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The Power Five => Big Ten => Topic started by: 847badgerfan on October 26, 2019, 06:10:28 PM

Title: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 26, 2019, 06:10:28 PM
We B1G Ten fans need to come to grips with reality. OSU is on another level than the rest of the conference. It started with Meyer and it will clearly continue under Ryan Day. That dood can coach and recruit.

They are going to steamroll anyone in their path for the rest of this season, and I'd pick them to destroy anyone they come up against in the playoff.

The biggest question is whether any other school in this conference can catch up. 

I don't see it.

We are the B1G OSU and little 13 (some littler than others).
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Brutus Buckeye on October 26, 2019, 07:05:56 PM
Penn St and Michigan back to back will be a huge test.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Honestbuckeye on October 26, 2019, 07:25:34 PM
We B1G Ten fans need to come to grips with reality. OSU is on another level than the rest of the conference. It started with Meyer and it will clearly continue under Ryan Day. That dood can coach and recruit.

They are going to steamroll anyone in their path for the rest of this season, and I'd pick them to destroy anyone they come up against in the playoff.

The biggest question is whether any other school in this conference can catch up.

I don't see it.

We are the B1G OSU and little 13 (some littler than others).
I don’t feel that way at all.  I predict right now that Ohio State will not even run the table this year- penn state and Michigan back to back is just about impossible. 


Nobody is ever as good as they look- and nobody is even close to unbeatable. 


Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 26, 2019, 07:36:06 PM
(https://rafphotographersmemorial.files.wordpress.com/2016/05/sandbags.jpg)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on October 26, 2019, 07:37:51 PM
Penn St and Michigan back to back will be a huge test.
Neither team is close to OSU. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 26, 2019, 07:42:51 PM
I dunno seems MSU having some tough off seasons hamstrung Sparty who could ham string the Buckeyes.PSU seems to be climbing out from under the weight of sanctions so we'll see.Definitely need some balance but CFB could be at a cross roads.Enjoy the games while we have them
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: SuperMario on October 26, 2019, 08:05:52 PM
It’s painful to admit,  but it’s the truth. To add another layer to the topic, it’s possible Michigan can’t get an elite QB because what sane human would want to face Bosa, Bosa, Chase Young in a career? Just career suicide in your biggest game.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MaximumSam on October 26, 2019, 08:09:29 PM
(https://www.cfb51.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fgiphygifs.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fmedia%2FB6Jr28VwfxUFa%2F200.gif&hash=616f0dbb42badf4001a18ff19a5f298a)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 26, 2019, 08:21:08 PM
(https://www.cfb51.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fgiphygifs.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fmedia%2FB6Jr28VwfxUFa%2F200.gif&hash=616f0dbb42badf4001a18ff19a5f298a)
To the moon, Alice!!



(https://i.ytimg.com/vi/s-Vb6jeWYe0/hqdefault.jpg)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: TyphonInc on October 26, 2019, 08:23:33 PM
Penn St and Michigan back to back will be a huge test.

Penn State, M*ch, and B1G Championship game, according to ESPN is the toughest 3 weeks of football anyone plays this year. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: TyphonInc on October 26, 2019, 08:38:15 PM
We B1G Ten fans need to come to grips with reality. OSU is on another level than the rest of the conference. It started with Meyer and it will clearly continue under Ryan Day. That dood can coach and recruit.

They are going to steamroll anyone in their path for the rest of this season, and I'd pick them to destroy anyone they come up against in the playoff.

The biggest question is whether any other school in this conference can catch up.

I don't see it.

We are the B1G OSU and little 13 (some littler than others).

I'm gonna claim a bit of a knee jerk reaction here.

Wisconsin made some weird choices for this game. (Like not putting 2 defenders on Young, overloading sides on defense, and never softening the rush attack with simple passes.)

Also the game in Columbus, made it harder on the Badgers.

I firmly don't believe OSU is head and shoulders above the other elite in the conference. The B1G is definitely not the ACC.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: RestingB!tchFace on October 26, 2019, 08:39:57 PM
There's no question that this year's OSU team is a different beast.  Similar to Clemson last year or Alabama in 2009.  I don't think that means that they are going to dominate the conference year in and year out in this sort of fashion.  Look back at last year.  Purdue beat them.  And they played some very close games against other conference teams.  Penn State and Maryland (in OT) were both one point victories while Nebraska was only a five point victory.  Teams will rise and fall.  Ohio State will always be at or near the top.

That said....Michigan shouldn't worry OSU one bit.  Penn State shouldn't be taken lightly.  If there is one other team in the conference that I think has the speed, size and talent to keep up with the Buckeyes.....it's the kitties.  And that's not to take anything away from my Gophers.  They keep playing better and better each week.  But it is impossible to judge this team based upon who they've played.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on October 26, 2019, 08:50:06 PM
To the moon, Alice!!



(https://i.ytimg.com/vi/s-Vb6jeWYe0/hqdefault.jpg)

Ahh yes. The good old days, when domestic violence was a hilarious punchline :smiley_confused1:
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Honestbuckeye on October 26, 2019, 08:58:21 PM
Neither team is close to OSU.
Last two seasons- OSU going on the road after tough, emotional home wins, got smoked by 2 teams nowhere near as good as the two teams at the end of this year’s schedule.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 26, 2019, 08:59:49 PM
Ahh yes. The good old days, when domestic violence was a hilarious punchline :smiley_confused1:
Relax.


Jackie and Carroll'Oc are calm people. Until.. never mind.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 26, 2019, 09:01:07 PM
Last two seasons- OSU going on the road after tough, emotional home wins, got smoked by 2 teams nowhere near as good as the two teams at the end of this year’s schedule. 
Not happening this year. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: slugsrbad on October 26, 2019, 09:19:24 PM
Please do not decide the fate of other teams while reeling from your own defeat.   It may be the case that Ohio State walks to the playoffs, but we will know that when it happens, not before.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on October 26, 2019, 09:20:10 PM
Last two seasons- OSU going on the road after tough, emotional home wins, got smoked by 2 teams nowhere near as good as the two teams at the end of this year’s schedule. 
Good teams can lose games. OSU is still far above PSU and MSU. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Brutus Buckeye on October 26, 2019, 09:58:15 PM
Neither team is close to OSU.
Still having flashbacks to having to play MSU the week before the Michigan game in 2015.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: rolltidefan on October 26, 2019, 10:58:59 PM
I’d have them 1, LSU 2, and bama/Clemson 3/4.
Osu definitely looks the most complete so far and they have good wins with no close call head scratchers. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 27, 2019, 08:07:44 AM
Penn State, M*ch, and B1G Championship game, according to ESPN is the toughest 3 weeks of football anyone plays this year.
And they project to be favored by double digits three games in a row. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 27, 2019, 10:03:12 AM
I have been saying OSU is the most complete team out there (with Fields healthy).  They remind me of Bama 2018 (before the NCG).

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 27, 2019, 10:26:13 AM
I have been saying OSU is the most complete team out there (with Fields healthy).  They remind me of Bama 2018 (before the NCG).


He got beat up pretty good yesterday. Probably the first time this season?? I don't think any other defense has been able to consistently get to him like UW did for 3 quarters. I don't think there is anyone ready, behind him.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 27, 2019, 10:29:32 AM
Yeah, I watched, they did put some licks on him, but I think anything other than a turned ankle or knee injury will just have him a bit sore.  He's a tough kid, and bigger than you might think.

Some fun matchups in the playoff would be:

LSU-OSU
OU-Alabama
UGA-OSU

Missouri-Clemson and UGA-UDubb are not likely now of course.

I'd have LSU at #2 personally.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 27, 2019, 10:44:18 AM
Not happening this year.
agreed
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 27, 2019, 10:52:51 AM
I think for OSU to lost we'd need a 0-3 TO margin and some other bad breaks, other than with Michigan.

They can still lose in AA and make the playoffs of course. 

Clemson is in better shape due to schedule of course.  I'd pencil both in, lightly, weird things happen, we all know.

I like LSU in the SEC, probably at 12-1, if they don't lose to Bama of course, and I lean to thinking they win that one on the road.

The Pac now has two one loss teams in contention (again).
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Brutus Buckeye on October 27, 2019, 11:09:02 AM
Obviously it is over if Fields gets knocked out. QB depth has been the glaring weakness since the final seconds ticked off in the Rose Bowl.

Day will have to prove that he can recruit in the trenches in order to maintain what the Urbs was cooking.

The D-Line recruiting will be fine as long as Larry Johnson is hanging around. Jury is still out on the O-Line.

Neither Penn St nor Michigan will be afraid of the Buckeyes. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 27, 2019, 11:13:22 AM
I think anyone can recruit in C-bus.  There would be "elite" versus "excellent" perhaps as a difference.

Fields certainly has been the "X factor" needed to raise them from excellent to elite this year, I think, but the rest of the team is elite.  You're welcome.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 27, 2019, 11:46:49 AM
Not happening this year.
Trying to hex us at least PSU is at home
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 27, 2019, 11:52:33 AM
I think anyone can recruit in C-bus.  There would be "elite" versus "excellent" perhaps as a difference.

Fields certainly has been the "X factor" needed to raise them from excellent to elite this year, I think, but the rest of the team is elite.  You're welcome.


Or we could have just kept Burrow not sure if he'd still be eligible.That is one thing many Buckeye fans believe Urbz faffed in '16 & '17
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 27, 2019, 12:09:02 PM
Neither Penn St nor Michigan will be afraid of the Buckeyes.
hah, Jimmy is scared
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MichiFan87 on October 27, 2019, 01:22:02 PM
Michigan will have nothing to lose going into The Game, since they're already out of BigTen contention. They should win the next 3 games (@Maryland, Michigan State, @Indiana) rather convincingly if they play like they did last night. We'll see, though, and I'll be there to see it....
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Big Beef Tacosupreme on October 27, 2019, 04:41:24 PM
We B1G Ten fans need to come to grips with reality. OSU is on another level than the rest of the conference. It started with Meyer and it will clearly continue under Ryan Day. That dood can coach and recruit.

They are going to steamroll anyone in their path for the rest of this season, and I'd pick them to destroy anyone they come up against in the playoff.

The biggest question is whether any other school in this conference can catch up.

I don't see it.

We are the B1G OSU and little 13 (some littler than others).

Watching OSU is almost disheartening, they may be the best football team I have seen since 1994 Penn State.   I don't think anyone in the B1G is able to play the complimentary football at the level necessary to beat them. 

With that said, I was encouraged by Wisconsin holding them off for a half.  I know they scored a TD with a few seconds left, but UW essentially held them to 3 points at the half.  When Wisconsin's offense let them down for the umpteenth time, the defense eventually broke.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 27, 2019, 04:45:41 PM
Or we could have just kept Burrow not sure if he'd still be eligible.That is one thing many Buckeye fans believe Urbz faffed in '16 & '17
This has reality in the title, so that wasn't gonna happen, unless he starts and then you lose Haskins. Which coulda been its own thing. 

(Now I'm imagining a world where Burrow starts and has some issues and there's laments about Haskins starting elsewhere and benching J.T.)

Anyway, Fields is more talented than all of 'em. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Big Beef Tacosupreme on October 27, 2019, 04:52:50 PM


That said....Michigan shouldn't worry OSU one bit.  Penn State shouldn't be taken lightly.  If there is one other team in the conference that I think has the speed, size and talent to keep up with the Buckeyes.....it's the kitties.  And that's not to take anything away from my Gophers.  They keep playing better and better each week.  But it is impossible to judge this team based upon who they've played.
Penn State has more depth than they have had in a long time.  They don't have any glaring weaknesses at any position.  In fact, the may be the overall most talent Penn State has had since the 90's.  Yet, on a position by position basis, OSU is even better.   It is mind blowing.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 27, 2019, 07:10:56 PM
We B1G Ten fans need to come to grips with reality. OSU is on another level than the rest of the conference.

They're better than everyone in the other conferences too, and I'm not sure it's close.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 27, 2019, 07:49:27 PM
To the extent that this is true, I think it is because, as a practical matter, the CFP has nationalized the sport (a lot more than it already was).

In the CFP era, if you are a high end midwestern recruit and you want to stay somewhat close to home and play for CFP titles, you have one choice: Ohio State.

In a more regional area there was at least a chance the another School might play for the top prize ( League Title, Rose Bowl). Now, not really. Two other midwestern schools have been to the CFP but they both got run off the field in the semi-final. Ohio State has also been run off the field in a semi-final once but in their other appearance they beat big bad Bama and won the whole thing.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 27, 2019, 07:50:51 PM
You guys knock it off seems like every year a team get annointed then they get their dix knocked into the dirt.Puttin' the whammy on us - Go cheer & claim the same for Clemson/Bama
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 27, 2019, 08:53:24 PM
best team EVER!!!
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Brutus Buckeye on October 27, 2019, 09:21:31 PM
Someone pointed out on another board that Northwestern is the only team OSU has played, with a losing record.

Miami, Nebraska and Michigan St are all 4-4 and all of the others are over .500.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Big Beef Tacosupreme on October 27, 2019, 09:43:47 PM
Someone pointed out on another board that Northwestern is the only team OSU has played, with a losing record.

Miami, Nebraska and Michigan St are all 4-4 and all of the others are over .500.


Ya typically want to remove OSU's loss from the equation if you really want a fair representation.  Therefore, Miami, Nebraska and MSU are all 4-3.

Let's compare Penn State to see if that is impressive:

Idaho -- FCS
Buffalo: 4-3
Pitt:  5-2
Maryland: 3-4
Purdue: 2-5
Iowa: 6-1
Michigan: 6-1
MSU: 4-3
----- coming up ----
Minnesota: 8-0
Indiana: 7-2 (if they beat NW)
OSU: 11-0 (assuming they can win until the PSU game)
Rutger: -- FCS

Final Answer:  Yes, it is very impressive for OSU.  Plus they beat a 6-1 Wisconsin team and a 6-0 Cincy.  However, after this week OSU adds in Rutger, Maryland, and Michigan, 3 teams on the level of a decent FCS program. So therefore it should end pretty close.:)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 28, 2019, 12:38:27 AM
Penn State, M*ch, and B1G Championship game, according to ESPN is the toughest 3 weeks of football anyone plays this year.
While probably true, Texas A&M and Auburn think this is cute.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 28, 2019, 12:38:45 AM
Who was that joker suggesting Wisconsin would easily beat OSU?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 28, 2019, 03:44:33 AM
OSU is scary good.  They just needs the QB to stay healthy.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 28, 2019, 07:51:10 AM
Who was that joker suggesting Wisconsin would easily beat OSU?


Wait, what?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: ELA on October 28, 2019, 08:17:12 AM
Chase Young is the best college defensive player since Suh
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 28, 2019, 09:20:21 AM
I don't know if buckeyecraaazy is still here or not, but she texted me after the LSU/Florida game that she was scared for her Buckeyes to have to play LSU in the playoffs.  I told her--and I quote--"lolz," and also that other than being way premature on winning the division and the conference, if the two played LSU likely didn't have the pass rush to beat a team like Ohio State.  So then this past Saturday I told her OSU was a pretty clear #1 in my book, and she said she's "not convinced."

Sandbagging and/or a healthy inferiority complex must be a Buckeye trait.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 09:23:22 AM
This has reality in the title, so that wasn't gonna happen, unless he starts and then you lose Haskins. Which coulda been its own thing.

(Now I'm imagining a world where Burrow starts and has some issues and there's laments about Haskins starting elsewhere and benching J.T.)

Anyway, Fields is more talented than all of 'em.
Problem was in '16 JT was pedestrian but he was surrounded with Guys headed for Sunday.When joe came in the 4th qtr receivers didn't have to stop,lean forward or reach back to catch the ball.Hit them in stride arms extended like your seeing in Baton Rouge.Later on that year Clemson exposed this charade - stacked the line took away everything underneath and watched JT arm punt everything over 25 yds.The following spring Urbz handed the starting QB job to JT - half the fanbase was livid. Burrow had went 22-28 the season before but JT had Meyers Party Picture or something.Haskins was still green,then Burrow broke his thumb,but Haskins mounted a comeback vs Michigan that season and it was obvious JT shouldn't had the gig.Problem was that defensive line over 2 seasons sent 6 guys to the League - they were Bama ready.Urbz affection for JT clouded his judgement and hurt the chance for a program NC.But the dood could recruit
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 28, 2019, 09:28:25 AM
While probably true, Texas A&M and Auburn think this is cute.
I'm sure Auburn is already game-planning for Samford. Shiver me timbers!!
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 09:29:23 AM
I don't know if buckeyecraaazy is still here or not, but she texted me after the LSU/Florida game that she was scared for her Buckeyes to have to play LSU in the playoffs.  I told her--and I quote--"lolz," and also that other than being way premature on winning the division and the conference, if the two played LSU likely didn't have the pass rush to beat a team like Ohio State.  So then this past Saturday I told her OSU was a pretty clear #1 in my book, and she said she's "not convinced."

