from Sam McKewon = Omaha weird herald
The Big Ten's physicality
The Big Ten’s physicality will be a shock to both football programs, especially to the defensive front seven.
A fact to tuck away: Nebraska did not rank in the Big Ten’s top half in rushing yards allowed per game until its fifth season, 2015. Rutgers and Maryland still haven’t done it in eight seasons.
Remember when Scott Frost, in his first season, remarked that NU wasn't there from a strength-and-size standpoint to compete with Wisconsin and Iowa?
The Huskers have, after a decade, made the final and full transition.
Physicality isn't the issue. UCLA and USC face a long, punishing climb in that regard.
Scheduling
Sixteen teams makes for a perfect 3-6-6 scheduling model. Three opponents who play each year and six home-and-away opponents that switch out every two years.
The question is: Does the Big Ten choose to do so in four team pods — that is, four teams in one group playing round-robin within the quartet — or are just two teams tethered together?
USC and UCLA will play each other every year. Will their annual Big Ten foes be the same as well?
At one time it made sense for Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin to get their own table for chemistry class. Now?
Perhaps Nebraska draws Iowa annually, but has UCLA and, dare we say, a team from what soon could be the old Big Ten East? If the latter is true, Michigan State, please.
Winning teams
UCLA and USC routinely produce winning teams across many sports.
In the past 10 years of the Director’s Cup, the Bruins and Trojans have an average finish of 6.8 and 6.7.
UCLA’s last two finishes, 13th and 15th, were its two lowest in the decade and the only two outside the top 10.