8/28/2006

PICKIN’ ON THE BIG TEN, LABOR DAY 2006

Football.

Football!

FOOOOTBAAAAAAAAALLLLL!!!

Ahem. Now that we’ve gotten that out of the way, let’s get down to the semi-serious business of picking the first week’s games in the Big Ten or, as we like to call it around here, “amateur weekend.” Seriously, there’s about one and a half tough games on this week’s schedule. But pick them we must, and we must do so early because (a) there’s two Thursday nighters this week, and (b) we’re going on vacation tomorrow.

So now it’s time to answer the unanswered questions heading into the season. Victories in this first week mean a lot; losses mean a lot more. Right now we know very little about what the Big Ten season will look like. By this time next week, we may know a lot more.

EASTERN ILLINOIS @ ILLINOIS

Of course, Illinois is in eastern Illinois, so it looks like . . . well, this is a scrimmage, isn’t it? Right?

Pshaw. There are no scrimmages when you’re Illinois. EIU is a 1-AA team, and not an outstanding one at that, but a list of their football-related alumni includes Mike Shanahan, Sean Payton, and Tony Romo. Which means that EIU has three more prominent alumni in the NFL than Illinois does. Still, there’s not much doubt about the outcome of this game. I hope.

SAFETY SCHOOL 10
SAFELY SCHOOLED 45

WESTERN MICHIGAN @ INDIANA

Sadly, it’s easier to remember when Western Michigan was good than it is to remember when Indiana was good. Hoeppner’s crew should disrupt the Broncos fairly easily, at least by IU standards.

KALAMAZOOPER 13
THE BEST FOOTBALL TEAM IN SOUTHERN INDIANA, PROBABLY 35

MONTANA @ IOWA

This marks the first time in the recent history of POTBT (what, there’s ancient history of POTBT?–Ed.) that two teams whose names are also titles on John Linnell’s 1999 album State Songs have met in a non-conference matchup. There, now don’t you feel smarter?

Montana is not a pushover–they’re a pretty good I-AA team–and Iowa will be without two starters (DE Kenny Iwebema and WR Herb Grigsby). So this game could be close. At the end of the first quarter.

REALLY JUST A LEG 14
SHE’S A WITCH 56

VANDERBILT @ MICHIGAN

Two Harvards of football conferences put their student-athlete minds together to answer the burning questions “How much of last year’s success was due to Jay Cutler?” and “Was it really just predictable playcalling, or was Michigan just not that great last year?”

SHIPPING MAGNATES 17
NYARLLOYDHOTEP 45

IDAHO @ MICHIGAN STATE

Expanding to twelve games on a permanent basis means you’re going to see a lot more games like this, games that make absolutely no geographical sense. But it does make sense when you know that John L. Smith is a former Dennis Erickson assistant and Idaho head coach. And, since this is a Dennis Erickson v. John L. Smith matchup, look for gobs of offense and practically no defense.

TWO NATIONAL TITLES 24
TWO CUSA TITLES 31

MINNESOTA @ KENT STATE

Yup, I checked . . . it’s a road game for the Gophers. There are three road games in the conference this week . . . and they’re all at MAC schools. Welcome to the bigs, MAC.

DAVE WINFIELD’S ALMA MATER 28
THURMAN MUNSON’S ALMA MATER 24

NORTHWESTERN @ FAKE MIAMI

The saddest football game imaginable right now.

LEARNING TO CRAWL 30
LAST OF THE INDEPENDENTS 31

NORTHERN ILLINOIS @ OHIO STATE

While we are this close to retiring the term “MACrifice” around these parts, this game may look like one at times, as tOSU will look to justify the buzz it’s generated by taking it to a pretty good MAC team. Look for a vulgar display of power early in this game.

DE KALB 6
DECALS 63

AKRON @ PENN STATE

So . . . like I asked in the preview, what’s the fluke with Penn State. Last year, or the years before? It’ll be at least one more week before we know the answer.

