim and I provided information disputing that claim. Nothing more.

Unless, of course, you're arguing people should be allowed to make claims without providing any factual evidence? I doubt that.

 
Im saying what happened 2 times in 307 games is inconsequential

A true abberation- like getting hit by lightning- just totally out of character

Not like Bo where it was common place and often times to teams that werent that great- not National Title contenders like TOs

 
Im saying what happened 2 times in 307 games is inconsequential

A true abberation- like getting hit by lightning- just totally out of character

Not like Bo where it was common place and often times to teams that werent that great- not National Title contenders like TOs
I agree with you. I too think TO's bad losses are largely incomparable to BP's for multiple reasons. But, again, this doesn't change the fact that the claim was simply not true. Using your same analogy - just because the chance of getting struck by lightning is low does not change the fact that people have been struck by lightning.

The weight or attention that should be paid to TO's losses is an argument for someone else. That wasn't my intention for posting the data.

 
I guess the end result is it happened once every 153 games

So when it did happen, you knew it was a complete aberration- like when someone getting hit by lightning- not common place like Bos teams

Under TO I never thought to myself- well it looks like we lose this one by 30+

With Bo- all the meltdowns his teams had- I felt that way often- Here we go again are we going to get blown out yet again? You just never knew

 
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