Sandbagging and/or a healthy inferiority complex must be a Buckeye trait. 

Tell you if tOSU makes CFB PO LSU/Burrow are the scary one IMO.Always liked Joe and him and Haskins shouldn't have been splitting garbage time behind a real nice guy who couldn't make an Arena League Roster.BTW if you still talk to BC - give her instructions to this place.She disappeared and so did Bama Buckeye.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 28, 2019, 10:01:14 AM
Chase Young is the best college defensive player since Suh
Husker fans have noticed this and agree

the Husker head coach seems to have noticed as well
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Honestbuckeye on October 28, 2019, 10:15:50 AM
Oh how soon we forget.  Being the next “ great team” is so fragile, and always ends badly.  

When you play Wisconsin, Penn State, MSU- especially in their better seasons, sometimes Iowa, and always Michigan (if you are OSU), those are games that take a huge physical and emotional toll at the CFB level. 

Penn State, and what I think is a whole new level of a Michigan team, back to back.  That’s going to get The Buckeyes.  One or both of them.  

Michigan was never as bad as they looked and Ohio State is not close to unbeatable.  It’s: what are you capable of?  How well, or how poorly can you play?  

Should make for a crazy stretch run.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 28, 2019, 10:25:10 AM
That's why I said OSU reminds me of 2018 Bama.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 10:49:58 AM
Penn State, and what I think is a whole new level of a Michigan team, back to back.  That’s going to get The Buckeyes.  One or both of them. 
M has looked solid the last 6 qtrs and PSU keeps winning.So they could turn into marquee match ups,unlike previous seasons OSU doesn't have a plan "B" at QB so Fields can't run as aggressively as one would like


Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Big Beef Tacosupreme on October 28, 2019, 11:39:39 AM
M has looked solid the last 6 qtrs and PSU keeps winning.So they could turn into marquee match ups,unlike previous seasons OSU doesn't have a plan "B" at QB so Fields can't run as aggressively as one would like



In years past Penn State has had superstars on their team (Allen Robinson, Saquon Barkley, etc), but they have always had some deficiencies, too.  This year Penn State doesn't really have any "superstars", but they don't have any deficiencies, either.

Watching OSU is like watching a team full of superstars, and also with no deficiencies.  It is ridiculous.

I'm not saying this in order to make any predictions or talk about the OSU / PSU game.  I'm simply adding to the original post. 

Enjoy it OSU fans.  This is a special team, even by OSU standards.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 28, 2019, 11:47:21 AM
Bama last year this time looked superhuman as well.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 28, 2019, 01:40:41 PM
Oh how soon we forget.  Being the next “ great team” is so fragile, and always ends badly. 

When you play Wisconsin, Penn State, MSU- especially in their better seasons, sometimes Iowa, and always Michigan (if you are OSU), those are games that take a huge physical and emotional toll at the CFB level.

Penn State, and what I think is a whole new level of a Michigan team, back to back.  That’s going to get The Buckeyes.  One or both of them. 

Michigan was never as bad as they looked and Ohio State is not close to unbeatable.  It’s: what are you capable of?  How well, or how poorly can you play? 

Should make for a crazy stretch run. 

I don't think anybody is saying Ohio State won't lose a game.  Only that they're the best team in the country.  

I won't say it's indisputable, your mileage may certainly vary, but it would take some slight of hand to find teams to put ahead of them in a power poll, which is all I mean when I say they're #1, or the best team, or whatever.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 28, 2019, 01:53:50 PM
Ohio State won't lose a game.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Mdot21 on October 28, 2019, 01:57:55 PM
Quote
Ohio State won't lose a game.
wouldn't be so sure on that. I think they are obviously great. Perhaps even the best team in the country this year. This defense is the best defense that OSU has had since those 2014/2015 teams. The offense is lethal too, but they don't have a dominant back that can take over the game like they had back then with Zeke. Their backs are very good, not elite top 5 NFL draft pick good like Zeke was. I think Bama or Clemson or LSU could get 'em in the playoff.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 28, 2019, 01:58:44 PM
Problem was in '16 JT was pedestrian but he was surrounded with Guys headed for Sunday.When joe came in the 4th qtr receivers didn't have to stop,lean forward or reach back to catch the ball.Hit them in stride arms extended like your seeing in Baton Rouge.Later on that year Clemson exposed this charade - stacked the line took away everything underneath and watched JT arm punt everything over 25 yds.The following spring Urbz handed the starting QB job to JT - half the fanbase was livid. Burrow had went 22-28 the season before but JT had Meyers Party Picture or something.Haskins was still green,then Burrow broke his thumb,but Haskins mounted a comeback vs Michigan that season and it was obvious JT shouldn't had the gig.Problem was that defensive line over 2 seasons sent 6 guys to the League - they were Bama ready.Urbz affection for JT clouded his judgement and hurt the chance for a program NC.But the dood could recruit
I know, I know, he put up a junior season that looked modestly like Burrow’s statistically. it was the greatest disaster of quarterbacking since they started throwing the ball forward.

But what I’m saying is this, in our imaginations when Burrow started as a RS freshman or Haskins as a RS freshmen play like they did at their peak. So if you bench Barrett say after the NW game in 2016, and young Burrow struggles (not an unreasonable guess) and a national title quality team is wasted, we’d hear complaints about benching a guy who threw 17 TDs and four picks, plus run well for an unproven guy.

The nature of people is to assume the QB not playing is awesome and that our team’s staff will get that awesomeness out of them. But that’s using the most rosy glasses. Maybe RS freshman Burrow, Curtis Samuel and a bunch of very fringe NFL guys solve that super nasty Clemson defense, but really, most likely, they knock him around and we hear endlessly about the time Urbs benched a productive vet for a wet behind the ears frosh.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 28, 2019, 02:00:43 PM
I don't think anybody is saying Ohio State won't lose a game.  Only that they're the best team in the country. 

I won't say it's indisputable, your mileage may certainly vary, but it would take some slight of hand to find teams to put ahead of them in a power poll, which is all I mean when I say they're #1, or the best team, or whatever. 
Ohio State PROBABLY won’t lose a game before the playoff, after that, who knows?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 02:36:45 PM
 but really, most likely, they knock him around and we hear endlessly about the time Urbs benched a productive vet for a wet behind the ears frosh.
Not really,Burrow threw for over 11,000 yds in HS you get to the next level you half to stretch the field.When you can't the apple polishing student getting woodshedded is what you get.Joe is a smart kid got his degree in 3 yrs we had the talent prolly/maybe would not have won but a thrower like joe makes it respectable.Look what happens at LSU when preparation meets opportunity - surrounded by athletes.Make you a sig bet - Burrow at least makes an Arena League Roster for one full season
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 28, 2019, 02:37:51 PM
I know, I know, he put up a junior season that looked modestly like Burrow’s statistically. it was the greatest disaster of quarterbacking since they started throwing the ball forward.

But what I’m saying is this, in our imaginations when Burrow started as a RS freshman or Haskins as a RS freshmen play like they did at their peak. So if you bench Barrett say after the NW game in 2016, and young Burrow struggles (not an unreasonable guess) and a national title quality team is wasted, we’d hear complaints about benching a guy who threw 17 TDs and four picks, plus run well for an unproven guy.

The nature of people is to assume the QB not playing is awesome and that our team’s staff will get that awesomeness out of them. But that’s using the most rosy glasses. Maybe RS freshman Burrow, Curtis Samuel and a bunch of very fringe NFL guys solve that super nasty Clemson defense, but really, most likely, they knock him around and we hear endlessly about the time Urbs benched a productive vet for a wet behind the ears frosh.


Fans' most popular player is the backup QB.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 02:39:35 PM
Ohio State PROBABLY won’t lose a game before the playoff, after that, who knows?
Maybe Michigan appears to have woken up a tad.Can't wait but the season is going bye entirely to fast as it is
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 02:41:33 PM

Fans' most popular player is the backup QB. 
Ya or the one who can actually throw a spiral consistently/accurately over 25 yds
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 02:44:27 PM
Chase Young is the best college defensive player since Suh
He certainly in the arguemenmt - both Bosa Bros are looking all that on Sundays - which is a little suprising to me
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 02:46:08 PM
Enjoy it OSU fans.  This is a special team, even by OSU standards.
No schmoozing from youse
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on October 28, 2019, 02:59:46 PM
Ohio State PROBABLY won’t lose a game before the playoff, after that, who knows?
Exactly. Here's how FPI rates them, obviously not counting CCG yet as it's not officially "on the schedule". Therefore I looked at Wisconsin's FPI (20.0, ranked 10th) vs the odds they gave for PSU (24.4, 5th) at home and the odds they gave for Michigan (18.5, 12th) on the road. I'm going to assume that Wisconsin on a neutral field is slightly more positive for OSU than PSU at home, and as Wisconsin is currently rated tougher than Michigan, going to assume that Wisconsin on a neutral field is just barely easier than Michigan at home.



If you multiply it out, OSU is 65.6% likely to win the next 4 games and be undefeated going into the CCG. Assuming my estimate is somewhere close to accurate for the CCG, they'd be around 54-55% to end the entire stretch undefeated and 13-0.

Now, there's not a game in there that they should lose. And 65.6% to go 12-0 might sound a little shaky. But compare that to the other remaining undefeated P5 teams:


The only P5 team in better shape is Clemson, because their remaining SoS is terrible. 

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 28, 2019, 03:13:42 PM
Not really,Burrow threw for over 11,000 yds in HS you get to the next level you half to stretch the field.When you can't the apple polishing student getting woodshedded is what you get.Joe is a smart kid got his degree in 3 yrs we had the talent prolly/maybe would not have won but a thrower like joe makes it respectable.Look what happens at LSU when preparation meets opportunity - surrounded by athletes.Make you a sig bet - Burrow at least makes an Arena League Roster for one full season
Wait, a kid with an OSU offer threw for a lot of yards when he almost never played a school with more than 900 kids. WOW. That’s like 3,000 less than a guy who washed out at Clemson and 5,000 less than a guy Washington fans wanted benched. And they actually played at big schools against better schedules.

I think when all said and done, Joe will be a more productive passer. That I’m not arguing.

I’m saying he probably wouldn’t have helped that OSU team to being better than Clemson that year, and if he wasn’t, people would’ve moaned endlessly about getting too cute unless he turned around and won a title a title the next year. That defense was mean, and if your assumption is, RFr Burrow is gonna score a bunch on that ... it seems fanciful.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 28, 2019, 03:31:34 PM
He certainly in the arguemenmt - both Bosa Bros are looking all that on Sundays - which is a little suprising to me

sigh....send him to the Saints with all the other OSU guys so we can complain about another one.  

(actually, nobody complains about Michael Thomas)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 28, 2019, 03:56:56 PM
Ya or the one who can actually throw a spiral consistently/accurately over 25 yds
or the one that is not turning the ball over
obviously it's tougher to have turnovers standing near the bench
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 05:25:23 PM
Obviously,going 22-28, with no picks against the same teams the starter ran up the score on isn't impressive.Or what he's doing now,just saying they could have rotated like he did in FLA - say he won with that.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 05:30:04 PM
and if he wasn’t, people would’ve moaned endlessly about getting too cute unless he turned around and won a title a title the next year. That defense was mean, and if your assumption is, RFr Burrow is gonna score a bunch on that ... it seems fanciful.
How many times did you see Burrow play in 2016?You make the same argument you made for Cooper - OH he won(JT).While ignoring the embarrassment of riches that surrounded them.I don't expect to win titles every 2-3-4 yrs.But when you get there for gosh sakes pull out all the stops.Hell it worked just 2 years prior but maybe you weren't watching
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 28, 2019, 05:44:20 PM
or the one that is not turning the ball over
obviously it's tougher to have turnovers standing near the bench
That actually wasn’t the problem in this Particular situation. If anything, the changeover probably would have increased the number of turnovers.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 28, 2019, 06:00:35 PM
How many times did you see Burrow play in 2016?You make the same argument you made for Cooper - OH he won.While ignoring the embarrassment of riches that surrounded them.I don't expect to win titles every 2-3-4 yrs.But when you get there for gosh sakes pull out all the stops.Hell it worked just 2 years prior but maybe you weren't watching
I will admit, I didn’t watch them play all that much that season. You didn’t either. One of the most successful offense of coaches of all time did. But we have decided his opinion isn’t super valid. But we do this thing in sports where what we don’t see is assumed to be better than what we don’t.

The argument here is different than cooper, which mostly comes down to gaps between good, very good and great and the argument Tulsa-Oklahoma State isn’t a real rivalry. The argument here is that Joe Burrow at that point most likely wasn’t as good as you wanted him to be, and that if he had played and stuff had gone sideways, we’d be hearing about it years later barring him winning a title down the road.

(tell me of the riches. One pretty decent NFL receiver, a bunch of practice squad guys, an embarrassment indeed)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 28, 2019, 06:03:22 PM
How much does what Burrow is doing now color perception retroactively?  Seems hard to avoid stuff like that.  LSU fans looked at what limited footage was available when we got him and decided to be optimistic because we're fans, and what else should we do?  But it was limited.  We certainly had a minority of fans and plenty fans of other teams tell us they weren't scared of a guy who was 3rd string and couldn't see the field in the Big Ten.  Mostly before this season, but you get the idea.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 06:30:32 PM
I will admit, I didn’t watch them play all that much that season. You didn’t either. 
Put that thing out you'll burn you fingers.Urban kept Zack Smith around for years.He's more than capable of saying/doing dumb shit.Meyer won an NC with a QB that he neither recruited or started.Urbs made an assinine assertion at media days that led to him being suspended and erasing phone/personnel messages.Nick Saban pulled his QB(in a NCG no less)when he wasn't getting it done.Urbz never thought of it when JT was getting his brakes beat off.What did Einstein say “The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.”
That whole season many beat writers questioned why the QB who passes the eye test was getting no snaps.Go to youtube and watch the 2017 Michigan game,Barret left the game injured and down either 6 or 8 I forget.And got lucky it wasn't worse as he hit a M LB right in the numbers that you would have caught.Any way Haskins came in erased the deficit and commanded a 31-20 win.URBZ dedication in that situation was to a player not the program.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 28, 2019, 06:31:30 PM
Fans ... Some thought Fields was not very good and just a runner ...
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 06:52:39 PM
(tell me of the riches. One pretty decent NFL receiver, a bunch of practice squad guys, an embarrassment indeed)
Do some home work this from the 2019 NFL Combine all three(Campbell,Dixon,McClaurin) played with JT in '16 & '17.And they didn't even start but saw snaps.Ya practice squad,would you like the 2016-17 Buckeye Rosters also


INDIANAPOLIS -- Thirty-seven receivers ran the 40 at the NFL Combine on Saturday.
Ohio State receivers took first, fifth and eighth.
As one program, the Buckeyes went stride for stride with the SEC, whose fastest receivers clocked in third, third and sixth.
Parris Campbell ran 4.31, Terry McLaurin 4.35 and Johnnie Dixon 4.41.
The best of the SEC went 4.33, 4.33, 4.39.
The 40 at the combine is a delight and a fun dash for bragging rights. Speed matters and teams care and money can be made, but the stopwatch doesn’t assure anything about the draft or their NFL careers. Former Buckeye Michael Thomas ran 4.57 at the combine three years ago. Now he might be the best receiver in the NFL.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 28, 2019, 07:42:26 PM
I'm tiring of this thread
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 28, 2019, 11:18:24 PM
Hey were not a 10th of the way to "Welcoming Nebraska" but ya I'm done.......for now.........Bug Eater
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 29, 2019, 05:50:24 AM
Wow, and I thought the JT Barrett bashing was over....but here we go again.

The guy had the #1 passer rating in the history of the B10...AND ran for 3000+ yards!!!!!!!!!  Holy hell, people!  Take LSU's OC away, and no, Joe Burrow isn't a Heisman contender, sorry.  OSU fans wanted him in over Barrett?  Yeah, the backup QB is the most popular guy on the team - he can fix all the team's ills.  Yawn.


Unbelievable.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MaximumSam on October 29, 2019, 06:54:16 AM

Fans' most popular player is the backup QB. 
It's not frequent that you have two first round draft picks as backup QBs
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 29, 2019, 07:00:52 AM
QBs these days come in as freshmen far more ready to start than they did back in the day.  The level of coaching they get at various camps etc. is off the charts, they basically are "pros" at age 13 or so.  They spend their "free time" working on their craft, and few play other sports to detract from that.  They go to school to keep up their grades of course and probably focus on less challenging course work even if they could handle tougher stuff.

And now of course they bounce around if they don't start as freshmen.  They often don't even sit a year.  I don't blame them of course, they have worked very hard to position themselves for the NFL, and sitting in college is not going to help at all versus playing.  And by and large the transfers are going to Name Programs.