GOODYEAR 10
NO, JUST A COUPLE BAD ONES 48

INDIANA STATE @ PURDUE

Gad, do I hate the first week of the season.

INSERT MORE INTERESTING TEAM HERE 0
YOU COULD SAY THAT ABOUT US TOO 59

WISCONSIN @ BOWLING GREEN (at Cleveland)

The Badgers have been roughed up by injuries and off-the-field incidents since last January. QB John Stocco will probably play in this game, though his mobility will be suspect after arthroscopic knee surgery a couple weeks back. The Badgers also lost fullback Chris Pressley and wide receiver Marcus Randle El for the season. That will force a lot of last-minute adjustments to the game plan, at least on offense. (The defense should be ready to go.) Doesn’t matter. BGSU is still a mid-pack MAC team which didn’t get better by losing last year’s starting QB Omar Jacobs.

BRET YOUR APPETITE 42
THE ACADEMIC BEACON OF SOUTHEASTERN NORTHWESTERN OHIO 12

Next week:

  • Illinois @ Rutgers: This was a pretty good game last year
  • Indiana @ Ball State: Uh-huh. ‘Road game.’
  • Iowa @ Syracuse: Trap game? Maybe . . .
  • Central Michigan @ Michigan: These games should not happen
  • Eastern Michigan @ Michigan State: Ditto
  • Minnesota @ California: Avert your eyes, ye weak of stomach
  • New Hampshire @ Northwestern: A nice soft landing
  • Ohio State @ Texas: The BCS Championship is in September this year, I guess
  • Penn State @ Notre Dame: The second of two stunningly good Big Ten games this week
  • Fake Miami @ Purdue: ‘Upset’ alert
  • Western Illinois @ Wisconsin: Gadzooks
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8/23/2006

CELEBRATING A SMALL VICTORY

While we haven’t made up any ground on Google (boooo!) we are pleased to announce that TBP is now the #1 Phil the Showkiller website on MSN Search.

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8/22/2006

WHOSE GRIDIRON CUISINE REIGNS SUPREME?

I know that TBP posts as of late have arrived about as often as national championships in East Lansing, but really, I’m trying to change my ways, and I’m always thinking about You The Reader, except when I’m not. So pardon me for being seven or eight days late on the pas de deux between ESPN’s Len Pasquarelli and Ivan Maisel regarding which sort of football is better: college or pro?

Now, of course, you know where my loyalties lie. As we’re fond of saying in Iowa, the only reason we don’t have professional football is because if we did, Missouri and Minnesota would want it, too. The college game is all in all. Even Pat Forde had to agree, though he made the competition sound much closer than it actually is.

We are aware that we’ve trod this ground before, sort of, but you can never repeat a truth too often. So here’s ten reasons why college football is better than the NFL.

