Isn't that interesting though, and we all do it, how a team gets that benefit of the doubt, season-to-season? The '96 Huskers ran for over 100 yards less per game than in '95. Moreover, they averaged nearly 2 yards less PER CARRY in '96. That's enormous. So while the defense remained great, the offense was a far cry from the year prior.
Meanwhile, Florida tightened things up on defense in '96 and the offense was still great.
This reminds me of a study I want to do on peaks within programs. Not by season record, but by pass/run offense and pass/run defense. Like how long does it take opponents to find a way to combat a part of the game you've learned to dominate and/or do the players leaving or coming in dictate success in a particular portion of the game? Does either situation occur more often than the other? Is there an average number of seasons a peak lasts?
And connected to that, possibly, is how certain "great" players may hinder team success. When the HC caters to his top player - just because you have a stud RB, should you give him a ton of carries when you otherwise wouldn't? If you have a great WR, do you pass too often because of him? Things like that.