This is part of the "NFLing" of CFB IMHO.  Soon they might get compensated for their likenesses.  The wheels are coming off the bus.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Temp430 on October 29, 2019, 07:21:46 AM
Is Ohio State's dominance all that surprising?  They have out recruited everyone year in and year out. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 29, 2019, 07:58:47 AM
Everyone in the B1G, yes.  Not everyone in the country, but they are in the mix.

It's not shock that a great QB, especially one who is mobile, can turn a very very good team into an elite NC level team.  LSU looks to be at that level this year, Alabama and Clemson have been at that level in recent years, all with elite QBs.  Oklahoma is another example, with some holes on D.  Take a very very solid team otherwise and add elite QB = NC shot.


Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: NorthernOhioBuckeye on October 29, 2019, 08:28:50 AM
Wow, and I thought the JT Barrett bashing was over....but here we go again.

The guy had the #1 passer rating in the history of the B10...AND ran for 3000+ yards!!!!!!!!!  Holy hell, people!  Take LSU's OC away, and no, Joe Burrow isn't a Heisman contender, sorry.  OSU fans wanted him in over Barrett?  Yeah, the backup QB is the most popular guy on the team - he can fix all the team's ills.  Yawn.


Unbelievable. 
I think us OSU fans see what this offense is capable of with a QB that can throw a ball down field accurately more than 15 yds. JT was a great player, but was limited in his ability to consistently hit receivers accurately and in stride. He compiled a lot of yards in the air, but generally against lesser competition. Sure he had some games where he threw very well and looked great. But they were over shadowed by a lot of games where he was missing wide open receivers 20-30 yds downfield consistently.

Part of the problem however was Meyer's insistence that his QB be a big part of his run game, and that was JT's forte. He was a serviceable passer, but a great runner. Meyer favored a running QB that could make a few throws over a passing QB that could not take over a game with his legs (Haskins).

What drives OSU fans nuts is seeing Burrow now at LSU showing that he was capable of both. I know that I was saying this a couple of years ago. I thought he ran well enough to be successful in Meyer's system, but also threw the ball well enough to take the top off the defense and get the safeties out of the box. But Meyer was loyal to JT to a fault.

I know this is not quantifiable, but I feel that if Fields had transferred in while JT was there and Meyer was still the HC, Fields would be warming the bench as Meyer would have stubbornly stayed with JT come hell or high water. Of all the great things Meyer did at and for OSU, he limited himself with his blind loyalty to certain players and coaches. 

The sudden turnaround in the defense this year is evidence of that. Schiano while probably a very good coach, was stubbornly unwilling to change his defensive philosophy in order to correct problems with the Defense. A good head coach would have addressed this early on, but Meyer did not do much to force Shciano to change things up due to his loyalty. Day comes in, fires the entire Def staff (save Larry Johnson) and look at the results with essentially the same players. 


Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 09:36:44 AM
What drives OSU fans nuts is seeing Burrow now at LSU showing that he was capable of both. I know that I was saying this a couple of years ago. I thought he ran well enough to be successful in Meyer's system, but also threw the ball well enough to take the top off the defense and get the safeties out of the box. But Meyer was loyal to JT to a fault.

I know this is not quantifiable, but I feel that if Fields had transferred in while JT was there and Meyer was still the HC, Fields would be warming the bench as Meyer would have stubbornly stayed with JT come hell or high water. Of all the great things Meyer did at and for OSU, he limited himself with his blind loyalty to certain players and coaches.
This,so much this^^^^^^^^,NOB - you get a Yuengling.Any way just watched the ND/UM contest on BTN last nite.Booger appears to be coming around.PSU/UM will be all that if PSU can get by the Goophs
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Big Beef Tacosupreme on October 29, 2019, 09:51:23 AM
This,so much this^^^^^^^^,NOB - you get a Yuengling
Leave our PA beer alone.

There was a time it was the dominate beer at PSU tailgates or PSU bars.  It was a PSU tradition. 

Nowadays Yuengling's popularity here is WAY down for political reasons. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 09:52:29 AM
The sudden turnaround in the defense this year is evidence of that. Schiano while probably a very good coach, was stubbornly unwilling to change his defensive philosophy in order to correct problems with the Defense. A good head coach would have addressed this early on, but Meyer did not do much to force Shciano to change things up due to his loyalty. Day comes in, fires the entire Def staff (save Larry Johnson) and look at the results with essentially the same players.
Very good point like BO said The Team,The Team,The Team.Can't stand pat you're paid big bucks make adjustments big ones if neccessary.The on going Zach Smith debacle is point in case how some things were afoul right under his nose.Perhaps he got complacent/uninspired after the 2014 season.But Lordy the man could recruit.I'm Certain he could sell Frostys to an Eskimo
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 29, 2019, 10:03:38 AM
Do some home work this from the 2019 NFL Combine all three(Campbell,Dixon,McClaurin) played with JT in '16 & '17.And they didn't even start but saw snaps.Ya practice squad,would you like the 2016-17 Buckeye Rosters also


INDIANAPOLIS -- Thirty-seven receivers ran the 40 at the NFL Combine on Saturday.
Ohio State receivers took first, fifth and eighth.
As one program, the Buckeyes went stride for stride with the SEC, whose fastest receivers clocked in third, third and sixth.
Parris Campbell ran 4.31, Terry McLaurin 4.35 and Johnnie Dixon 4.41.
The best of the SEC went 4.33, 4.33, 4.39.
The 40 at the combine is a delight and a fun dash for bragging rights. Speed matters and teams care and money can be made, but the stopwatch doesn’t assure anything about the draft or their NFL careers. Former Buckeye Michael Thomas ran 4.57 at the combine three years ago. Now he might be the best receiver in the NFL.


So the starters weren't that good, but the kids playing less were. Sounds like OSU needed to start an all-underclassman offense to really have an attack that could compete in the playoff.

And if we get to count the young pups, I'm confused about something with Campbell and McLaurin. There were top-3 round draft picks, but they stayed all the way through senior seasons. Stayed through their fifth-year senior seasons in fact. I'm impressed such bounties of talent passed up the draft twice. As we've said, people don't "develop" or whatever we might call it. The spring forth, fully formed. 

I retract it all, in 2016, he was just throwing to studs. The riches in the WR room were near as good as the riches in the QB room. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 10:08:03 AM
Leave our PA beer alone.

There was a time it was the dominate beer at PSU tailgates or PSU bars.  It was a PSU tradition. 

Nowadays Yuengling's popularity here is WAY down for political reasons. 
Ya know I've been drinking it for about two decades but was only availible in Ohio about 7-8 yrs ago.Fortunately a brother,neighbor and co-worker were making monthly runs back/forth.I watched a segment when the History Chanel was one that they did on brewing.Bud/Miller/Coors had gotten so big in the early-mid '70's brewers like Yuengling almost went out of business.Dick Yuengling had said after WWII when 16 million GIs came home beer flew off of the shelves.Even though most of it was watered down from grain rationing.So Miller/Bud/Schlitz/Coors decided why waste money on more grain when the stuff was selling great.The Yuenglings were one of the respectable Brewers that went back to pre war,pre prohibition brewing.Because of ace advertising the Macros sales took off while much better stuff was left on the shelves.That was the case with many small brewers that either got bought out or closed their doors.For years went we went to Canada their beers where so much better and sought after.The Craft brewers changed all that and may they be praised,but for the money Yuengling's lineup is my go to
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 29, 2019, 10:14:01 AM
Beer and politics shouldn't be mixed
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 10:19:12 AM
So the starters weren't that good, but the kids playing less were. Sounds like OSU needed to start an all-underclassman offense to really have an attack that could compete in the playoff.

And if we get to count the young pups, I'm confused about something with Campbell and McLaurin. There were top-3 round draft picks, but they stayed all the way through senior seasons. Stayed through their fifth-year senior seasons in fact. I'm impressed such bounties of talent passed up the draft twice. As we've said, people don't "develop" or whatever we might call it. The spring forth, fully formed.

I retract it all, in 2016, he was just throwing to studs. The riches in the WR room were near as good as the riches in the QB room.
No not at all they got plenty of playing time.Noah Brown,Curtis Samuel(who were great collegiate receivers)Cory Smith also.Before that JT had Devin Smith who was fantastic and Michael Thomas.That's why Urbz coined it the "Spread".Read NOBs take he's right Nick Saban would have pulled JT who was no where as good as Jalen Hurts long time ago.Again adjustments were not being made,can't help that if you can't see it.Again a QB rotation prolly would have worked liked Urbs did in Fla
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 29, 2019, 10:32:44 AM


What drives OSU fans nuts is seeing Burrow now at LSU showing that he was capable of both. I know that I was saying this a couple of years ago. I thought he ran well enough to be successful in Meyer's system, but also threw the ball well enough to take the top off the defense and get the safeties out of the box. But Meyer was loyal to JT to a fault.

I know this is not quantifiable, but I feel that if Fields had transferred in while JT was there and Meyer was still the HC, Fields would be warming the bench as Meyer would have stubbornly stayed with JT come hell or high water. Of all the great things Meyer did at and for OSU, he limited himself with his blind loyalty to certain players and coaches.

The sudden turnaround in the defense this year is evidence of that. Schiano while probably a very good coach, was stubbornly unwilling to change his defensive philosophy in order to correct problems with the Defense. A good head coach would have addressed this early on, but Meyer did not do much to force Shciano to change things up due to his loyalty. Day comes in, fires the entire Def staff (save Larry Johnson) and look at the results with essentially the same players.



We'll start at the top. Do you feel RS freshman Burrow was better than RS junior Burrow? Simple question, but it stay a lot about setting the table. 

Moving on to the non-quantifible part. I think this is interesting because it's not at all unique to Urbs. Fans across the country assume their coach loves their not great QB to a fault. It's pretty common. At a point, we must ask, are all these coaches watching hours of practice films and misjudging all of it (maybe), or are fans by and large built to believe what they've hardly seen is better than what they often see? This is not to say it's 100 percent one way or the other, only that this common feeling might be endemic in the kind of optimism we see in ourselves.

The Schiano thing speaks to another sort of splintered perspective. You're saying the coach would've addressed it early on. I assume you mean early last season, maybe after the suspension? Because here's the thing. You know who built the two best OSU defenses in the Urbs era? That'd be Schiano. His first two were better than Ash's, notably better. Should he have been fired after doing that back-to-back years? Or are we prisoners of rather emotional moments. 

(Also worth noting, the new OSU DC was demoted by Michigan, basically passed over twice, and now has this. Maybe it's just the odd nature of CFB at play?)

The larger point is this, it's one of entitlement. OSU fans assume these are 15-0 teams and it is incumbent upon the coaches not to mismanage them down to only playoff teams. There is no thought that it's hard to be that good, that consistently contending, that there's an easy fix if only some young player were handed the job without putting in the work. We ignore the oddity of the sport, the fact almost no one goes undefeated and only one team wins each season. Perhaps the earlier part is how sports should be and really is, but I remain skeptical. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 10:39:37 AM
We'll start at the top. Do you feel RS freshman Burrow was better than RS junior Burrow? Simple question, but it stay a lot about setting the table.
Simple question do you believe true FR QB Tua Tagovailoa was better than Jalen Hurts at half time of a National Championship Game?Nothing ventured - nothing gained,we'll never know because Urbz couldn't/wouldn't pull the trigger,Saban did - that is why he is the Best.Admit it you had no idea who  Tua Tagovailoa was - it's OK neither did I,but sometimes you have have to go to the bull pen when the obvious is evident
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 29, 2019, 10:46:36 AM
No not at all they got plenty of playing time.Noah Brown,Curtis Samuel(who were great collegiate receivers)Cory Smith also.Before that JT had Devin Smith who was fantastic and Michael Thomas.That's why Urbz coined it the "Spread".Read NOBs take he's right Nick Saban would have pulled JT who was no where as good as Jalen Hurts long time ago.Again adjustments were not being made,can't help that if you can't see it.Again a QB rotation prolly would have worked liked Urbs did in Fla
Wait, we can’t be invoking the time he had Smith and Thomas. That would tell us that a red shirt freshman JT who wasn’t supposed to start the second in the country and passer rating. And if that was the case, it would imply players could change in the course of their careers, which might just mean senior Burrow tells us not much about redshirt freshman burrow. And if that’s the case, this is all lamenting conjecture.

also, how do you mean coined “spread”
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 29, 2019, 11:03:54 AM
Wow, and I thought the JT Barrett bashing was over....but here we go again.

The guy had the #1 passer rating in the history of the B10...AND ran for 3000+ yards!!!!!!!!!  Holy hell, people!  Take LSU's OC away, and no, Joe Burrow isn't a Heisman contender, sorry.  OSU fans wanted him in over Barrett?  Yeah, the backup QB is the most popular guy on the team - he can fix all the team's ills.  Yawn.


Unbelievable. 

Burrow has the same OC this year, I keep telling you this.  You think Brady is the OC, he's not, and it's not in name only.  He's not calling the plays or coordinating the offense, though some hope he's being groomed for it. 

Without Brady's influence, maybe Burrow is not a Heisman candidate because the offense isn't the same, but there's just a lot of evidence he was going to be very good this year regardless.  I was firmly in the doubter category that Brady would have any great material effect on the offense (wrong) but still knew Burrow had taken a clear leap the last several games of last season and would look really good this year.  Brady brought some play concepts to the team.  He's not responsible for Burrow making reads, his mechanics, his awareness, that type of thing.  What people don't look at from last year is how little time Burrow got with the LSU offense bc of when he transferred.  Last season he was still trying to mesh with our plays and terminology, timing with receivers, etc.  He just had no time in the system.  And still continued to get better through the year. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 29, 2019, 11:19:06 AM
Nowadays Yuengling's popularity here is WAY down for political reasons.
Wait, what?  I know nothing of this, just curious?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on October 29, 2019, 11:27:50 AM
Beer and politics shouldn't be mixed
Yeah... Just look at Founder's. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Big Beef Tacosupreme on October 29, 2019, 11:35:11 AM
Wait, what?  I know nothing of this, just curious?
The owner publicly came out and supported Trump.  Penn State fans are college educated and the big drinkers are millennials. Neither is exactly a hot demographic for Trump supporters. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on October 29, 2019, 11:36:23 AM
Moving on to the non-quantifible part. I think this is interesting because it's not at all unique to Urbs. Fans across the country assume their coach loves their not great QB to a fault. It's pretty common. At a point, we must ask, are all these coaches watching hours of practice films and misjudging all of it (maybe), or are fans by and large built to believe what they've hardly seen is better than what they often see? This is not to say it's 100 percent one way or the other, only that this common feeling might be endemic in the kind of optimism we see in ourselves.
Agreed... We were seeing it just this year with Sindelar at Purdue, especially after Brohm seemed to prefer Sindelar to Blough two years in a row, only to see Blough take the reins strongly when he got the starter role.

But even this year, there were people thinking that Sindelar was never going to be worthwhile and that Brohm should just start developing Plummer. Might as well build for the future, right? 

And of course we see what happens. Plummer comes in and has games he looks great [not that this is hard against Maryland], and games [Illinois] where he's benched for a walk-on because he looks terrible. Not that I agreed with the decision to bench him, but he DID look terrible. 

I find it hard to believe that all these coaches are so doe-eyed in love with a certain QB that they lose all objectivity. 

That said, I do think that some of the coaches tend to be very risk-averse. They worry that if they bench the starter and the backup fails, they get the blame. But if they stick with the starter, nobody knows whether the backup would have succeeded in their place, so nobody has in-game evidence on which to base their criticism. 

This is somewhat changing with the transfer portal, as we see in this thread. Guys who would have been career backups--even if they might be better than the starter--now jump ship and go to other schools. If they flourish at the other school, the coach who had them riding pine looks wrong. But I think that's flawed logic. When you jump from one offensive system, offensive coordinator, blocking scheme/talent, RB/receiving talent, etc to another, on top of changes to culture, changes to team chemistry, etc... It's not apples-to-apples.

But I agree... Fans always seem to think they know more than the coach in calling for the backup QB, and in some cases, maybe they're right. In a lot of cases, however, they're working on such incomplete information relative to the coaching staff that they're probably only right about twice a day. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: NorthernOhioBuckeye on October 29, 2019, 12:54:43 PM
We'll start at the top. Do you feel RS freshman Burrow was better than RS junior Burrow? Simple question, but it stay a lot about setting the table.

Moving on to the non-quantifible part. I think this is interesting because it's not at all unique to Urbs. Fans across the country assume their coach loves their not great QB to a fault. It's pretty common. At a point, we must ask, are all these coaches watching hours of practice films and misjudging all of it (maybe), or are fans by and large built to believe what they've hardly seen is better than what they often see? This is not to say it's 100 percent one way or the other, only that this common feeling might be endemic in the kind of optimism we see in ourselves.