  1. Accessibility. You can actually go to a college football game. Not only that, but you can afford to get in, to park, to buy a snack at the stadium, etc., etc. Several NFL teams ban tailgating at their precious properties. No college is that stupid.
  2. Perspective. Unlike the NFL, where no team is eliminated until week 13, several big-time college programs will be out of the national title chase by the 10th of September. This will force their fans to stop dreaming up what-if scenarios and instead focus on watching and enjoying the games. This leads to the next way college football has it all over the NFL, namely . . .
  3. No playoffs. Why is this a good thing? Because, right now, 56 teams get to say they had a good season by getting into bowl games (yes, even the New Orleans Bowl counts) and 28 teams can say they ended the year with a bowl win. If the longed-for playoff system ever comes about, how many teams will make it? Sixteen? And will fans of the first-round losers say, “Well, at least we made the playoffs”? Or will it be more fuel for fireourcoach.com? Be honest. And please–that “plus one” concept will work for maybe a couple years until there’s some dispute about who really belongs in that game.
  4. Unchecked psychosis. How else do you explain Ole Miss fans and their delusions of relevance?
  5. Better class of cheating. NFL cheaters need clandestine pharmacies and hypodermic needles and all that other CSI stuff. College football cheaters just need jock-sniffing lunatics with lucrative businesses.
  6. Domination. Sure, it’s fun to watch NFL teams gut it out and really struggle with one another. Unless it’s an endless series of 3-and-outs for both teams, and that happens more often than NFL apologists care to admit. There’s something magic, though, about watching a good football team execute a great game plan to perfection. You hardly ever see that in the NFL. There’s too much parity.
  7. Polarizing announcers. Brent Musberger’s announcing is not to my taste, but I notice him when he’s the one calling the game. Others feel similarly about a lot of NCAA announcers. NFL announcers are bland to the point of invisibility–can you tell the difference between, say, Ian Eagle and Kevin Harlan? And don’t get me started about sideline reporters.
  8. Regional bigotry. Sure, we tout this a lot. But do NFC East fans and AFC South fans go at each other like, say, Big Ten and SEC fans? Sirrah, they do not. Maybe because they’ll only face each other once every four years. The bowls give us all a chance to flaunt our good taste in geography every season.
  9. Bands and cheerleaders. Ancillary to football, I know, but at least college football has bands (unlike all but one NFL team), and the cheerleaders in college probably make more money and get treated better than NFL cheerleaders.
  10. Second chances. When a player flames out because the coaching staff changed its philosophy or just found a new Golden Boy, a college player with remaining eligibility can always transfer. An NFL player has to beg to be traded or hang on until the contract’s up.

I think I’ve made my case, but I can always count on you readers to tell me when I’m wrong. What say you?

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8/21/2006

ROUNDTABLE: POLL ME OVER, ROMEO

So this week’s Blogpoll roundtable is, natch, about polling. Not a snap taken in live action yet, so it’s clearly still open season on second- or third-order discourse. This week’s Table is courtesy of The House Rock Built. I’d offer them “mad props,” but I’m not a nationally syndicated sports-talk radio host.

1. What’s the biggest ripoff in this preseason poll? Either pick a team that’s offensively over or underrated, or you can rag on a particular voter’s bad pick (hey, we’re all adults here, we can handle it).

I don’t get the love for Cal. I mean, I’m as guilty of overrating them as anyone, I guess, but (a) when has a Tedford team ever proven itself to be ‘elite,’ and (b) what makes us all so sure that this year is different? It’s still another case of “run quarterback subroutine.” We’ll all drool over their offensive numbers, and they’ll still lose three to five games. I can’t imagine them winding up in the top 10 at the end of the season, and I hate myself because I’ve got them at #11 right now.

2. What shold a preseason poll measure? Specifically, should it be a predictor of end-of-season standing (meaning that a team’s schedule should be taken into account when determining a ranking), or should it merely be a barometer of talent/hype/expectations?

A preseason poll should measure the aggregate opinion of a bunch of truly sanguine thinking about which teams are adequately prepared to compete in their conferences. But it usually measures popularity of coaches, recruiting classes, and traditions. In other words, one thing that has something to do with a team’s performance on the field, one thing that might be an influence, and one thing that almost drives me to follow curling instead; namely, Traditional Powers Hegemony.

3. What is your biggest stretch in your preseason ballot? That is to say, which team has the best chance of making you look like an idiot for overrating them?

I don’t think anybody’s a stretch on my ballot even though I’ve already expressed some concerns about Cal. I’m well aware that some people are honked that I left Georgia off my initial ballot. I don’t know what to say, other than that last year I left Louisville off my initial ballot, and it turned out I was basically right. (Though, like everybody else, I had Tennessee way too high.)

4. What do you see as the biggest flaw in the polling system (both wire service and blogpolling)? Is polling an integral part of the great game of college football, or is it an outdated system that needs to be replaced? If you say the latter, enlighten us with your new plan.

The biggest flaw in any poll is inertia. It’s hard to be humble enough to admit that you’ve severely overrated a team when that team goes out and stinks it up in their first couple games. You also always run the risk of voters voting for the uniform rather than the team in the uniform.

