Leap Year: Six College Football Teams Positioned to Break Through in 2015

Iceland12

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You might want to skip the first one. :eek:

Minnesota

Last Three Years: 22-17 (11-13 in Big Ten); five or more losses each season

This Year: Big Ten West champs?

Of all the teams on this list, Minnesota is the one with the least obvious line of demarcation from success to slump: Give or take a handful of respectable campaigns in the Glen Mason era, Minnesota’s slump is well into its fifth decade.3 But it’s also the program with the shortest distance to travel from its most recent efforts to a bona fide breakthrough: Although Minnesota hasn’t claimed a championship of any kind since 1960, after consecutive 8-5 finishes, the gap between the Gophers and a division title doesn’t require a leap so much as a solid, sustained step forward.

In fact, because the past two seasons have followed essentially the same script, we can pinpoint exactly when and where that step needs to come: at home, on November 28, in the regular-season finale against Wisconsin. Two years ago, Minnesota went into the Wisconsin game boasting a surprising 8-2 record and with upsets over Nebraska and Penn State already under its belt; the Gophers subsequently lost to the Badgers, 20-7, then dropped their last two against Michigan State and Syracuse. Last year, Minnesota took an 8-3 mark into Madison, having already scored reassuring wins over Iowa and Nebraska in addition to throwing a scare into Ohio State; again, though, the Gophers couldn’t get past Wisconsin with the Big Ten West title on the line, and settled for another unranked finish after falling to Missouri in the Citrus Bowl.

Admittedly, as improbable as Minnesota’s ascendance to viable West Division contender under coach Jerry Kill has been, it probably wouldn’t be possible at all if not for the ongoing frustration at Nebraska (which fired its coach after last season), Iowa (which may be on the verge of firing its coach), and even Northwestern (which may be starting to think about firing its coach at some point). The Big Ten West is the weakest division in the Power 5 conferences by a mile, but it’s not by random chance that the Gophers have come closer than any of their rivals to exceeding their historical ceiling under Kill, or that they’ve done it in largely nondescript, fundamentally sound fashion. With the question marks facing Wisconsin, there’s a case to be made that the Badgers’ status as de facto division front-runner owes more to inertia than to merit. If so, the time for Minnesota to end the drought is now, because the window for capitalizing on a down division may not be open for long.




http://grantland.com/the-triangle/2...tennessee-minnesota-cal-temple-southern-miss/
 

You might want to skip the first one. :eek:

Minnesota

Last Three Years: 22-17 (11-13 in Big Ten); five or more losses each season

This Year: Big Ten West champs?

Of all the teams on this list, Minnesota is the one with the least obvious line of demarcation from success to slump: Give or take a handful of respectable campaigns in the Glen Mason era, Minnesota’s slump is well into its fifth decade.3 But it’s also the program with the shortest distance to travel from its most recent efforts to a bona fide breakthrough: Although Minnesota hasn’t claimed a championship of any kind since 1960, after consecutive 8-5 finishes, the gap between the Gophers and a division title doesn’t require a leap so much as a solid, sustained step forward.

In fact, because the past two seasons have followed essentially the same script, we can pinpoint exactly when and where that step needs to come: at home, on November 28, in the regular-season finale against Wisconsin. Two years ago, Minnesota went into the Wisconsin game boasting a surprising 8-2 record and with upsets over Nebraska and Penn State already under its belt; the Gophers subsequently lost to the Badgers, 20-7, then dropped their last two against Michigan State and Syracuse. Last year, Minnesota took an 8-3 mark into Madison, having already scored reassuring wins over Iowa and Nebraska in addition to throwing a scare into Ohio State; again, though, the Gophers couldn’t get past Wisconsin with the Big Ten West title on the line, and settled for another unranked finish after falling to Missouri in the Citrus Bowl.

Admittedly, as improbable as Minnesota’s ascendance to viable West Division contender under coach Jerry Kill has been, it probably wouldn’t be possible at all if not for the ongoing frustration at Nebraska (which fired its coach after last season), Iowa (which may be on the verge of firing its coach), and even Northwestern (which may be starting to think about firing its coach at some point). The Big Ten West is the weakest division in the Power 5 conferences by a mile, but it’s not by random chance that the Gophers have come closer than any of their rivals to exceeding their historical ceiling under Kill, or that they’ve done it in largely nondescript, fundamentally sound fashion. With the question marks facing Wisconsin, there’s a case to be made that the Badgers’ status as de facto division front-runner owes more to inertia than to merit. If so, the time for Minnesota to end the drought is now, because the window for capitalizing on a down division may not be open for long.


Perhaps they are referring to the recent coaching change in WI and Nebraska, but schedule-wise, if MN can continue to take steps forward the window to capitalize on the "down" West will be open through the 2016 season. MN gets a break schedule-wise, drawing East teams Penn St, Rutgers, and Maryland. The only non-conference foe that may be tough is CSU, maybe a Gary Andersen led Oregon State. Meanwhile, WI has to face MI, MSU, and OSU. Plus they open against LSU, a team that ESPN has picked to be in the CFP. Not too mention, if the 2016 recruiting class retains all the verbal commits, MN should be even deeper than they are this season.
 

You might want to skip the first one. :eek:

Minnesota

Last Three Years: 22-17 (11-13 in Big Ten); five or more losses each season

This Year: Big Ten West champs?

The Big Ten West is the weakest division in the Power 5 conferences by a mile, but it’s not by random chance that the Gophers have come closer than any of their rivals to exceeding their historical ceiling under Kill, or that they’ve done it in largely nondescript, fundamentally sound fashion.




http://grantland.com/the-triangle/2...tennessee-minnesota-cal-temple-southern-miss/

Are my glasses really that Maroon and Gold or B1G shaped?

ACC Coastal?

Last year: Nebraska beat Miami and lost a toss up to USC who is top 10 preseason
Wisconsin beat preseson #6 in a bowl game
Iowa won on the road at PITT
MN Lost to the National Champ by 7
Northwestern beat Notre Dame who SI has in the playoff prediction this year.
 

Would make it even sweeter if we could pull the upset TCU in the opener. Ohio State shut up some of the national critics by winning the NC last year. Beating #2 TCU would go along ways to shutting up the B1G west critics this year.
 

"the gap between the Gophers and a division title doesn’t require a leap so much as a solid, sustained step forward."

Love that line. Brick by brick.
 


If so, the time for Minnesota to end the drought is now, because the window for capitalizing on a down division may not be open for long.

Wisconsin MIGHT get back what it was....Nebraska will have a hard time getting anywhere close to what it once was.

None of that crap is a given.
 

I'm sorry, whoever wrote this "The Big Ten West is the weakest division in the Power 5 conferences by a mile" is an idiot.
 

I'm sorry, whoever wrote this "The Big Ten West is the weakest division in the Power 5 conferences by a mile" is an idiot.

It did go 1-4 in bowl games last year and Wisky was fortunate to get the W. On the other hand, it went undefeated against the vaunted SEC West so we have that going for us.
 




Nitpick, but I'm pretty sure we were favored against Penn State in 2013. Beating them was not an upset.
 




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