The Schiano thing speaks to another sort of splintered perspective. You're saying the coach would've addressed it early on. I assume you mean early last season, maybe after the suspension? Because here's the thing. You know who built the two best OSU defenses in the Urbs era? That'd be Schiano. His first two were better than Ash's, notably better. Should he have been fired after doing that back-to-back years? Or are we prisoners of rather emotional moments.

(Also worth noting, the new OSU DC was demoted by Michigan, basically passed over twice, and now has this. Maybe it's just the odd nature of CFB at play?)

The larger point is this, it's one of entitlement. OSU fans assume these are 15-0 teams and it is incumbent upon the coaches not to mismanage them down to only playoff teams. There is no thought that it's hard to be that good, that consistently contending, that there's an easy fix if only some young player were handed the job without putting in the work. We ignore the oddity of the sport, the fact almost no one goes undefeated and only one team wins each season. Perhaps the earlier part is how sports should be and really is, but I remain skeptical.
I'm not saying that Meyer was right or wrong. All I am saying that as fans that only get to see what is presented to us during games (and the spring scrimmage), it is frustrating to have watched JT arm punt throws for 3 1/2 years to wide open receivers and then see Burrow show up at LSU and put himself in Heisman contention. And it seems to all go back to Meyer's loyalty to certain players and coaches. 

But I admit, it is hard to argue with the success that Meyer had. And you are correct, I was not at practice or the team meetings and have no idea what each of these players looked like outside of game days.

But I also know that Meyer is truly sold on the running aspect of the QB position almost at the expense of being a capable passer. And what is really frustrating is seeing that Burrow is capable of doing both rather effectively. He is not quite the runner that JT was, but is a much better runner than Haskins was. Conversely, Haskins probably threw a better ball than Burrow, but Burrow definitely threw the ball far better on his worst day than JT did on his best. And there are a few games (Iowa and Oklahoma come to mind) where if JT could have hit some downfield throws, the running game would have opened up quite a bit. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 29, 2019, 01:08:42 PM
The owner publicly came out and supported Trump.  Penn State fans are college educated and the big drinkers are millennials. Neither is exactly a hot demographic for Trump supporters.
hah, I'm not drinking crappy bear because someone supports one politician or another

I'm not drinking Busch Light because some good Iowan is raising money for a good cause.

I drink what I like.  Even if Utee is not impressed.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: NorthernOhioBuckeye on October 29, 2019, 01:09:56 PM
The Schiano thing speaks to another sort of splintered perspective. You're saying the coach would've addressed it early on. I assume you mean early last season, maybe after the suspension? Because here's the thing. You know who built the two best OSU defenses in the Urbs era? That'd be Schiano. His first two were better than Ash's, notably better. Should he have been fired after doing that back-to-back years? Or are we prisoners of rather emotional moments.

(Also worth noting, the new OSU DC was demoted by Michigan, basically passed over twice, and now has this. Maybe it's just the odd nature of CFB at play?)

The larger point is this, it's one of entitlement. OSU fans assume these are 15-0 teams and it is incumbent upon the coaches not to mismanage them down to only playoff teams. There is no thought that it's hard to be that good, that consistently contending, that there's an easy fix if only some young player were handed the job without putting in the work. We ignore the oddity of the sport, the fact almost no one goes undefeated and only one team wins each season. Perhaps the earlier part is how sports should be and really is, but I remain skeptical.
As to the Schiano thing, I was using this as an example of Meyer's loyalty. Last season when the defense was giving up chunk plays to EVERY TEAM THEY PLAYED (even Oregon St), there should have been a "Come to Jesus" moment between Meyer and Schiano. (The first thing I would have done is told him that he cannot play exclusive man to man coverage as half the defense was playing with their backs to the ball).

Did that happen? I don't know, but I do know that things never got better. I truly believe that Meyer gave Schiano too much freedom to leave it alone and hope it got better. I also believe that had Meyer come back this year, Schiano would have been welcomed back with open arms. 

As for the Entitlement aspect, maybe OSU fans do feel that way. But when you break down last season for what it was, it becomes quite apparent that the coaching staff let this team down. Sure they went 13-1 last year, but that defensive performance kept them out of the playoffs. And Almost all of the same players are back this year. A defense that was ranking outside the Top 50 in the country, is now arguably one of the best in the country. THAT is on the coaches last year.

And sure we expect our team to go undefeated every year. When they recruit the way they have, why shouldn't we? But there is a difference between matching up to a team with close to equal talent and just having a bad game and getting blown off the field by a clearly inferior team. And when the reason for that had been apparent all season long and the HC does nothing about it, you bet it frustrates the fans. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 29, 2019, 01:14:24 PM
The owner publicly came out and supported Trump.  Penn State fans are college educated and the big drinkers are millennials. Neither is exactly a hot demographic for Trump supporters.

This talk stops now.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 29, 2019, 01:34:19 PM
so the non-college educated in the state root for Pitt?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 29, 2019, 01:42:55 PM
It's not frequent that you have two first round draft picks as backup QBs
Cardale Jones was a first round draft pick in name only.  How's that working out?


Oh, and NFLness has little to do with college greatness.  Barrett had an all-time great career, and maybe when he's 50-60 years old, he'll get his due.  But the way he's treated by OSU people is sad.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Honestbuckeye on October 29, 2019, 01:57:41 PM
Cardale Jones was a first round draft pick in name only.  How's that working out?


Oh, and NFLness has little to do with college greatness.  Barrett had an all-time great career, and maybe when he's 50-60 years old, he'll get his due.  But the way he's treated by OSU people is sad.
Amen.    
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 29, 2019, 01:59:27 PM
This year's Buckeye team is the best one I've seen since probably 1998.

Maybe there is a lesson there somewhere.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Brutus Buckeye on October 29, 2019, 02:27:12 PM
Cardale Jones was a first round draft pick in name only.  How's that working out?


Oh, and NFLness has little to do with college greatness.  Barrett had an all-time great career, and maybe when he's 50-60 years old, he'll get his due.  But the way he's treated by OSU people is sad.
You always do this. One poster says something, then you attribute it to all OSU fans or all Big Ten fans. Asinine.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 29, 2019, 02:29:28 PM
You always do this. One poster says something, then you attribute it to all OSU fans or all Big Ten fans. Asinine.

All OSU fans do this.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: NorthernOhioBuckeye on October 29, 2019, 02:33:16 PM
Cardale Jones was a first round draft pick in name only.  How's that working out?


Oh, and NFLness has little to do with college greatness.  Barrett had an all-time great career, and maybe when he's 50-60 years old, he'll get his due.  But the way he's treated by OSU people is sad.
Well, I have never said that I or other OSU fans didn't appreciate his accomplishments. But the reality was that he was not a very good down field passer. Sure he was part of a lot of wins by OSU and most fans I know are happy about that. But it does not mean there were not points left on the field due to his deficiencies. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 29, 2019, 02:43:02 PM
QBs are judged by championships

unfairly, but that's the deal
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 29, 2019, 02:50:16 PM
I think many college QBs have been "fairly" considered to be great without a championship.  P. Manning is one of course.  Mayfield was considered to be a great college QB by most, I think.  And some championship winning QBs are largely forgotten, like whoever it was who replaced Manning when they did win an NC.

Make a list of your top ten or so college QBs and check how many won an NC.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on October 29, 2019, 02:55:00 PM
The Schiano thing speaks to another sort of splintered perspective. You're saying the coach would've addressed it early on. I assume you mean early last season, maybe after the suspension? Because here's the thing. You know who built the two best OSU defenses in the Urbs era? That'd be Schiano. His first two were better than Ash's, notably better. Should he have been fired after doing that back-to-back years? Or are we prisoners of rather emotional moments.

As to the Schiano thing, I was using this as an example of Meyer's loyalty. Last season when the defense was giving up chunk plays to EVERY TEAM THEY PLAYED (even Oregon St), there should have been a "Come to Jesus" moment between Meyer and Schiano. (The first thing I would have done is told him that he cannot play exclusive man to man coverage as half the defense was playing with their backs to the ball).

Did that happen? I don't know, but I do know that things never got better. I truly believe that Meyer gave Schiano too much freedom to leave it alone and hope it got better. I also believe that had Meyer come back this year, Schiano would have been welcomed back with open arms.
Is the issue that Schiano was too wedded to scheme, whether he had the talent for that scheme or not?

For example, if he had an aggressive attacking defense that relied on players being able to perform in straight man coverage, and he HAD players that were capable of doing that, he could have the two best defenses in the Meyer era. And then if he stuck to that scheme despite the fact that his players weren't capable of holding up in straight man coverage, all of a sudden the exact same defense would lead to big chunk plays.

You have to recruit to fit your scheme, or you have to scheme to fit what you've recruited. It sounds like maybe he failed to find the right pieces for his scheme but never adjusted. 

OSU put a CB into the 1st round and a safety into the 2nd round of the 2016 draft. They then put two CBs and one safety into the first round of the 2017 draft. 

Since, 1 first round CB into the 2018 draft, and one 4th-round CB into the 2019 draft. 

Maybe they just didn't have the horses for the scheme in the 2018 season, and Schiano never did anything to adjust?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 29, 2019, 03:12:07 PM
I think many college QBs have been "fairly" considered to be great without a championship.  P. Manning is one of course.  Mayfield was considered to be a great college QB by most, I think.  And some championship winning QBs are largely forgotten, like whoever it was who replaced Manning when they did win an NC.

Make a list of your top ten or so college QBs and check how many won an NC.


Apparently, the Buckeyes value trophies like Hukser fans

I have always considered Turner Gill of the 83 season the best Husker QB, but most Husker fans go with Frazier, or Frost, or Tagge

Some like to consider Eric Crouch the best based on his Hypesman trophy, I thought Bobby Newcombe was better and Solich made a mistake.
I guess I'm saying, my list might not include as many NC QBs as the unwashed masses
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: NorthernOhioBuckeye on October 29, 2019, 03:12:30 PM
Is the issue that Schiano was too wedded to scheme, whether he had the talent for that scheme or not?

For example, if he had an aggressive attacking defense that relied on players being able to perform in straight man coverage, and he HAD players that were capable of doing that, he could have the two best defenses in the Meyer era. And then if he stuck to that scheme despite the fact that his players weren't capable of holding up in straight man coverage, all of a sudden the exact same defense would lead to big chunk plays.

You have to recruit to fit your scheme, or you have to scheme to fit what you've recruited. It sounds like maybe he failed to find the right pieces for his scheme but never adjusted.

OSU put a CB into the 1st round and a safety into the 2nd round of the 2016 draft. They then put two CBs and one safety into the first round of the 2017 draft.

Since, 1 first round CB into the 2018 draft, and one 4th-round CB into the 2019 draft.

Maybe they just didn't have the horses for the scheme in the 2018 season, and Schiano never did anything to adjust?
This runs deeper than simply placing the blame for the defensive failures strictly on Shciano. The other defensive coaches share in some of the blame also, such as Alex Grinch. But I believe that is was Schiano's scheme to stay in man to man coverage despite the big plays there were giving up.

I believe that in the seasons prior to 2018, they did have the personnel to play his schemes for the most part. However, the issue last year wasn't necessarily tied strictly to the DB's. The LB's were a major part of the problem also. They were out of position on many occasions and forced into coverage's that took them out of position to make plays and limit chunk plays.

Knowing this, they never adjusted to the personnel they had. IMHO, they just kept hoping that the players would just get better I guess. But the scheme didn't change much.

However, now those same players are still in the defensive line up and are making the plays they didn't make last year. Some of that is maturity. But a lot of the players have stated that they have learned a lot from the new defensive coaches, especially Jeff Hafley. They have said that the coaching staff has simplified the defense and it has allowed the players to play without having to over think their assignments. Without being there myself to witness it, I have to take their word for it.

But all of that being said, my point is that Meyer was loyal to certain players and coaches to a fault. I remember reading that he considered Schiano a close personal friend. The Zach Smith situation demonstrates some of this. Smith was a terrible receivers coach. He finally gets let go, they hire Brian Hartline and all of a sudden, players that were mediocre in the past, are being drafted in the early rounds. Go figure.

As for JT Barrett. I still am very happy that he was our QB for 3 1/2 years and appreciate everything he did for the team. He will be considered an all time great. All I was saying in his regard is that when you see what Burrow is doing at LSU, it kind of makes you think what has changed for him and why wasn't he able to crack the starting lineup in Columbus. It is just frustrating that we HAD a QB that is about at the same skill level as J. Fields all along, but we never utilized him. I'm not upset with Barrett, just bewildered that had Burrows been given a chance, maybe we make the playoffs last year. (But as bad as the defense was, it is probably a good thing we didn't).

But as for how things have worked out, if I could go back, I probably wound't change a lot. We have fields for at least 1 more season and the team is looking as good as they ever have. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 03:13:29 PM
QBs are judged by championships

unfairly, but that's the deal
Truth,Tebow or Leak didn't do shyt in the League but they worked out fine at the level we care about
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Riffraft on October 29, 2019, 03:16:27 PM
Cardale Jones was a first round draft pick in name only.  How's that working out?


Oh, and NFLness has little to do with college greatness.  Barrett had an all-time great career, and maybe when he's 50-60 years old, he'll get his due.  But the way he's treated by OSU people is sad.

You are only seeing (hearing) from the vocal minority of negative noras that every fan base has. Most of us appreciate JT for who he was and what he did. 

That said we are always disappointed when we don't go 15-0 and win the national championship. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 03:17:59 PM
Is the issue that Schiano was too wedded to scheme, whether he had the talent for that scheme or not?

Maybe they just didn't have the horses for the scheme in the 2018 season, and Schiano never did anything to adjust?
Yup have to adjust with what you have.Pretty simple playing to the strengths instead of pounding a square peg into a round whole
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 03:19:27 PM
The owner publicly came out and supported Trump.  Penn State fans are college educated and the big drinkers are millennials. Neither is exactly a hot demographic for Trump supporters.
That's funny because Trump doesn't drink - sure acts like it some times.Him and Zack Smith should tweet each other
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Brutus Buckeye on October 29, 2019, 03:25:27 PM
Since Fro is a Florida fan, that automatically means that he must hate Urban Meyer. Talk about ungrateful, look in the mirror.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 03:27:38 PM
As for the Entitlement aspect, maybe OSU fans do feel that way. But when you break down last season for what it was, it becomes quite apparent that the coaching staff let this team down. Sure they went 13-1 last year, but that defensive performance kept them out of the playoffs. And Almost all of the same players are back this year. A defense that was ranking outside the Top 50 in the country, is now arguably one of the best in the country. THAT is on the coaches last year.
NOB bringing his A game.Ya BS on the entitlement thing.I was a wee little lad when the '68/69 Buckeyes won the whole thing.Had to wait 34 yrs for the next.Being a Browns/Indians fans I've never witnessed a Trophy raising.But damn when you get the chance pull out all the stops - it is never certain you get back.Saban realized that 2 yrs back at half time of a National Championship Game do what's good for the Program not a player
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 29, 2019, 03:32:38 PM
Since Fro is a Florida fan, that automatically means that he must hate Urban Meyer. Talk about ungrateful, look in the mirror.

All Gator fans hate Meyer.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 03:39:35 PM
Wait, we can’t be invoking the time he had Smith and Thomas. 
You invoked that you thought JT was a record setter,I'm pointing out the NFL talent that surrounded him his 4 seasons of play.It's easy to be a saint when some one else is setting the stage for your miracles.We had a known quality in a decent running QB who couldn't go over the top.Yet there were 2 guys who could stretch the field behind him.Saban took the chance Urbz didn't - pretty simple stuff.These were being discussed on the Buckeye Boards ad nauseam during the 2016 season
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 03:44:00 PM
Since Fro is a Florida fan, that automatically means that he must hate Urban Meyer. Talk about ungrateful, look in the mirror.
Hey-Hey-hey the voice of truth and reason - just ask him.Meyer platooned Leak/Tebow could have done the same with JT and or Burrow/Haskins.Man crush or party picture kept him from doing so even after 2016
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 29, 2019, 09:10:54 PM
You always do this. One poster says something, then you attribute it to all OSU fans or all Big Ten fans. Asinine.
Sigh.
All OSU fans don't do any one, particular thing.  But many poormouth JT Barrett.  Hell, which phrasing do you like?  Many?  Too many?  Most?  A loud minority?  Ugh.


For a guy who threw for the most TDs in B10 history (by a lot) AND ran for the 2nd-most TDs by a B10 QB, all that seemed to be talked about were what he couldn't do.  He had an ALL-TIME GREAT CAREER and many/most/too many OSU fans wish he was better.