Still, I hope the polls never go away, for the same reason that I hope there’s never a playoff in Division I-A: I don’t want it settled on the field. 12 games are not enough to sort out who’s the best out of 117 teams. You have to have subjective evaluation as part of the process.

5. You’re Scott Bakula, and you have the opportunity to “Quantum Leap” back in time and change any single moment in your team’s history. It can be a play on the field, a hiring decision, or your school’s founders deciding to build the campus in Northern Indiana, of all godforsaken places. What do you do?

Easy. I make Ronnie Harmon hold on to the flippin’ ball.

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8/20/2006

ONE-HIT WONDERS RE-REVISITED

Never let it be said that I’m too good to revisit an idea I had two years, one month, and one day ago.

More Possible Followups for One-Hit Wonders:

  • 867-5390/Sorry
  • Far From . . . OK, Frank, It’s Actually Over
  • Axl F#
  • Pop Goes The Unexpectedly Hip Mortgage Broker Trying To Hide His Hip-Hop Past
  • I’ve Still Been Thinking About You, Since We Haven’t Played A Gig In Twelve Years
  • Standing Outside A Starbucks With Money In My Hand But Not Quite Enough For Bus Fare Home
  • I’d Like To Teach The World To Pick Up All These Flippin’ Coke Bottles
  • I’m Not Lisa, And You’ve Been Informed About The No-Contact Order
  • Low-Budget Prank Shows Killed The Video Star
  • I’m-A-Gadda-Da-Volvo
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8/15/2006

PRESEASON BLOGPOLL BALLOT

Rank Team Delta
1 Notre Dame 25
2 Texas 24
3 Ohio State 23
4 Southern Cal 22
5 Louisiana State 21
6 West Virginia 20
7 Florida 19
8 Iowa 18
9 Auburn 17
10 Louisville 16
11 Cal 15
12 Nebraska 14
13 Wisconsin 13
14 Arkansas 12
15 Penn State 11
16 Georgia Tech 10
17 Alabama 9
18 Michigan 8
19 Iowa State 7
20 Miami (Florida) 6
21 Northern Illinois 5
22 Boston College 4
23 Virginia Tech 3
24 Texas Tech 2
25 UCLA 1

Dropped Out:
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PICKIN’ ON THE BIG TEN 2006 SEASON PREVIEW

We will not mince words: the sudden passing of Randy Walker has totally dimmed our enthusiasm for getting this season preview finished. Here at TBP International HQ, we will miss Walker’s special brand of ninja football, a style of play completely suited for a team completely unsuited for its conference. While we wish the third runner-up in the Peyton Manning Lookalike Contest the best of luck in his new job, Randy Walker is irreplaceable. So, if this season preview lacks the zazz of previous editions, there’s why. We don’t wanna throw Northwestern under the bus, but we always try to be pretty sanguine about what’s likely to happen.

Looking back at the ‘05/06 bowls: Do we have to?

The top three Big Ten bowl teams of last season (Ohio State, Penn State, Wisconsin) won their games while the bottom four (Iowa, Northwestern, Minnesota, Michigan) didn’t. You could argue that the top-tier performance shows how strong a conference the Big Ten was last season. You could also argue that the weak performance of the lower-echelon teams shows how the Big Ten wasn’t such a great conference last season. For that matter, you could also argue that Tuesday’s salad displaces the spectrum of anti-harmonic rat sniffles.

The coaching situation is always in flux

There were no firings in the offseason. One or two might have been justified. But that doesn’t mean there are no new coaches in the conference, of course. A couple of first-time head coaches distressingly close to my own age will make their debuts on Big Ten sidelines this season. Bret Bielema takes over for Barry Alvarez in Wisconsin, in an orderly transition which was first announced a year ago. Pat Fitzgerald will try to fill Randy Walker’s place at Northwestern.

