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Another Big 10 Embarassment? Cursory Thoughts on Week 1

I've often noted that college football is a sport of waiting.  Waiting for signing day, waiting for spring practice, waiting for fall camp...season openings, conference play, marquis opponents, rivalry games, favorable third-party losses, bowl assignments, bowl match-ups, the national championship game... Ours is a game defined by benchmark.  In many ways the lives of fans are defined by these kinds of periodic, despotic, interludes.

When you're a Big 10 fan; however, one thing that's never in want is the opportunity to second guess the competitiveness of the conference.  Mediocre seems to have become a great Midwestern analog -- its gentle spirit waiting in the wings of the Edward Jones Dome, and along the clandestine redwoods of Strawberry Canyon.

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Like Juice Williams the Big 10 Conference still needs a little sideline work.

This Saturday was no exception.  With the eyes of a skeptical (perhaps even scornful) nation on Michigan State and No. 20 Illinois both teams were handedly defeated by BCS compatriots California and No. 7 Missouri.  Traditional conference power Michigan fell also -- to the Mountain West, in a second-consecutive season opening loss at the hands of a non-BCS foe.   And while a combined 19 point margin of loss for all three might not sound earth-shattering, none led outside the first quarter of play -- resulting in a frantic series of unavailing comebacks.

The only conference that has cause to feel worse is the ACC, who saw its uncontested favorite No. 9 Clemson fall face first at the hands of a middle of the pack (in the SEC) No. 24 Alabama, and runner up No. 17 Virginia Tech beaten at its own game by East Carolina.

Does the Big 10 have a silver lining?

Star-divide

Don't ask anyone outside the Midwest, but Northwestern came back from a first quarter deficit to silence Syracuse -- putting up 484 total yards of offense in a race-to-the-bottom contest with the Big East's Orange.  No. 13 Wisconsin took care of business on the heels of P.J. Hill, who ran for over two-hundred yards for only the second time in his career. 

The No. 22 Nittany Lions flooded past Coastal Carolina, racking up 594 yards of offense, and a 373rd career victory for Joe Paterno, (tying Bobby Bowden's record).  And the No. 2 Ohio State Buckeyes looked fluent in 43-0 shutout of Youngstown State (highlighted by true freshman turned gazelle Terelle Pryor who skated to 52 yards -- including an 18 yard touchdown dance -- and lowpointed by a potentially damning foot plant a la Wells).

Wins for Iowa, Indiana, and Minnesota help add to the assets column of the balance.  In case you're keeping track, that's 7 and 3 for the Big 10 in out of conference plesantries (Purdue, interestingly enjoyed a by-week).  Comparatively, the Big East went 4-4, the ACC 7-5, the Big 12 10-2, the SEC 10-2, and the Pac 10 6-1.

So we beat the ACC and the Big East.  Great.  That's like beating your little sister at driveway basketball.

But should we really fault Michigan State and Illinois for dropping the conference banner?

I'm not convinced we should.  The Fighting Illini overcame a 31-10 halftime deficit to make things interesting against a Missouri Tigers squad that (second-half defense notwithstanding) is the real deal.  Michigan State squandered an ability to move the football at will with a series of missed opportunities 3,000 miles from home.  (Before you jump all over this one, ask a Tennessee fan how much fun it is to open a season on the West Coast).  Neither established pace or presence, but both proved they're not pretenders.

And that perhaps, is the symptom of a developing Big 10 -- a league that's all voice with no middle.

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Changing of the Guard...

While the marquee games were not quite what we would like to have, the Big 10’s secondary balance of power (beneath the Ohio State university) has shifted slightly towards Michigan State, Illinois, and others…Michigan will be down for a couple of years.

However, the conference has the ability to play strong and stand up well for itself this year and all of us who love good, smash-mouth football, not the whiny, “don’t touch me”, get out of bounds stuff are proud of the Big 10’s opening and look forward to a strong season.

Proudly waving the Cubbie Blue from Northern Missouri! GO CUBS GO!

by Tater01 on Sep 2, 2008 11:41 AM CDT   0 recs

+1

What would Red Grange,Bronko Nagurski, Jim Thrope, Jim Brown, and Walter Payton have to say about sissy -panzy ass players who duck for the out of bounds play to avoid contact?

I'm worried about the beer supply. After this case, and the other case, there's only one case left- Barney Gumble

by CptChaosSidekick on Sep 3, 2008 8:25 AM CDT to parent up   0 recs

We do not need another apologist for the B10

The debate over which BCS conference is the best has gone on so long that I am just sick of it! I know all the talking points by heart. I have seen all the stats I care to see. The pronounments are posted relentlessly on blogs and articles that that don’t even remotely have anything to do with conferences. It has been debated ad nasuem. Please give it a rest.

I don’t care anymore. I am sick of the cool-aid drinkers from the SEC, PAc 10, Big 12, Big 10, etc. I started out rooting for a team and I am gonna stay rooting for my team and against their opponent! You can’t make me defend the other teams in the conference.
I won’t! I won’t! I won’t!

Gee. I feel better. Thanks. Come to think of it……..the ACC really got spanked this weekend….

by Juannieboy on Sep 2, 2008 1:41 PM CDT   0 recs

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