Setting the bar kinda high, no?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 29, 2019, 10:12:28 PM
Throwing to guys who had incredible YAC even you propped up enough could put up numbers.Urban split QB duties with Leak/Tebow but wouldn't with a guy who was throwing 25 yd wounded ducks.JT isn't even in the top 25 for a single season ydg.His numbers were padded over 4 yrs,ya know the League ready guys are leaving after 1 or 2.Again should have been platooned,nice guy no field general.Don't take my word for it see where the phenoms name is

https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/conferences/big-ten/leaders/pass-yds-player-season.html (https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/conferences/big-ten/leaders/pass-yds-player-season.html)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 29, 2019, 10:51:27 PM
I'm not saying that Meyer was right or wrong. All I am saying that as fans that only get to see what is presented to us during games (and the spring scrimmage), it is frustrating to have watched JT arm punt throws for 3 1/2 years to wide open receivers and then see Burrow show up at LSU and put himself in Heisman contention. And it seems to all go back to Meyer's loyalty to certain players and coaches.

But I admit, it is hard to argue with the success that Meyer had. And you are correct, I was not at practice or the team meetings and have no idea what each of these players looked like outside of game days.

But I also know that Meyer is truly sold on the running aspect of the QB position almost at the expense of being a capable passer. And what is really frustrating is seeing that Burrow is capable of doing both rather effectively. He is not quite the runner that JT was, but is a much better runner than Haskins was. Conversely, Haskins probably threw a better ball than Burrow, but Burrow definitely threw the ball far better on his worst day than JT did on his best. And there are a few games (Iowa and Oklahoma come to mind) where if JT could have hit some downfield throws, the running game would have opened up quite a bit.
So I'll start with the first graph and two things.

Part of CFB is that kind of angst. You watch a guy all the time, you learn his limits. You also tend to let that command your perspective. If you'd like to tell me there were 1 3/4 years of laments about arm punting, that I'll buy. But he was second in the county in passer rating as a freshman, setting that team for an actual title, and the next year OSU fans spent a chunk of the year asking for him over Jones. Heck, Barrett had four TD passes in that 2016 win over Oklahoma and had them looking good though at least four games (I think sentiment started to turn in the latter half of that season).

It's also worth noting, Burrow didn't "show up at LSU and put himself in Heisman contention." He showed up at LSU and was the 12th rated passer in the SEC. As a fourth-year junior. This points to another interesting happening. We see our teams all the time. Our nits bother us. What happens to other players, former players, we only really see the highs and lows. In this case, more this year than last year.

I empathize with your last graph. I really do. Because we spend a lot of time with someone and their flaws become all we see. If Barrett had not gone 23-4 with a playoff appearance and Big Ten title, he'd actually be remembered more fondly. But it points to another factor. If Burrow had been given three-plus years or runway, there's a very real chance OSU fans end up annoyed by one flaw he has or another. Perhaps he's a stud three years running who gets better and better. More likely there are ups and downs, and he ends up looking less shiny compared to 2015 Barrett. Perspective is weird that way. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 29, 2019, 11:04:07 PM
As to the Schiano thing, I was using this as an example of Meyer's loyalty. Last season when the defense was giving up chunk plays to EVERY TEAM THEY PLAYED (even Oregon St), there should have been a "Come to Jesus" moment between Meyer and Schiano. (The first thing I would have done is told him that he cannot play exclusive man to man coverage as half the defense was playing with their backs to the ball).

Did that happen? I don't know, but I do know that things never got better. I truly believe that Meyer gave Schiano too much freedom to leave it alone and hope it got better. I also believe that had Meyer come back this year, Schiano would have been welcomed back with open arms.

As for the Entitlement aspect, maybe OSU fans do feel that way. But when you break down last season for what it was, it becomes quite apparent that the coaching staff let this team down. Sure they went 13-1 last year, but that defensive performance kept them out of the playoffs. And Almost all of the same players are back this year. A defense that was ranking outside the Top 50 in the country, is now arguably one of the best in the country. THAT is on the coaches last year.

And sure we expect our team to go undefeated every year. When they recruit the way they have, why shouldn't we? But there is a difference between matching up to a team with close to equal talent and just having a bad game and getting blown off the field by a clearly inferior team. And when the reason for that had been apparent all season long and the HC does nothing about it, you bet it frustrates the fans.
The top boldd is the center assumption. That there is a way, with Urbs calling over his coach and yelling at him or having a big meeting that thing would be magically fixed. And I just don't know if that's how the world works. I just think it's a little idealistic to say mid-season, we change everything and it suddenly gets better. The part about him coming back is likewise conjecture. Urbs fired his first DC after two years IIRC. 

You point out all the same players are back. Is it not logical that another year of growing, another year of weights, another year of college football helped many players improve? 

To the second bolded I say this. You shouldn't expect it because it's not something that often happens. It's just very hard to do. And in the end, chances are, your team will fail at something. It will fail to make the playoff at 13-1, or make the playoff and get knocked out. One team leaves happy, maybe another is happy to be there (not the case for OSU I'd assume).

(The coach doing nothing about it, how much of that is something that's out there and how much is again projection. I.e. Things are going wrong and they're not being fixed, thus someone must not be doing something)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 29, 2019, 11:24:25 PM
You invoked that you thought JT was a record setter,I'm pointing out the NFL talent that surrounded him his 4 seasons of play.It's easy to be a saint when some one else is setting the stage for your miracles.We had a known quality in a decent running QB who couldn't go over the top.Yet there were 2 guys who could stretch the field behind him.Saban took the chance Urbz didn't - pretty simple stuff.These were being discussed on the Buckeye Boards ad nauseam during the 2016 season
Exhibit A: Entitlement. 

When someone explains that being very successful is easy and that a very good college player is actually just decent, that's majestic entitlement. It's a natural part of college fandom, but shoot, I thought us youngin's were the one that didn't respect hard work, not the old heads.

(Also, on that Saban thing. He had this year's top rated passer in the country who may well have saved his team's playoff spot nailed to the bench as an injured Tua tossed two first-half picks)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 29, 2019, 11:31:26 PM
Since Fro is a Florida fan, that automatically means that he must hate Urban Meyer. Talk about ungrateful, look in the mirror.
I think this a a joke that's going over my head. I wen't halfway to responding to it and don't want to get sucked in. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 29, 2019, 11:34:30 PM
Throwing to guys who had incredible YAC even you propped up enough could put up numbers.Urban split QB duties with Leak/Tebow but wouldn't with a guy who was throwing 25 yd wounded ducks.JT isn't even in the top 25 for a single season ydg.His numbers were padded over 4 yrs,ya know the League ready guys are leaving after 1 or 2.Again should have been platooned,nice guy no field general.Don't take my word for it see where the phenoms name is

https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/conferences/big-ten/leaders/pass-yds-player-season.html (https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/conferences/big-ten/leaders/pass-yds-player-season.html)
That list has caused me to lose faith in passing yardage as a useful number.

Edit: Upon further review, every Big Ten passing number is kind of a mess. Fields is gonna leave with either the best individual season ever, or be right there with Haskins, Wilson and Brees. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 30, 2019, 03:05:13 AM
And you counter with passing yardage?  :57:


Miraculous that such a limited QB could be the ALL TIME B10 leader in TD passes and passer rating (and only 15th in attempts) AND being a top-3 ALL TIME rushing QB in B10 history....same guy, one career.


But he was limited.  He wasn't that good.  Only played because of loyalty.  I guess he was just lucky...on 1,867 plays.




Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: NorthernOhioBuckeye on October 30, 2019, 07:42:51 AM
So I'll start with the first graph and two things.

Part of CFB is that kind of angst. You watch a guy all the time, you learn his limits. You also tend to let that command your perspective. If you'd like to tell me there were 1 3/4 years of laments about arm punting, that I'll buy. But he was second in the county in passer rating as a freshman, setting that team for an actual title, and the next year OSU fans spent a chunk of the year asking for him over Jones. Heck, Barrett had four TD passes in that 2016 win over Oklahoma and had them looking good though at least four games (I think sentiment started to turn in the latter half of that season).

It's also worth noting, Burrow didn't "show up at LSU and put himself in Heisman contention." He showed up at LSU and was the 12th rated passer in the SEC. As a fourth-year junior. This points to another interesting happening. We see our teams all the time. Our nits bother us. What happens to other players, former players, we only really see the highs and lows. In this case, more this year than last year.

I empathize with your last graph. I really do. Because we spend a lot of time with someone and their flaws become all we see. If Barrett had not gone 23-4 with a playoff appearance and Big Ten title, he'd actually be remembered more fondly. But it points to another factor. If Burrow had been given three-plus years or runway, there's a very real chance OSU fans end up annoyed by one flaw he has or another. Perhaps he's a stud three years running who gets better and better. More likely there are ups and downs, and he ends up looking less shiny compared to 2015 Barrett. Perspective is weird that way.

I must not be conveying my thoughts very well. Yes Barrett had an amazing career at tOSU. He put up incredible numbers and won a lot of games I will not argue that and in fact am very appreciative for it.

My point is that while he was very good, he was also somewhat limited in how far he could really take the offense. I would even speculate that had he NOT gotten injured in the last reg season game in 2014, tOSU may not have steamrolled Wisconsin and gotten into the playoffs. And had they managed to get in, the would have been steamrolled by Bama. Not because JT was not a good player but because he could not pop the top off the defense the way the Jones did.  Bama would have just loaded the box and dared JT to throw it downfield. He may have completed a couple here or there, but most likely would have thrown a few picks.

Also, look as Zeke's rushing numbers for a 3 game stretch, 220, 230 and 246 yds. Those are the 3 highest yardage games of his college career. Not 3 of the highest, the 3 highest. And what was different about those games other than they were arguably the 3 of toughest opponents in a 3 game stretch that he would see in college? A QB that could pop the top off the defense and an offensive coordinator that tailored the offense to his abilities. While Jones was capable of running the ball, that was not his strong suit. Meyer was FORCED to allow the OC to change his offense.

However, the following season, they went right back to the Meyer offense predicated on a running QB sharing caries with the tailback. Yeah they won those games, but they didn't look impressive doing so. Jones struggled and JT was brought back in because of his ability to move the ball in that offense.

With all of that said, the issue was that Barrett played to the best of his ability and had some great wins and awesome moments. I am very grateful that he was the QB and happy with the results. But his throwing ability along with UM's insistence that HIS system was the only way to go, possibly cost them even greater success. And even with that, he had another QB later that could both run and throw the ball downfield but never gave him an honest opportunity to demonstrate it. Had he given Burrows that opportunity, they may have achieved even more. But who knows.

When it's all said and done, I am very happy with where they are now. I am glad that Fields is there and will be for next season. I am happy with the way the current offense and defense are playing. I am also happy that Ryan Day is now the coach and is doing well. I wish Urban well and hope he enjoys his new job. Things really could not be much better.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 30, 2019, 08:17:51 AM
It's odd that a HC great enough to turn a glorified FB into an all-time great QB at Florida and took such a limited passing talent like Barrett to put up the numbers he did was so inept at picking a QB.  UM's offense was predicated on having a running threat at QB...so that's why he played Barrett.  Simple.  I don't understand finding fault in that.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 30, 2019, 08:25:23 AM
Well, CUM did not win every game obviously, so there is the fault.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 30, 2019, 11:48:03 AM
Exhibit A: Entitlement.

When someone explains that being very successful is easy and that a very good college player is actually just decent, that's majestic entitlement. It's a natural part of college fandom, but shoot, I thought us youngin's were the one that didn't respect hard work, not the old heads.

(Also, on that Saban thing. He had this year's top rated passer in the country who may well have saved his team's playoff spot nailed to the bench as an injured Tua tossed two first-half picks)
What Saban did this year is irrelevant to this discussion.This has nothing to do with entitlement.Did you actually read any of the previous explanations or were you too tired reaching for another beer?Again these arguments were raging 3 years ago on Buckeye Boards.I can tell you weren't really dialed into the situation.Why did Saban pull Jalen Hurts - and insert a true freshman in Tua under very smiliar circumstances a year later?The Coach had to at least try to adapt/adjust to the dilemma of being behind with a running QB - which he did.

  There is never,ever a  guarantee to get back there.Urbs stood pat the following season after he promised sweeping changes to the media/fans in the wake of the epic beatdown(he literally lied).Those writers/fans that thought it prudent Burrow/Haskins should at least see some snaps were right in retrospect.Because of obvious lapses in throwing the ball that Burrow/Haskins could have provided.And later obviously demonstrated which both you and Urbz can't see or won't acknowledge.But Urbz was paid to give the program a punchers chance - not stand pat on a pet project.

Urbz and Bill Clinton could both look right into a camera and tell  whoppers.His recruiting and understanding of quick strike offenses are 1st rate.His statements to the media and personnel decisions regarding coaches and players were many times suspect.


Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 30, 2019, 12:16:22 PM
It's odd that a HC great enough to turn a glorified FB into an all-time great QB at Florida and took such a limited passing talent like Barrett to put up the numbers he did was so inept at picking a QB.  UM's offense was predicated on having a running threat at QB...so that's why he played Barrett.  Simple.  I don't understand finding fault in that. 
It's finding fault with not going with other options when plan 'A" isn't working.At Florida you saw this with Leak/Tebow maybe he got complacent in C-Bus.When Saban arrived in T-Town he had the remedy for Urban's offense - a in your face Belichick/Bears like defense.And a grind it out NFL style offense,Oh and he could recruit also.IMO Bama beating Meyers Gators in'09 & '10 hastened UFM's departure.Urbans meteoric rise at BG/Utah/Fla didn't prepare him for adversity or St Nicks staunch defenses
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 30, 2019, 12:34:50 PM
The owner publicly came out and supported Trump.  Penn State fans are college educated and the big drinkers are millennials. Neither is exactly a hot demographic for Trump supporters.
I'm somewhat surprised by this for two reasons:

First, my hunch, and this article backs it up (https://issuu.com/nationalmedia/docs/nmrppsportspolitics), is that CFB fans are right-of-center.  There is a graph on page four that shows various sports fanbases by their Republican/Democrat leaning and their typical turnout:

Second, I thought Millennials didn't drink that much beer.  Article (https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomaspellechia/2017/10/27/millennials-are-blamed-for-falling-beer-sales-in-the-u-s/#55b1eab84a78).  

I've always liked Yuengling.  Until a few years ago I couldn't get it in Ohio so it was something of a special treat that I would get once in a while when I went to PA.  

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 30, 2019, 12:39:13 PM

My point is that while he was very good, he was also somewhat limited in how far he could really take the offense. I would even speculate that had he NOT gotten injured in the last reg season game in 2014, tOSU may not have steamrolled Wisconsin and gotten into the playoffs. And had they managed to get in, the would have been steamrolled by Bama. Not because JT was not a good player but because he could not pop the top off the defense the way the Jones did.  Bama would have just loaded the box and dared JT to throw it downfield. He may have completed a couple here or there, but most likely would have thrown a few picks.

With all of that said, the issue was that Barrett played to the best of his ability and had some great wins and awesome moments. I am very grateful that he was the QB and happy with the results. But his throwing ability along with UM's insistence that HIS system was the only way to go, possibly cost them even greater success. And even with that, he had another QB later that could both run and throw the ball downfield but never gave him an honest opportunity to demonstrate it. Had he given Burrows that opportunity, they may have achieved even more. But who knows.
Exactly,had he not gotten hurt against UM in'17 same thing.JT put us in a whole,Haskins got us out and then some.People who follow a team weekly see and remember the subtle aspects or variations.What JT did he did good,what he couldn't do was detrimental to the team vs stiff competition
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 30, 2019, 12:40:15 PM
apparently Washington National fans lean towards the left

well, according to FB
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MarqHusker on October 30, 2019, 12:44:51 PM

Second, I thought Millennials didn't drink that much beer.  Article (https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomaspellechia/2017/10/27/millennials-are-blamed-for-falling-beer-sales-in-the-u-s/#55b1eab84a78). 

I've always liked Yuengling.  Until a few years ago I couldn't get it in Ohio so it was something of a special treat that I would get once in a while when I went to PA. 


don't confuse taste and preferences for an opportunity to put out the virtue signal.     There are people that would claim to stop eating black licorice if Twizzlers' owners came out in favor of DJT or some other protest worthy cause.   
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 30, 2019, 12:59:55 PM
I guess you can see why I'm confused what's allowed around here and what's not.  

Also, apparently I'm a "global moderator."  What exactly does that mean?  Does that mean there are peons here who have to get my coffee?  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 30, 2019, 01:02:42 PM
And you counter with passing yardage?  :57:


Miraculous that such a limited QB could be the ALL TIME B10 leader in TD passes and passer rating (and only 15th in attempts) AND being a top-3 ALL TIME rushing QB in B10 history....same guy, one career.


But he was limited.  He wasn't that good.  Only played because of loyalty.  I guess he was just lucky...on 1,867 plays.