OK, we got all that out of the way. Now, on to the real coaching question heading into this season, namely, who’s gonna get whacked if their seasons don’t pan out? You know there are three coaches still in their honeymoon suites: Bielema, Fitzgerald, and Indiana’s Terry Hoeppner, who survived off-season brain cancer surgery. Ron Zook should be on this list, but I’m not sure he really is. Then there’s the success-related untouchables: Jim Tressel at tOSU and Kirk Ferentz at Iowa. Only the NCAA can dislodge Tressel, while the Hawkeye faithful no longer wonder if their beloved coach will be connected with NFL vacancies; it’s only a question of which ones. (Personally, I think Brian Billick is keeping Ferentz’s seat warm in Balitmore.) Paterno, of course, is a special case; last season’s success has merely resolidified his right to write his own ending.

So what about the other four (or five) coaches? Lloyd Carr ought to be untouchable–he did win a national title, you know–but the grumblings emanating from the Big House are starting to find some resonance. Another season like last season could put Carr out on the street. Purdue’s Joe Tiller, meanwhile, probably cashed in all of his goodwill after last season’s team failed to come close to the lofty preseason projections. A bowl game might be necessary to save his job. Same goes for Sparty’s John L. Smith, who has yet to get his team to swallow the lithium. Meanwhile, Glen Mason got his contract extension in Minneapolis, but if I were him, I’d be worried. Now that the on-campus stadium deal is done, he’s got maybe one or two more seasons to get away with 6-5 records. The taxpayers will be expecting something for their money, after all.

And now, the actual previews

ILLINOIS: DON’T USE DYNASTY MODE

Trendy though it may be to disparage Ron Zook, his first season in Champaign wasn’t a complete flop. He didn’t have much to work with, after all. Even though the record was as dismal as anything Brother Of Norv ever put up, the Illini were much more competitive last season. Figure on this as another season where the Illini’s improvements may not show up in the league standings. The defense was pretty dreadful last year, and the roster still has a distinct lack of playmakers. Not yet, Angry Indigenous Woodlands People, but soon.

Illinois will not face Michigan or Minnesota this year.

Preseason award: Give The Zooker the Willy Loman Fedora for his magnificent job of recruiting; not many 2-9 teams land a consensus top-30 recruiting class.

INDIANA: HOEPP DREAMS

IU coach Terry Hoeppner is now 1-0 against brain tumors, and that’s a bigger victory than anything. Last year’s Hoosiers were markedly better, managing to stay in nearly every game. Still, without amazing progress on both sides of the ball, IU will struggle to get back above .500 this year. Really, I could’ve just rerun the Illinois preview here, except that Indiana won’t play Penn State or Northwestern this year.

Preseason award: IU gets this year’s Tom Bodett Turned-Off Motel 6 Lightbulb for what amounts to a five-game home stand to open the season. Technically, their September 9th game against Ball State is a roadie, but c’mon.

IOWA: THE AMAZING INFLATABLE EXPECTATIONS

Again this year, some pundits are calling the Hawkeyes a dark-horse national title contender, noting that Iowa’s line play improved swiftly during last season, and most of those linemen return. So does quarterback Drew Tate, currently flying just under the Heisman radar. But any team that has to replace Abdul Hodge and Chad Greenway, along with both starting cornerbacks and a wide receiver corps, probably isn’t deep enough to make a run at all the glory. A BCS bid isn’t out of the question, though. Iowa will not play Penn State or Michigan State this season.

Preseason award: The Hans Brinker Silver Skates go to defensive ends Kenny Iwebema and Bryan Mattison, who will need to maintain their high level of play from the very outset as the Hawks break in a mostly-new linebacking corps.

