Posts Tagged ‘Nebraska Cornhuskers’

Fresh Take: UW, UH, A&M On the Rise

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

Washington HuskiesGet the Welcome Wagon Ready:

These programs are coming back to the party:

-Washington: Steve Sarkisian looks like the perfect fit.  The Huskies played with LSU, upset USC win, Jake Locker is a true leader, and Husky Stadium still a great atmosphere.

-Texas A&M: QB Jerrod Johnson quietly leads the nation’s #1 Offense. We’ll know more this weekend when the Aggies take on the Hogs in Dallas.

-Nebraska: Bo Pelini has the Huskers believing.

-Tennessee: Lane Kiffin is like a shot of adrenaline. Kiffin and Coach O will recruit.

-Houston: Kevin Sumlin reviving a once-proud program

Start the Coaching Search
-CU: Looks like Dan Hawkins just a bad fit.
-UVA: Al Groh needs to start packing up his desk now; save recruiting visits for the next guy

Big 12, Briefly
OU wasn’t prepared for a QB not named Bradford. OSU had the season’s worse hangover after the party of all parties. Baylor couldn’t handle the media hype against Connecticut.

Mizzou appears to have maintained a solid club despite huge losses.  A&M’s True Freshmen young guns seem to be primed for marked improvement in Aggieland.  Texas keeps rollin’ with sharp-shooter Colt McCoy and a cast of immense talent.

Tech, Leach’s Stock Falling
With the rise of OSU, and  Texas A&M showing signs of waking up from its decade-long slumber, Texas Tech hangs on another year or two as a spoiler until self-proclaimed pirate Mike Leach’s peg leg gives way.

Notre Dame
The Irish are stockpiled with talent but Charlie Weis is hanging on by a thread.  UW’s Sarkisian and Locker might be carrying hammers this weekend to drive a few more nails in Weis’ coffin. Will the University of Cincinnati’s Brian Kelly the next in line to be tasked with waking up the echoes?

BYU
An example of why Non-BCS schools don’t belong.  The ‘BCS Busters’ would cease to exist if they played more than 1 away game every year against a team with more than 15,000 people cheering against them.  Utah’s Sugar Bowl win is an example of a team getting up for one game; play 4 of those in un-friendly territory every year, and the concept of the ‘BCS Buster’ wouldn’t exist.

Observations / Questions

Ole Miss / Houston Nutt: Is Nutt living on Coach O’s recruits?

LSU: looks like a slow deterioration on the bayou.  The Tigers are at a point where they can either rise back to the nation’s elite, or head down the path back to the Capital One Bowl, or worse.

Florida State: Looked great vs. BYU; a sign of things to come?

Miami: will the blue-chip depth come of age & return the “U” to dominance?  In the words of our favorite analyst Lee Corso, “Not so fast!” VT proved the “U” isn’t quite back yet.

Michigan: will Rodriguez’ year 2 and 3 trend continue?

USC will win out; the UW loss will be a blip on the screen.

-The PAC-10 is underrated.

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What Is The Big 12 Missing? Nebraska and Texas A&M

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

nebraska-cornhuskersIn 2008, the Big 12 scored points and put quarterbacks in New York for the Heisman Trophy Ceremony.  With obscene offensive numbers, the media jumped on the bandwagon as the Big 12 barked at the heels of the SEC as the dominant conference in college football.  How can the Big 12 shake its reputation as the second-most dominant conference?  The answer lies in two places: College Station, TX and Lincoln, NE.  The Big 12 needs Black Shirts and a Wrecking Crew.  The Big 12 needs Nebraska and Texas A&M to be good again. 

Certainly, OU and Texas can play with Florida and Alabama, but the Gators and the Crimson Tide are just a little better.   Texas Tech and Missouri can play with LSU and Georgia, but the Bayou Bengals and the ‘Dawgs are a lot better. Year-in, year-out, from top to bottom, the SEC has more depth than any other conference, and it looks like that will continue in 2009.

The past few years the Big 12’s second tier has been Texas Tech, Missouri and Kansas.  While this is great for the Red Raiders, Tigers and Jayhawks, the Big 12 as a whole isn’t really getting any better.  It doesn’t need anymore second-tier teams.  It would be an added bonus for the second tier to maintain their success, but the conference needs two more top-tier teams.

Unlike the second tier, the Aggies and Huskers have the resources, facilities, tradition and fan support to get there.  In other words, Tech, Mizzou and KU are all tapped out; they’ve reached their maximum upside.  We all know what Nebraska can be, and Texas A&M has an upside capable of competing with OU and Texas.

OU, Texas, Texas A&M and Nebraska should be mainstays in the Top 10-15, year in, year out.  Right now, only OU and Texas are carrying their weight.  It’s time for the Huskers and Aggies to pull theirs and help carry the Big 12 torch.  

Relative to the SEC, the current state of affairs in the Big 12 is not good:  it’s OU, Texas, and the rest.  On the other hand, the SEC has Florida, Alabama, LSU and Georgia–all teams worthy of serious national consideration.  And Tennessee will be back soon if Lane Kiffin can adjust to the cut-throat recruiting culture of the SEC.

Both Nebraska and A&M made mistakes with their previous coaching hires with Bill Callahan and Dennis Franchione but seem to be happy with their current regimes.  It won’t be 2009, but in the next couple of years we’ll see if the former defensive mastermind Bo Pelini and former NFL Head Coach/GM Mike Sherman have recruited and developed well enough to become more than just a blip on the schedules of OU and Texas.  The Big 12 needs it.  Otherwise, no matter how many points they score or how many of its quarterbacks are invited to the Heisman ceremony, the Big 12 will be looking up at the SEC–again.

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