Um try to stay on point.AGAIN Barret isn't in the top 25 in single season stats in the BIG.Why is that?The other guys have NFL contracts.Because for you my misguided correspondent JT padded stats surrounded by NFL talent vs overmatched opponents the team won inspite of him.Next thing you'll tell the congregation that he's better than Haskins and or Burrow who fans were inquiring about.That you in blissful ignorance miss.OBVIOUSLY those two deserved to be at least platooned.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 30, 2019, 01:03:58 PM
I guess you can see why I'm confused what's allowed around here and what's not. 

Also, apparently I'm a "global moderator."  What exactly does that mean?  Does that mean there are peons here who have to get my coffee? 
Careful the way some of them comprehend the written word they'd pee in your coffee
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 30, 2019, 01:09:47 PM
So here's some reality for OSU, and a couple others.

I think it was back around 2013 or so, LSU and Florida players took to twitter to start arguing about who is DBU, a pointless yet ongoing spat.  Recently I've seen OSU enter the fray (which is kinda rude, nobody invited you to our BBQ).  Not OSU players, mind you....the actual school started putting stuff out comparing selective numbers.  They also think they're DBU.

The real question is:  why isn't Alabama ever included in that discussion?  Those guys have had a number of very impressive DBs over the last several years, particularly safeties.  They routinely field one of the most productive and talented secondaries, and they're as high a profile team as it gets.  I'm surprised you don't hear more about them....especially from them.  I mean, claiming titles they want to be true is kind of their thing.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 30, 2019, 01:25:40 PM
Prolly too busy kissing pictures of Nick or whizzing on pictures of Dabo
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 30, 2019, 01:35:51 PM
The "RBU" type discussions are amusing.  They should compile a list and argue about it on Espin, the magazine.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on October 30, 2019, 01:57:25 PM
I'm somewhat surprised by this for two reasons:

First, my hunch, and this article backs it up (https://issuu.com/nationalmedia/docs/nmrppsportspolitics), is that CFB fans are right-of-center.  There is a graph on page four that shows various sports fanbases by their Republican/Democrat leaning and their typical turnout:
I'd venture this is more due to other demographics favoring CFB. First, the "power" teams are often located in red states. You've got the South, you've got the upper Midwest (rust belt that was formerly red although is more purple these days), and you've got the central swath from Nebraska down to Texas. 

Out here on the Left coast, and in the mid-Atlantic to Northeast states, college football is not nearly as popular. 

Couple that with the fact that college football fandom is more rural in general, whereas pro sports and the NFL are more aligned with big metro areas, and rural areas skew more to the right. Boston is all about the Pats, not BC. NYC is all about the Giants and Jets, not Rutger and Syracuse. DC is about the Redskins, not about UMD. Chicago is about the Bears, not the Wildcats. LA is a mess in general, but it's a Rams town now. SF is about the 49ers, and doesn't care about Stanford all that much. And while Seattle has UDub local, it's still all about the Seahawks. So the biggest metro areas that would skew things blue are more interested in the local NFL teams than the local-ish NCAA teams.

So if the biggest CFB programs and fan bases just tend to geographically align with the reddest [rural] parts of the reddest states, it makes perfect sense that CFB fandom would skew to the right. 

I guess you can see why I'm confused what's allowed around here and what's not. 

Also, apparently I'm a "global moderator."  What exactly does that mean?  Does that mean there are peons here who have to get my coffee? 
I do think we've been walking a fine line around here. 

For me, and I said this last week, there are topics that are politics-adjacent that are interesting to delve into but they're not really "political debate". However, there are certain political "third rail" issues--or perhaps discussion specifically about certain politicians--that can quickly destroy dialogue and turn it ugly. 

A more academic discussion about why certain sports may skew certain directions politically is a different thing than having a political debate...
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 30, 2019, 02:16:33 PM
So here's some reality for OSU, and a couple others.

I think it was back around 2013 or so, LSU and Florida players took to twitter to start arguing about who is DBU, a pointless yet ongoing spat.  Recently I've seen OSU enter the fray (which is kinda rude, nobody invited you to our BBQ).  Not OSU players, mind you....the actual school started putting stuff out comparing selective numbers.  They also think they're DBU.

The real question is:  why isn't Alabama ever included in that discussion?  Those guys have had a number of very impressive DBs over the last several years, particularly safeties.  They routinely field one of the most productive and talented secondaries, and they're as high a profile team as it gets.  I'm surprised you don't hear more about them....especially from them.  I mean, claiming titles they want to be true is kind of their thing. 
Everyone knows real BBQ is in Texas and DB U is the U of Texas-Austin
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 30, 2019, 02:24:31 PM
I agree there is real BBQ in Texas (and of course in other places).

I'm content for each school to call itself DBU.  I'm also content for someone to note that their program has turned out a lot of players at one position who have been very good.  It's akin, for me, to "top ten beaches".  Fine with me, there is someone's list.  I could well personally find that some other beach was more to my liking.

Don't get me started on wine ratings.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 30, 2019, 02:33:32 PM
Everyone knows real BBQ is in Texas and DB U is the U of Texas-Austin
Old,bitter,drunken fearless justa stirrin' up the pot
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 30, 2019, 02:37:35 PM
I'm still in an 0-fer in the ATL on the Q.  Fox Bros. had some good brisket though.  They are two bros, from Texas, so there is that.

We went back to Fat Matt's again.  It was packed, and the Q was just so-so IMHO.  The slaw was pretty bad in fact.

They did have a blues band playing.

I may have to just get by on the McRib.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 30, 2019, 03:02:31 PM
Everyone knows real BBQ is in Texas and DB U is the U of Texas-Austin

As David Pollack said, more like DB-Burnt-U.

There is great brisket in TX.  If we're talking pork, I like the NEArkansas/TN area very well.  Of course the best stuff is not from a restaurant but from somebody's back porch who knows what they're doing.  

There was a chili cookoff at my church last Sunday.  Some of that stuff was very good.  Some of it....was not.  I felt some of those people needed their Texan licenses revoked.  utee said Texans making bad chili should be reported to the Texas Rangers.  Seems wise, Walker would know what to do with people like that.  I saw beans.  

I've never been to a Cajun restaurant I thought was real Cajun food, even in Acadiana.  But a lot have come probably as close as possible while still passing code.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 30, 2019, 03:44:17 PM
Don't get me started on wine ratings.
Wash your feet stomp the damn grapes and get it out here
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 30, 2019, 04:16:06 PM
I'd venture this is more due to other demographics favoring CFB. First, the "power" teams are often located in red states. You've got the South, you've got the upper Midwest (rust belt that was formerly red although is more purple these days), and you've got the central swath from Nebraska down to Texas.

Out here on the Left coast, and in the mid-Atlantic to Northeast states, college football is not nearly as popular.

Couple that with the fact that college football fandom is more rural in general, whereas pro sports and the NFL are more aligned with big metro areas, and rural areas skew more to the right. Boston is all about the Pats, not BC. NYC is all about the Giants and Jets, not Rutger and Syracuse. DC is about the Redskins, not about UMD. Chicago is about the Bears, not the Wildcats. LA is a mess in general, but it's a Rams town now. SF is about the 49ers, and doesn't care about Stanford all that much. And while Seattle has UDub local, it's still all about the Seahawks. So the biggest metro areas that would skew things blue are more interested in the local NFL teams than the local-ish NCAA teams.

So if the biggest CFB programs and fan bases just tend to geographically align with the reddest [rural] parts of the reddest states, it makes perfect sense that CFB fandom would skew to the right. 
I think this is a good point that I hadn't really thought about.  I suppose that if you checked certain teams you would find a more leftward skew among their fans.  Ie, BC fans, to the extent that they exist are probably generally from the greater Boston Metro area and they are probably pretty left leaning compared to CFB fans in general.  

I strongly disagree with your parenthetical that I bolded.  Going W->E through the Great Lakes states:

Note that with MN, WI, MI, and PA I stated that they are "possibly trending purple".  All of them were more Republican than the national vote in the 2016 election but obviously one election does not make a trend and if you look at results from the last few elections (not who won, but how the vote compared to the national vote) it is a mixed bag.  That said, I see nothing to support your assertion of formerly red and trending purple.  

Back to Penn State, I'm not sure how that would apply.  PA was formerly pretty solidly blue but it was trending more purplish even before 2016 and, of course, went red in 2016 for the first time since 1988.  It probably depends largely on where the PSU fans in question are from.  Looking at the 2016 PA election map there is a blue county in Western PA (Pittsburg), one in central PA (I think PSU), one a little SE of that (?) then a bunch around Philly and along the NJ border.  The rest of the state ranges from light red to dark red.  
I do think we've been walking a fine line around here.

For me, and I said this last week, there are topics that are politics-adjacent that are interesting to delve into but they're not really "political debate". However, there are certain political "third rail" issues--or perhaps discussion specifically about certain politicians--that can quickly destroy dialogue and turn it ugly.

A more academic discussion about why certain sports may skew certain directions politically is a different thing than having a political debate...
That is my theory.  We definitely don't want this to become a political debate forum but at least in my opinion, discussing what happened in a more academic way should be fine.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 30, 2019, 04:18:02 PM
I'm still in an 0-fer in the ATL on the Q.  Fox Bros. had some good brisket though.  They are two bros, from Texas, so there is that.

We went back to Fat Matt's again.  It was packed, and the Q was just so-so IMHO.  The slaw was pretty bad in fact.

They did have a blues band playing.

I may have to just get by on the McRib.
was the band solid?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on October 30, 2019, 06:49:58 PM
Good points, @medinabuckeye1 (https://www.cfb51.com/index.php?action=profile;u=1547) 

I forget that much of the rust belt is manufacturing/union territory and trends blue. And I think their tendency to go red/purple in 2016 was an outlier. So you're right on those states.

I was thinking a bit of Indiana because of my time at Purdue, knowing it's always been very red. It was a mistake to generalize it wider in the Midwest.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: CWSooner on October 30, 2019, 09:44:56 PM
I strongly disagree with your parenthetical that I bolded.  Going W->E through the Great Lakes states:
  • Minnesota barely voted for Clinton over Trump.  This was previously a Democratic stronghold.  It was the only state to vote for Mondale over Reagan in 1984 and hasn't voted for a Republican for President since Nixon's landslide in 1972.  Even then, Nixon won the national popular vote 61-38 and carried 49 states but he only won Minnesota 52-46 so Minnesota was ~8% more Democratic than the US as a whole.  The popular vote in the 2016 election Minnesota was slightly more Republican than the national popular vote.  Minnesota was formerly deep blue and is possibly trending purple. 
  • Wisconsin went red in 2016, for the first time since 1984.  There again, in 1984 Reagan won the national popular vote by about 18% but he only won Wisconsin by about 9%.  Wisconsin is a formerly deep blue state possibly trending purple. 
  • Illinois is and remains deep blue, no trend either way. 
  • Indiana is a solidly red state in any race in which it matters.  Obama did carry the Hoosier State in 2008 but only barely despite winning the national popular vote by 7%.  Prior to that the last Democrat to carry Indiana was Lyndon Johnson in 1964.  Note that 2008 and 1964 were both Democratic landslides.  This is the inverse of MN/WI where the last time (prior to 2016 in WI's case) that a Republican won there it was in a national Republican landslide (1972 and 1984). 
  • Michigan went red in 2016, for the first time since 1988.  Like Minnesota and Wisconsin this is a formerly deep blue state that is possibly trending purple. 
  • Ohio (this is the one I know the most about) has voted for every winning Presidential candidate for the last 50+ years.  The last candidate to win without Ohio was Kennedy in 1960.  However, Ohio has been trending more red.  In 2016 the state went Republican by ~8% while the national popular vote was 10% to the left of that. 
  • Pennsylvania went red in 2016 for the first time since 1988.  Like MN, WI, and MI this is a formerly deep blue state that is possibly trending purple. 

Note that with MN, WI, MI, and PA I stated that they are "possibly trending purple".  All of them were more Republican than the national vote in the 2016 election but obviously one election does not make a trend and if you look at results from the last few elections (not who won, but how the vote compared to the national vote) it is a mixed bag.  That said, I see nothing to support your assertion of formerly red and trending purple. 

Back to Penn State, I'm not sure how that would apply.  PA was formerly pretty solidly blue but it was trending more purplish even before 2016 and, of course, went red in 2016 for the first time since 1988.  It probably depends largely on where the PSU fans in question are from.  Looking at the 2016 PA election map there is a blue county in Western PA (Pittsburg), one in central PA (I think PSU), one a little SE of that (?) then a bunch around Philly and along the NJ border.  The rest of the state ranges from light red to dark red.  That is my theory.  We definitely don't want this to become a political debate forum but at least in my opinion, discussing what happened in a more academic way should be fine.
You'd probably know more on this than I do, Medina, but I would guess that the Midwest in general has gotten less blue as the strength and numbers of big labor have declined.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 30, 2019, 11:31:24 PM
What Saban did this year is irrelevant to this discussion.This has nothing to do with entitlement.Did you actually read any of the previous explanations or were you too tired reaching for another beer?Again these arguments were raging 3 years ago on Buckeye Boards.I can tell you weren't really dialed into the situation.Why did Saban pull Jalen Hurts - and insert a true freshman in Tua under very smiliar circumstances a year later?The Coach had to at least try to adapt/adjust to the dilemma of being behind with a running QB - which he did.

  There is never,ever a  guarantee to get back there.Urbs stood pat the following season after he promised sweeping changes to the media/fans in the wake of the epic beatdown(he literally lied).Those writers/fans that thought it prudent Burrow/Haskins should at least see some snaps were right in retrospect.Because of obvious lapses in throwing the ball that Burrow/Haskins could have provided.And later obviously demonstrated which both you and Urbz can't see or won't acknowledge.But Urbz was paid to give the program a punchers chance - not stand pat on a pet project.

Urbz and Bill Clinton could both look right into a camera and tell  whoppers.His recruiting and understanding of quick strike offenses are 1st rate.His statements to the media and personnel decisions regarding coaches and players were many times suspect.



Let’s start from the top.

What Saban did isn’t really relevant to any discussion, but he’s trotted out as a point when any fan base wants to bench a QB. But a year later, he didn’t bench a QB, but that’s weirdly ignored because it implies what Saban did isn’t a way of being, but a rarer thing.

The idea Ohio State boards arguing it is meaningful is a good indication of not reading many board on your part. Here’s the thing, every fan base is arguing they should bench their starter for the shiny backup. They’re doing it in Georgia and South Carolina, Purdue and Wisconsin. It’s not special. It’s college football.

I respect he’s a liar. But I look at that puncher’s chance part. And it’s interesting because making the playoff isn’t a puncher’s chance. Because that’s the entitlement part. The 11-1 happens because you’re Ohio State. No respect that a kid put his body on the line to get there. Because it’s easier to play make believe that a kid who couldn’t pass a 135 QB rating as a junior was gonna put a dent in a Venables defense as a redshirt freshman. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 30, 2019, 11:43:01 PM


My point is that while he was very good, he was also somewhat limited in how far he could really take the offense. I would even speculate that had he NOT gotten injured in the last reg season game in 2014, tOSU may not have steamrolled Wisconsin and gotten into the playoffs. And had they managed to get in, the would have been steamrolled by Bama. Not because JT was not a good player but because he could not pop the top off the defense the way the Jones did.  Bama would have just loaded the box and dared JT to throw it downfield. He may have completed a couple here or there, but most likely would have thrown
So Nubbz commented on this and I wanted to answer, but this part is kinda the point, so this answers both this and his comment.

The argument that the offense really changed is interesting, but in the end, you look back, Jones got a good number of carries. It could’ve also been a particular group balled out and got a little ground down.

You’re arguing in an imaginary playoff, things might have gone differently. We’ve no way of knowing, but I actually agree. The thing is, if there’s no Barrett, OSU probably loses to MSU and hey, no national title. And we live in a world where a player can be key to a title and a year later, OSU fans are begging for Barrett. Life is weird and jagged and strange.

We cannot know what might’ve happened. We can pretend it would’ve turned out with all the titles because we’re wired to draw some satisfaction from the complaining. I’ll buy the Haskins stuff, less so the Burrow stuff. Redshirt sophomore Burrow is an unknown, one of a long line of QBs who were all-stars because they got no chance to prove otherwise.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MarqHusker on October 31, 2019, 12:05:23 AM
I was in Boston recently, and out for a nightcap after a business event, and I sauntered into a BBQ joint in downtown Boston,  the place looked legit, the bartender was a Louisiana native, and I wasn't hungry, just a couple beers.  Anyways, what they were charging for BBQ, it was criminal  Obvs.  real estate commands such prices, but nobody should pay those prices for Q.  People getting robbed.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 31, 2019, 05:08:29 AM
Um try to stay on point.AGAIN Barret isn't in the top 25 in single season stats in the BIG.Why is that?The other guys have NFL contracts.Because for you my misguided correspondent JT padded stats surrounded by NFL talent vs overmatched opponents the team won inspite of him.Next thing you'll tell the congregation that he's better than Haskins and or Burrow who fans were inquiring about.That you in blissful ignorance miss.OBVIOUSLY those two deserved to be at least platooned.
Every OSU QB's stats are padded, being surrounded by NFL talent vs overmatched opponents.  Yet no one had the career he had.  And again, single-season passing yardage has got to be the most antiquated, erroneous gauge of how good a QB is you could possibly have cited.  It's much more of a sign that your team sucks and is behind a lot.  You know this.
He had 2 individual seasons of high-volume, 160+ passer ratings...basically the same as Troy Smith.  Heisman-winner Troy Smith.  Looking at it closer, Barrett's crime was basically having a great FR season and not repeating it until his SR season.  Ohhh, sorry!  