MICHIGAN: SOMEWHERE UNDER THE SEA

Look, there’s a lot of Big Ten teams that would be happy with back-to-back five-loss seasons, since that would necessarily entail back-to-back seven-win seasons. But this is Michigan we’re talking about, and apparently not even a national title can buy a coach tenure any more. And it’s strange, but I can’t remember a year when I didn’t think Michigan was one of the three best teams in the Big Ten before the season started. However, this year I’d put them no better than fourth, and that scares me. Michigan doesn’t have off years. So I’m deeply suspicious of the fact that I don’t see the Wolverines making a big improvement this season. I know Carrthulhu is just waiting to rise. But he won’t be consuming the souls of Illinois or Purdue.

Preseason award: I’m granting quarterback Chad Henne the Bird-Smacked Window of Transparent Competence for his work past season. 23 touchdowns, 8 interceptions, and still, everybody talks about Drew Tate and Troy Smith when they mention Big Ten QBs.

MICHIGAN STATE: UNLITHIATED

Watching Sparty this year could be like watching the Jerry Lewis telethon used to be. You just know that at some point they’re going to lose it completely because, well, they’re Sparty, and that’s what they do. They win the games they shouldn’t, and they lose the games they shouldn’t. Look for Gang Green to light up the scoreboard this year with an amazingly deep and talented offense. Unfortunately, look for them to do the same thing on defense. No Iowa or Wisconsin games this season.

Preseason award: In East Lansing, we’re installing the Harry Caray Babelfish for visiting announcers. Just take a look at Sparty’s roster, then tell me how to pronounce “Nwagbuo.”

MINNESOTA: NO PRESSURE HERE

Glen Mason got his extension, but the university made him sweat. Now he’s going to make the university sweat, as he heads into this season without a dominant running back for the first time in about seven years. Can they suddenly start passing the ball as well as they’ve always run it? Or will some unheralded running back step into the Jackson/Barber/Maroney void and keep the ball rolling? And how will the Gophers fare without Illinois and Northwestern games, plus road trips to Madison and Columbus? Oh well. At least they can never go back to the Music City Bowl.

Preseason award: Glen Mason gets the Anti-Snyder Exploding Cupcake for finally scheduling a challenging non-conference road game, at California. It almost makes up for this season’s home tilts with Kent State, Temple, and North Dakota State. Almost.

NORTHWESTERN: THE CURSE OF LOW EXPECTATIONS

Nobody wants to say it after all the Cats have been through since late June, but this team was likely to take a step backwards this season anyway. Brett Basanez is the only QB they’d known for four seasons. The defense was somewhat depleted by graduations as well. Pleasant-surprise RB Tyrell Sutton returns, though, which mitigates some of the existential dread for Cats fans heading into Pat Fitzgerald’s first season. The name of the game for this year is to pull it together and point towards the future, though. That’s not to say Northwestern can’t upset a team or two along the way, though it won’t happen to Indiana or Minnesota this season.

Preseason award: The whole team gets the Journey Of A Thousand Miles Insole for starting with a single step.

OHIO STATE: THE BEST AND BRIGHTEST

If the Big Ten has a shot at a national title this year, it’s on the backs of the Bucks. Losing an entire linebacking corps and a great receiver in Santonio Holmes, coupled with a Week Two rematch with Texas in Austin, means that the Bucks had better start fast and keep running. Look for Ted Ginn Jr. not to live up to all the hype, as he figures to be double-teamed most of the time until a viable #2 receiver asserts himself, and look for teams to go West Coast on the Buckeyes in order to test out the potentially squishy linebacker situation. Still, all the elements are there for Ohio State to make another run for all the marbles. Purdue and Wisconsin don’t factor in to this year’s plans, though.

Preseason award: The Glue Factory Trophy For Softening Up That Dead Horse goes to all the pundits who somehow think that Maurice Clarett and his unfortunate situation has anything at all to do with Ohio State football in 2006.

PENN STATE: A RIDDELL WRAPPED IN AN ENIGMA

Okay, football geniuses, what’s the fluke: last season’s coulda-woulda-shoulda Nittany Lions, or the teams from the preceding five seasons? Did JoePa return to form last year, or did the Nits just overachieve spectacularly? We’ll know by the end of September, after PSU visits South Bend and Columbus, home to two legitimate national title contenders. If the Nits survive both those road trips, it could be clear sailing the rest of the way. If not, not.

