As for the rest of the criteria, I considered the following:
» Only teams that are in Power Five conferences and had full access to the BCS when the BCS was in play. That disqualifies Boise State, BYU, Utah, TCU and a few others. It doesn’t disqualify Notre Dame, but something else does.
» At least a 55 percent winning percentage over the last 10 seasons. That guarantees a team has won at least seven games per season.
» At least seven bowls over the last 10 years. Nebraska has played in nine, skipping only 2007. That rids us of yo-yo teams.
» A five-year average national recruiting rank in the top half of college football, as measured by combining the ratings of the 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015 recruiting classes according to 247Sports Composite service. Further, any team with a national average rank 10.0 or better doesn’t qualify until Nebraska itself reaches that recruiting stratosphere. Further, the program must have some recruiting advantages (location, facilities, tradition, league placement, etc.) and at least some recruiting disadvantages.
» I’m not entirely dismissing private schools, but there aren’t any on this list, and the differences between how public and private universities operate are significant enough for me to generally disqualify them. This includes Notre Dame.
» Sheer fan decree. Thus Oklahoma makes the list, as did one Big Ten team. Since Wisconsin got the most votes from fans, I went to the No. 2 vote-getter, which has 15 fewer wins than Nebraska over the last decade and a new head coach, just like the Huskers.
LinkHere are the 12 peer programs — 10 of my own picks, plus the two fan favorites — from worst 10-year record to best:
Iowa
Arizona State
Michigan
Georgia Tech
Michigan State
Oklahoma State
West Virginia
Clemson
Missouri
Wisconsin
Oklahoma
Oregon
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