And again, you bring up NFL contracts.  If you honestly, genuinely cannot differentiate between college success and NFL potential, we can stop here.  UM's loyalty wasn't to Barrett, it was to his winning %.  He'd diagram a rub play facing his grandma in backyard football if it meant winning vs not winning.  He played Barrett over others for a reason.  You're pretending 2019 Burrow = 2017 Burrow, and that's obviously silly.  


OSU went 49-6 in Barrett's 4 seasons (not all games started by Barrett).  He was statistically the best passer in B10 history AND ran for as many TDs as Saquon Barkley and Ezekiel Elliott.  And you argue that the only reason he was on the field so much was blind, unwarranted loyalty.  Hell, I guess if UM threw one of those other guys out there, OSU would have easily gont 55-0 and they'd have 4 Heismans, right?



Settle down, Beano.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 07:39:26 AM
Let’s start from the top.

What Saban did isn’t really relevant to any discussion, but he’s trotted out as a point when any fan base wants to bench a QB. But a year later, he didn’t bench a QB, but that’s weirdly ignored because it implies what Saban did isn’t a way of being, but a rarer thing.

The idea Ohio State boards arguing it is meaningful is a good indication of not reading many board on your part. Here’s the thing, every fan base is arguing they should bench their starter for the shiny backup. They’re doing it in Georgia and South Carolina, Purdue and Wisconsin. It’s not special. It’s college football.

I respect he’s a liar. But I look at that puncher’s chance part. And it’s interesting because making the playoff isn’t a puncher’s chance. Because that’s the entitlement part. The 11-1 happens because you’re Ohio State. No respect that a kid put his body on the line to get there. Because it’s easier to play make believe that a kid who couldn’t pass a 135 QB rating as a junior was gonna put a dent in a Venables defense as a redshirt freshman. 
I don't expect much from you and you never fail to disappoint You paint with a wide brush and expect it to be taken as gospel.Many kids made ohio states record possible,and many of them are employed on Sundays.JT played football he's not marching off to war.So save the he put his body on the line bullshit .You competely ignore the points about Haskins/Burrow.Other teams didn't have those two sitting behind an arm punter.You comparing roses to ragweed.You've not watched or read about anything presented except what you pull out of your very dank crevasse.Saban didn't stand pat and played a freshman quarterback -that's a fair comparison.Meyer just kept trying the same broken thing - with out trying.If you can't see that I can't help you.By Einsteins definition - that's insanity.Meyer trotted out the very same thing that just failed entirely on CFB biggest stage 4 months later in spring ball.NOB laid it out pretty simple for you and both Haskins & Burrow have amply demonstrated what Buckeye fans were inquiring about.I've never said JT or any other student athlete "sucks"I did point out there were what turned out to be better options that Urban Meyer at 5 million a year chose not take.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 07:41:09 AM
I was in Boston recently, and out for a nightcap after a business event, and I sauntered into a BBQ joint in downtown Boston,  the place looked legit, the bartender was a Louisiana native, and I wasn't hungry, just a couple beers.  Anyways, what they were charging for BBQ, it was criminal  Obvs.  real estate commands such prices, but nobody should pay those prices for Q.  People getting robbed.

Yeah, it's the real estate there.  We found some places in the 'burbs that were reasonably priced (not Q).  Gas prices here can vary from $2.99 to $2.49 with a separation of about a mile, usually the high priced one is on the freeway.  Some of that is gouging of course.  

Urban Meyer IMHO was a very good coach.  I personally wouldn't second guess him, I don't know enough, but I guess that's what we do as fans.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 07:43:01 AM
Every OSU QB's stats are padded, being surrounded by NFL talent vs overmatched opponents.  Yet no one had the career he had.  And again, single-season passing yardage has got to be the most antiquated, erroneous gauge of how good a QB is you could possibly have cited.  It's much more of a sign that your team sucks and is behind a lot.  You know this.
He had 2 individual seasons of high-volume, 160+ passer ratings...basically the same as Troy Smith.  Heisman-winner Troy Smith.  Looking at it closer, Barrett's crime was basically having a great FR season and not repeating it until his SR season.  Ohhh, sorry! 


And again, you bring up NFL contracts.  If you honestly, genuinely cannot differentiate between college success and NFL potential, we can stop here.  UM's loyalty wasn't to Barrett, it was to his winning %.  He'd diagram a rub play facing his grandma in backyard football if it meant winning vs not winning.  He played Barrett over others for a reason.  You're pretending 2019 Burrow = 2017 Burrow, and that's obviously silly. 


OSU went 49-6 in Barrett's 4 seasons (not all games started by Barrett).  He was statistically the best passer in B10 history AND ran for as many TDs as Saquon Barkley and Ezekiel Elliott.  And you argue that the only reason he was on the field so much was blind, unwarranted loyalty.  Hell, I guess if UM threw one of those other guys out there, OSU would have easily gont 55-0 and they'd have 4 Heismans, right?



Settle down, Beano.
Get it together kid. Grow up. Get a life. Stop being a burden on society.Why don't you go play your little college football game that no one is interested in - thicko.You're wrong UFM had a man crush on JT.You and BAB win Haskins and Burrow both SUCK HAPPY?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 07:43:05 AM
https://quoteinvestigator.com/2017/03/23/same/ (https://quoteinvestigator.com/2017/03/23/same/)

Oh, and Einstein didn't say that, and it does not sound like something he would have said.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 07:56:49 AM
It's beem attributed to him or Ben Franklin,but how does the guy you quoted really know?If he asked him then there you have it.Obviously it's to late to ask either of them.But the point still stands in that discussion.I've read a little on Albert and they said he had a sense of humor - so it's certainly not out of the realm
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 07:59:07 AM
There are various quote finders on line, if all of them say it's misattributed, I figure it is.

And as I said, it doesn't sound like a thing Einstein would say.  English was obviously not his first language.  A lot of his quotes were in German originally and translated, like "God does not play dice", which he did say, but it's translated.

He was not a fan of quantum uncertainty.  His EPR paper is still discussed.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 08:02:28 AM
What's EPR a soccer Term like QBR ::)


(https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-thumb-21922-100-rLkskQ106fln672VZdhx93YKI1qAYMFk.jpeg) (https://www.quora.com/profile/Peter-Baskerville)
Peter Baskerville (https://www.quora.com/profile/Peter-Baskerville), Been doing it for over 60 years
Updated May 11, 2017 (https://www.quora.com/Did-Einstein-really-define-insanity-as-doing-the-same-thing-over-and-over-again-and-expecting-different-results/answer/Peter-Baskerville)



This quote is generally attributed to Einstein in most online quote collections, however there seems to be significant debate about the authenticity of this attribution. Others like Mark Twain, an old Chinese proverb and Benjamin Franklin have also been suggested as the originators, but general consensus concludes that they have a significantly lesser claim than Einstein.


The earliest claim is that Einstein used and published the quote in his "Letters to Solovine 1951" however no specific reference has yet been supplied from that source. There is apparently an attribution to Einstein using this quote in a transactions of the North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference, Volume 71, p. 54, Wildlife Management Institute, published in 1975 although according to Bill Hood (https://www.quora.com/profile/Bill-Hood-2)'s answer, this volume was actually published in 2006.


Other verifiable evidence of the quote's original authorship come from:



My read of it all is that Einstein was too smart to define the broad scope of insanity in such narrow terms. However, the quote has been used effectively by Alcoholics Anonymous for many decades to drive home a simple point in a specified context and so I think it most probably originated from someone in that organisation like Dr. Silkwood or Bill Wilson, possibly as far back as the 1930's.





Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 08:35:41 AM
https://www.aps.org/publications/apsnews/200511/history.cfm (https://www.aps.org/publications/apsnews/200511/history.cfm)

The EPR paper is a famous one from the period where quantum mechanics was being discussed (and disputed).  Einstein had a very deterministic view of the universe.  QM was/is clearly contrary to that view, so he fought against it, or more correctly he challenged it as being incomplete.

Werner Heisenberg, Niels Bohr and others who helped create the theory insisted that there was no meaningful way in which to discuss certain details of an atom’s behavior: for example, one could never predict the precise moment when an atom would emit a quantum of light. But Einstein could never fully accept this innate uncertainty, once famously declaring, “God does not play dice.” He wasn’t alone in his discomfort: Erwin Schrödinger, inventor of the wave function, once declared of quantum mechanics, “I don’t like it, and I’m sorry I ever had anything to do with it.”

In a 1935 paper, Einstein, Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen introduced a thought experiment to argue that quantum mechanics was not a complete physical theory. Known today as the “EPR paradox,” the thought experiment was meant to demonstrate the innate conceptual difficulties of quantum theory. It said that the result of a measurement on one particle of an entangled quantum system can have an instantaneous effect on another particle, regardless of the distance of the two parts.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 09:05:15 AM
I guess you can see why I'm confused what's allowed around here and what's not. 

Also, apparently I'm a "global moderator."  What exactly does that mean?  Does that mean there are peons here who have to get my coffee? 
We don't really have rules on it. More common sense than anything. I don't think there has been much over any line here, except for one post, maybe. One was very insulting.


What we don't want is to be tagged by the google machine, so mentioning names of politicians is not good here. One part of this site is insulated from that now, I believe.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 09:07:58 AM
We have not needed "rules" here in the past, and I think it would be great if we can continue in that vein.

Common sense covers many ills.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MaximumSam on October 31, 2019, 09:20:37 AM
I've loved JT from his first game.  You will find no JT bashing from me.  Urbs loved him because he was smart, hardworking, dependable, and didn't mind being used as a hammer in the run game.  But there are other facts:

1. Haskins was and Burrow looks to be first round draft picks.
2. Urbs has more or less said he didn't think Cardale Jones would be successful replacing JT.
3. Saban more or less said they would've beat OSU if JT played.
4. As far as youth, Justin Fields is looking pretty good for a second year player who has only been on campus for less than a year.
5. Haskins had the best passing season in B1G history as a redshirt sophomore.
6. OSU made the playoffs during JT's redshirt freshman year.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Temp430 on October 31, 2019, 09:21:32 AM
I think Ohio State is the best team in the country right now.  It sucks but that's the reality.  Recently seeking entertainment by reading Notre Dame message boards after Michigan's beat down of the Irish I noticed a common theme in many posts: fire Brian Kelly and hire Urban Meyer.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: TyphonInc on October 31, 2019, 09:40:59 AM
We'll start at the top. Do you feel RS freshman Burrow was better than RS junior Burrow? Simple question, but it stay a lot about setting the table.

Moving on to the non-quantifible part. I think this is interesting because it's not at all unique to Urbs. Fans across the country assume their coach loves their not great QB to a fault. It's pretty common. At a point, we must ask, are all these coaches watching hours of practice films and misjudging all of it (maybe), or are fans by and large built to believe what they've hardly seen is better than what they often see? This is not to say it's 100 percent one way or the other, only that this common feeling might be endemic in the kind of optimism we see in ourselves.

The Schiano thing speaks to another sort of splintered perspective. You're saying the coach would've addressed it early on. I assume you mean early last season, maybe after the suspension? Because here's the thing. You know who built the two best OSU defenses in the Urbs era? That'd be Schiano. His first two were better than Ash's, notably better. Should he have been fired after doing that back-to-back years? Or are we prisoners of rather emotional moments.

(Also worth noting, the new OSU DC was demoted by Michigan, basically passed over twice, and now has this. Maybe it's just the odd nature of CFB at play?)

The larger point is this, it's one of entitlement. OSU fans assume these are 15-0 teams and it is incumbent upon the coaches not to mismanage them down to only playoff teams. There is no thought that it's hard to be that good, that consistently contending, that there's an easy fix if only some young player were handed the job without putting in the work. We ignore the oddity of the sport, the fact almost no one goes undefeated and only one team wins each season. Perhaps the earlier part is how sports should be and really is, but I remain skeptical.

I know, I know, I'm 2 days late and a dollar short. But I do like this post.

Joe Burrow this year is Heisman caliber amazing. Joe Burrow last year (I think it was a M*ch fan on this site) was campaigning that he was the worse QB (with some qualifier) and had stats to back it up. I only remember this because I was saying if you remove the 1st 2 or 3 games where his stats were pathetic; he was a decent QB the rest of the season. Joe Burrow as a freshman looked the part to become an amazing QB, but we don't have enough data to make absolutes about his freshman campaign. 

Of course you are right that the coach has hundreds if not thousands of hours of tape and practice on who his QB is. We the fans, get one maybe two practices and game day. We fans also have selective memory, for OSU we all remember Jackson (starter) Germaine (backup) fiasco ("It cost us a national title!") Backups and Rookies tend to get a performance bump, because like us fans opposing coaches and defenses haven't had a chance to study him as well.  I really think the "No Tape On Jones", helped OSU win the 14 title. He looked world beater those 3 games, but seemed human the next year... So, it becomes obvious that the backup is better, especially when the backup can do something the starter has struggled with. 

For me the entitled OSU fan, it has always been Beat M*ch*g*n, contend for the B1G Title, and let the beauty pageant pieces fall where they may. From my observations this year OSU has looked the part of one of the top 4 teams, but I'm not a voting member of the beauty pageant, so I'll keep rooting that we beat that team up north and contend for the B1G title. I do think PSU, TTUN, and (assuming) Wisconsin have the talent and coaching staff to upset the Buckeyes.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: TyphonInc on October 31, 2019, 09:47:22 AM
You always do this. One poster says something, then you attribute it to all OSU fans or all Big Ten fans. Asinine.

I agree.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 31, 2019, 10:11:10 AM
I don't expect much from you and you never fail to disappoint You paint with a wide brush and expect it to be taken as gospel.Many kids made ohio states record possible,and many of them are employed on Sundays.JT played football he's not marching off to war.So save the he put his body on the line bullshit .You competely ignore the points about Haskins/Burrow.Other teams didn't have those two sitting behind an arm punter.You comparing roses to ragweed.You've not watched or read about anything presented except what you pull out of your very dank crevasse.Saban didn't stand pat and played a freshman quarterback -that's a fair comparison.Meyer just kept trying the same broken thing - with out trying.If you can't see that I can't help you.By Einsteins definition - that's insanity.Meyer trotted out the very same thing that just failed entirely on CFB biggest stage 4 months later in spring ball.NOB laid it out pretty simple for you and both Haskins & Burrow have amply demonstrated what Buckeye fans were inquiring about.I've never said JT or any other student athlete "sucks"I did point out there were what turned out to be better options that Urban Meyer at 5 million a year chose not take.
There’s a lot in there, much about how what persons never actually did is held in high regard compared to what someone actually did that contributed to a national title. you point out JT failed on a big stage, the implication is some second year QB wouldn't have. I reject that premise.

(I also point out that if Burrow crapped the bed vs Clemson, we’d have laments about him years later)

The Saban part is again a comparison of convenience. We wouldn’t say a third stringer should be put in by OSU at the start of the playoffs this year, even thought it’s the only way OSU has claimed a title this decade. But Saban aligns with the common benching desires.

I look at the part where you say I’ve not read or watched anything but what I pull from my ... well. And the issue is the opposite. I seen too much. I’ve seen it all through your eyes. I’ve seen more than a decade, close to a decade and a half of this message board, and Close to 20 years on message boards at large. I have seen my own fan base call for benching‘s of between nine and 11 of its past 12 starting quarterbacks. And I have been told they tried to bench the three before that too. Ohio State had a run of five consecutive quarterbacks which they were deeply dissatisfied with, at least four who they called to be benched, two of them were. I’ve heard how SO many backup QBs would’ve changed things and how so many coaches don’t know what they’re doing.

JT and his ups and downs weren’t special. They were painfully mundane. The response is the same as it always is and always was.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 10:13:56 AM
I think Ohio State is the best team in the country right now.  It sucks but that's the reality.  Recently seeking entertainment by reading Notre Dame message boards after Michigan's beat down of the Irish I noticed a common theme in many posts: fire Brian Kelly and hire Urban Meyer.


