To me this highlights one of the problems with the super conferences.
In the olden times a team needed to be good enough to put itself in the position to leap over two traditional powerhouses. Most years only one of them would be lights out; the other would be very good, but not elite. When the Big Ten added Penn State, that didn't really change as Penn State has largely been "very good," but rarely elite. So the Iowas, Wisconsins, Michigan States (and the others) had a shot at glory if they could get the pieces to fall right. That's still technically true, but competing in a conference with this many blue bloods makes it just that much harder. With the attention (read: $$$) that Oregon and USC pay to football, it's hard to imagine they will ever be any less than a Penn State-type addition: always very good, sometimes elite. Including Washington, which has historically been very strong, though it feels like it has more ups and downs, at least in the last couple of decades, and...
Even for Illinois, which is looking pretty good these days, what is the realistic chance that it can climb past Ohio State, Michigan, Oregon, and Penn State, let alone contending with USC, Washington, and the traditional Big Ten programs that should make the conference schedule difficult like Iowa?
Sigh. Change is here, and I'm not thrilled with it. And I'm frustrated that Wisconsin hasn't been relevant in the conference since pre-Covid.