Preseason award: The Deion Sanders Feathered Cap of Versatility goes to Justin King, only a sophomore and already one of the most dangerous gamebreakers on either side of the ball.

PURDUE: OVERPURDUE

Last season wasn’t supposed to be like that. Everybody was all over Purdue in the preseason, noting that virtually ever starter returned, and the Trainbuilders wouldn’t face Michigan or Ohio State. The same is more or less true this year, but the expectations are much lower after all the agony of last year. Head coach Joe Tiller felt the pressure and may not survive another bowl-less season. Of course, with this year’s schedule and all the talent he’s got coming back, he’d better make it to a bowl game.

Preseason award: Purdue has roundly earned the Marcel Duchamp Non-Trophy for Outstanding Achievement in Schedule Dadaism. Purdue’s homecoming is set for September 23 against Minnesota. It comes on the heels of home games against Indiana State, Fake Miami, and Ball State, meaning that, technically, Purdue’s homecoming occurs before they have actually gone anywhere.

WISCONSIN: IS BRET THE NEW BRETT?

It was an orderly transition from Alvarez to Bielema, mostly because everybody knew the change was coming before the season even started. Now the Badgers enter the season after a rather turbulent offseason involving lots of Booker Stanley-related drama and a sudden John Stocco injury of unknown duration. Stocco may be back for the start of the season, but at this point, everything’s up in the air. Tyler Donovan is likely to be the Badgers’ QB if Stocco isn’t ready. Absent Brian Calhoun, the running game looks to step back, and the Badger defense could stand some general improvement. However, the schedule gods have smiled upon Lake Mendota. Bucky’s non-conference games will be against a rebuilding Bowling Green, Chuck Long’s San Diego State crew, 1-AA Western Illinois, and perennial placeholder Buffalo. There are tough road trips to Ann Arbor and Iowa City, but otherwise, it’s hard to argue that the Badgers don’t have the conference’s easiest schedule.

Preseason award: The Large Order of Freedom Fries goes to the numerous Badger faithful who got wadded up over rumors that their new coach (an Iowa grad) has a tattoo of the Hawkeye logo. This caused some to question Bielema’s loyalty. Look, it’s easy to change where you are. It’s much harder to change where you’re from. Should Bielema renounce his alma mater because he now works for a rival? And does anybody seriously think any coach would deliberately tank a game to a heated rival? Hey, I heard a rumor that Mike McCarthy might start Aaron Rodgers in the season opener just to send a message that it’s no longer business as usual in Green Bay! There, I just gave Wisconsin talk radio the only topic it’ll need for the next three weeks.

PREDICTED (AND CERTAINLY WRONG) ORDER OF FINISH

  1. Ohio State (11-1 overall, 8-0 in conference): A great team, but they won’t win in Austin.
  2. Iowa (11-1, 7-1): But I’m certainly wrong.
  3. Wisconsin (10-2, 6-2): Huge assist from the schedule.
  4. Penn State (10-2, 6-2):So help me, I think they’ll beat Notre Dame.
  5. Michigan (8-4, 5-3): Like I said, not among the top teams in the conference. Please don’t eat me, Carrthulhu.
  6. Purdue (7-6, 3-5): Gets the nod over the other 3-5s thanks to the Hawaii game.
  7. Indiana (6-6, 3-5): Hoeppner takes IU one step closer to credibility.
  8. Michigan State (6-6, 3-5): Start looking for a CUSA coach ready to move up. Wait, that didn’t work.
  9. Illinois (5-7, 2-6): Give Zooker two more years, he’ll have his team in a bowl.
  10. Northwestern (3-9, 1-7): Thus spoiling the Disney movie.
  11. Minnesota (3-9, 0-8): Out-talented by every Big Ten team they face except maybe Indiana.
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