I have thought this for several weeks, and of course, "fans" think hiring some new coach is a panacea.

I think Kelly is doing a pretty decent job at ND considering.  They have lost their recruiting advantages I think from 1980.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 10:16:59 AM
Kelly doesn't SUCK, but Irish fans like many helmet school fans want greatness

Urban has shown he can deliver
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 10:26:33 AM
Yeah, I understand the notion, but "fans" still want a simple "solution" to whatever ails them.

I'm the same.  I just figure my "solutions" are largely impractical and probably not real solutions, plus I have no influence anyway.

I try not to get frustrated by things out of my control.  

I rely on coffee to changes the things I can change, and wine to tolerate the things I cannot change.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 10:30:39 AM
I've been told by women that I'm much too logical

but, it helps with things out of my control
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 31, 2019, 10:49:00 AM
You'd probably know more on this than I do, Medina, but I would guess that the Midwest in general has gotten less blue as the strength and numbers of big labor have declined. 
Ohio has but only slightly until 2016 and you have to go back almost 50 years to find a Presidential election in which Ohio voted more Democratic than the nation as a whole.  As noted above, Ohio has voted for the winner in 15 straight Presidential elections (starting with 1964) so the Buckeye State has, for the last ~60 years, been pretty much even with the nation as a whole.  I believe that Ohio's 52 year streak of voting for the winning Presidential candidate is the longest such streak in the nation.  Lately, however, Ohio has typically been slightly to the right of the national vote so it is basically just a matter of time until Ohio votes for an unsuccessful Republican candidate:

Note that Ohio was more Democratic than the nation as a whole in 1964 and 1972.  Ohio was only slightly to the right in all of the other elections since 1960 until 2016 when Ohio was substantially more Republican than the nation as a whole.  

There is a trend but it is pretty minor.  From ~1960-1972 Ohio was slightly more Republican than the country twice and slightly more Democratic twice.  After that Ohio became consistently more Republican but only by a VERY thin margin so that isn't much change.  

If you graphed this all out for the Great Lakes States I think you'd see roughly the same thing in MN, WI, MI, and PA.  They have all probably drifted slightly to the right and then moved sharply right in 2016.  The interesting thing to see, going forward, will be if that right turn in 2016 is a trend that future Republican candidates can maintain or even grow (possibly taking Minnesota where Trump lost by about 1.5%) or if it is a one-time phenomena that future Democratic candidates can reverse.  

Close states in 2016:
States that Tump won by <8%:
Note that Ohio is conspicuously absent from this list.  For decades Ohio has been a swing state if not THE Swing State but in 2016 Trump won Ohio by a comfortable 8.13% margin (slightly to the right of Georgia and just left of Texas).  

States that Clinton won by <8%:

This really demonstrates how precarious Trump's 2016 win was.  He won 102 EV's by <5% and 115 by less than 6%.  Even a leftward shift of just 1% would flip the election.  Meanwhile, Clinton only won 31 EV's by <5% meaning that a rightward shift wouldn't change much because there aren't many competitive states that Clinton actually won.  

Assuming that the seven "faithless electors" would have voted for the candidate that won their state if it mattered:
Won by at least 1%:
Won by at least 2%:
Won by at least 3%:
Won by at least 4%:
Won by at least 5%:
Won by at least 6%:

The next closest states after that are Ohio (18 EV's Trump won by 8.13%) and New Mexico (5 EV's Clinton won by 8.21%).  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 10:51:00 AM
I don't think Urbs is a "fit" at ND. Probably not at USC either. The more I think about his coaching return (and he WILL return), the more I think he's headed for the NFL. They'll give him his own Brinks truck.

(https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/ikZFMzRRCJtg/v0/1200x734.jpg)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 10:58:25 AM
I thought last year that Meyer's health was in pretty bad shape, and the stress of coaching at any level is not in his best interest.

The clearest example was a time out where he was away from the team bent over with hands on knees.  He looked not great at other times as well.  

I also don't think he needs to coach again to secure any kind of legacy thing, to the extent that matters to him.

I think he should stay in the booth, and will, but that's a guess.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 10:59:33 AM
If I were to concoct one rule (which I'm not doing), I'd say that we should avoid posting any names of politicians here.

That said, medina's breakout is as usual interesting (and apolitical as it is just facts).
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: ELA on October 31, 2019, 11:20:39 AM
If I were to concoct one rule (which I'm not doing), I'd say that we should avoid posting any names of politicians here.

That said, medina's breakout is as usual interesting (and apolitical as it is just facts).
I think there is a way to talk about the impact of politics without debating politics, and I'm good with that.  I don't think anyone here is taking one side or the other, simply pointing out the impact of the demographics.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 11:22:20 AM
I entirely agree, and the group here should be able to talk politics intelligently.

Perhaps we could use a political "board" other than the one that exists (which is "interesting").
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Big Beef Tacosupreme on October 31, 2019, 11:53:11 AM
Ohio has but only slightly until 2016 and you have to go back almost 50 years to find a Presidential election in which Ohio voted more Democratic than the nation as a whole.  As noted above, Ohio has voted for the winner in 15 straight Presidential elections (starting with 1964) so the Buckeye State has, for the last ~60 years, been pretty much even with the nation as a whole.  I believe that Ohio's 52 year streak of voting for the winning Presidential candidate is the longest such streak in the nation.  Lately, however, Ohio has typically been slightly to the right of the national vote so it is basically just a matter of time until Ohio votes for an unsuccessful Republican candidate:
  • In 2016 the national popular vote was 48/46 D while Ohio was 52/43 R so Ohio was ~3-4 points to the right. 
  • In 2012 the national popular vote was 51/47 D while Ohio was 51/48 D so Ohio was slightly to the right. 
  • In 2008 the national popular vote was 53/46 D while Ohio was 51/47 D so Ohio was ~1-2 points to the right. 
  • In 2004 the national popular vote was 51/48 R while Ohio was 51/48 R so Ohio was close to dead on. 
  • In 2000 the national popular vote was almost exactly even while Ohio was 50/47 R so Ohio Was slightly to the right. 
  • In 1996 the national popular vote was 49/41 D while Ohio was 47/41 D so Ohio was slightly to the right. 
  • In 1992 the national popular vote was 43/37 D while Ohio was 40/38 D so Ohio was slightly to the right. 
  • In 1988 the national popular vote was 53/46 R while Ohio was 55/44 R so Ohio was slightly to the right. 
  • In 1984 the national popular vote was 59/41 R while Ohio was 59/40 R so Ohio was close to dead on. 
  • In 1980 the national popular vote was 51/41 R while Ohio was 52/41 R so Ohio was slightly to the right. 
  • In 1976 the national popular vote was 50/48 R while Ohio was almost exactly even so Ohio was slightly to the right. 
  • In 1972 the national popular vote was 61/38 R while Ohio was 60/38 D so Ohio was slightly to the left
  • In 1968 the national popular vote was almost exactly even while Ohio was slightly to the right of that. 
  • In 1964 the national popular vote was 61/39 D while Ohio was 63/37 D so Ohio was slightly to the left
  • In 1960 the national popular vote was almost exactly even while Ohio was 53/47 R so Ohio was slightly to the right. 

Note that Ohio was more Democratic than the nation as a whole in 1964 and 1972.  Ohio was only slightly to the right in all of the other elections since 1960 until 2016 when Ohio was substantially more Republican than the nation as a whole. 

There is a trend but it is pretty minor.  From ~1960-1972 Ohio was slightly more Republican than the country twice and slightly more Democratic twice.  After that Ohio became consistently more Republican but only by a VERY thin margin so that isn't much change. 

If you graphed this all out for the Great Lakes States I think you'd see roughly the same thing in MN, WI, MI, and PA.  They have all probably drifted slightly to the right and then moved sharply right in 2016.  The interesting thing to see, going forward, will be if that right turn in 2016 is a trend that future Republican candidates can maintain or even grow (possibly taking Minnesota where Trump lost by about 1.5%) or if it is a one-time phenomena that future Democratic candidates can reverse. 

Close states in 2016:
States that Tump won by <8%:
  • 16 EV's, Michigan, Trump won by 0.23%
  • 20 EV's, Pennsylvania, Trump won by 0.72%
  • 10 EV's, Wisconsin, Trump won by 0.77%
  • 29 EV's, Florida, Trump won by 1.20%
  • 1 EV, Nebraska 2nd District, Trump won by 2.24%
  • 11 EV's, Arizona, Trump won by 3.55%
  • 15 EV's, North Carolina, Trump won by 3.66%
  • 16 EV's, Georgia, Trump won by 5.13%
Note that Ohio is conspicuously absent from this list.  For decades Ohio has been a swing state if not THE Swing State but in 2016 Trump won Ohio by a comfortable 8.13% margin (slightly to the right of Georgia and just left of Texas). 

States that Clinton won by <8%:
  • 4 EV's, New Hampshire, Clinton won by 0.37%
  • 10 EV's, Minnesota, Clinton won by 1.52%
  • 6 EV's, Nevada, Clinton won by 2.42%
  • 2 EV's, Maine at-large, Clinton won by 2.96%
  • 9 EV's, Colorado, Clinton won by 4.91%
  • 13 EV's, Virginia, Clinton won by 5.32%

This really demonstrates how precarious Trump's 2016 win was.  He won 102 EV's by <5% and 115 by less than 6%.  Even a leftward shift of just 1% would flip the election.  Meanwhile, Clinton only won 31 EV's by <5% meaning that a rightward shift wouldn't change much because there aren't many competitive states that Clinton actually won. 

Assuming that the seven "faithless electors" would have voted for the candidate that won their state if it mattered:
  • Clinton won 232 EV's. 
  • Trump won 306 EV's.
Won by at least 1%:
  • Clinton won 228 EV's by at least 1% (subtract 4 NH)
  • Trump won 260 EV's by at least 1% (subtract 16 MI, 20 PA, 10 WI)
Won by at least 2%:
  • Clinton won 218 EV's by at least 2% (subtract 10 MN)
  • Trump won 231 EV's by at least 2% (subtract 29 FL)
Won by at least 3%:
  • Clinton won 212 EV's by at least 3% (subtract 6 NV)
  • Trump won 230 EV's by at least 3% (subtract 1 NE 2nd)
Won by at least 4%:
  • Clinton won 212 EV's by at least 4% (none 3-4%)
  • Trump won 204 EV's by at least 4% (subtract 11 AZ, 15 NC)
Won by at least 5%:
  • Clinton won 203 EV's by at least 5% (subtract 9 CO)
  • Trump won 204 EV's by at least 5% (none 4-5%)
Won by at least 6%:
  • Clinton won 190 EV's by at least 6% (subtract 13 VA)
  • Trump won 188 EV's by at least 6% (subtract 16 GA)

The next closest states after that are Ohio (18 EV's Trump won by 8.13%) and New Mexico (5 EV's Clinton won by 8.21%). 

Thanks, I love data like this. Very interesting. 

Another point of interest, millennials and Gen X are far more liberal than older generations. As those groups become larger voting blocks it will be interesting to see if that will counter the red shift in some of these states. 

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 11:57:43 AM

I don't think Urbs is a "fit" at ND. Probably not at USC either. The more I think about his coaching return (and he WILL return), the more I think he's headed for the NFL. They'll give him his own Brinks truck.

Obviously, ND and/or USC could easily afford $10 million a season or as much as any NFL team would be willing to pay


Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 12:02:52 PM
While appearing on The Colin Cowherd Show, (https://www.foxsports.com/watch/the-herd-with-colin-cowherd/video/1626500675577) Meyer was asked about whether Oklahoma's Lincoln Riley should be interested in the job if it were to come open.

"That's New York Yankees, that's the Dallas Cowboys," Meyer said. "That's the one. Great city. They got Dak Prescott, Zeke Elliott. You got a loaded team. And I can't speak for him obviously, I hate to even speculate because I don't know him, that's really not fair, but to me, that's the one job in professional football that you say, 'I got to go do that.'"


Cowherd, being the professional interviewer that he is then sensed Meyer's feelings on it, and pressed him a bit further on whether he'd be interested himself.



"Sure," Meyer said. "Absolutely. Absolutely. That one? Yes."
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 12:10:10 PM
Thanks, I love data like this. Very interesting.

Another point of interest, millennials and Gen X are far more liberal than older generations. As those groups become larger voting blocks it will be interesting to see if that will counter the red shift in some of these states.


It is a point of interest for sure, and I'm pretty certain we all know why.

Interesting, also, is that the several who work for me are not liberal. Two of them still live with their parents though. I guess that's a thing too, with that generation.

That bugs me.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 12:10:58 PM
There’s a lot in there, much about how what persons never actually did is held in high regard compared to what someone actually did that contributed to a national title. you point out JT failed on a big stage, the implication is some second year QB wouldn't have. I reject that premise. You can reject the fact that one coach (Saban) took a proactive stance and replaced a running QB with a thrower and won.Another coach under similiar circumstances stood pat for 2 seasons after the fact with men that proved to be winners.So comprehension is the problem not attitude - my bad

(I also point out that if Burrow crapped the bed vs Clemson, we’d have laments about him years laterMaking shyt up in your alternate universe -good stuff.Nobody and I mean nobody would have blamed Urbz for trying after JT himself made the case for relief.31-0 smashing - your career as a football analyst continues to skyrocket - not

The Saban part is again a comparison of convenience. No it's a comparison of similiar circumstances - nothing ventured nothing gained.How many times does that have to be paraded in front of your eyes

We wouldn’t say a third stringer should be put in by OSU at the start of the playoffs this year, even thought it’s the only way OSU has claimed a title this decade.Yes a 3rd stringer that Urban didn't play or recruit but had to settle on.Who could go over the top and stretch a defense as NOB previously pointed out to you - twice

I look at the part where you say I’ve not read or watched anything but what I pull from my ... well. And the issue is the opposite. I seen too much. I’ve seen it all through your eyes. If you really believe that then You've taken enough drugs to send sniffer dogs into early retirement

I’ve seen more than a decade, close to a decade and a half of this message board, and Close to 20 years on message boards at large. I have seen my own fan base call for benching‘s of between nine and 11 of its past 12 starting quarterbacks. Oh forgive me I didn't know your fanbase had a QB drafted in the 1st round after setting single season Big Ten records in passing yds and TDs.Also set single season Team records in passing %,TDs & Yds who just happened to have to sit 2 yrs behind a guy who got cut 3 times from NFL practice squads.I'd bring up the other back up but he's busy filling out his resume rather handsomely at LSU

And I have been told they tried to bench the three before that too. Ohio State had a run of five consecutive quarterbacks which they were deeply dissatisfied with, at least four who they called to be benched, two of them were. I’ve heard how SO many backup QBs would’ve changed things and how so many coaches don’t know what they’re doing. There's that wide brush again I didn't know that our fans had been deeply dissatified with Terrelle Pryor,Braxton Miller or Cardale Jones but I haven't been told that so you got me there.I made a passing reference oh 10 pages back about a specific situation.And you had to jump in and correct me on Generalities,turning a ripple into a Tsunami


Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 12:21:11 PM

I think he should stay in the booth, and will, but that's a guess.
I agree easy coin
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Big Beef Tacosupreme on October 31, 2019, 12:37:25 PM
It is a point of interest for sure, and I'm pretty certain we all know why.

Interesting, also, is that the several who work for me are not liberal. Two of them still live with their parents though. I guess that's a thing too, with that generation.

That bugs me.
T
Staying on facts only, student loans and housing prices have far outpaced inflation. That is a major factor in why they are less likely to own cars, have fewer or no children, and live at home. 

The automobile industry is in serious trouble. 

Tangentially related, can we do an investing post, too?  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 12:39:24 PM
I agree easy coin
helluva lot fewer hours in the work week
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 12:42:31 PM
Staying on facts only, student loans and housing prices have far outpaced inflation. That is a major factor in why they are less likely to own cars, have fewer or no children, and live at home.

The automobile industry is in serious trouble.

Tangentially related, can we do an investing post, too? 
something wicked this way comes and I'm not talking about last nite's Chili - hope I'm wrong
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 12:43:01 PM
Thanks, I love data like this. Very interesting.

Another point of interest, millennials and Gen X are far more liberal than older generations. As those groups become larger voting blocks it will be interesting to see if that will counter the red shift in some of these states.


scared the heck outa my liberal daughters.............

Told them that I was a liberal at their age

got the wheels spinning as to if they would some day mature into a couple evil conservatives

as Daltrey said...........


Things they do look awful c-c-cold 
Yeah, I hope I die before I get old
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Kris60 on October 31, 2019, 12:44:41 PM
Nubbz, I’ll give you this, you’ve made a good case.  Because I have to admit every time I’ve heard an Ohio St fan complain about JT Barrett my knee jerk reaction has always been, “You spoiled brats are complaining about a guy who won a ton of games and set a ton of records?  Give me a break.”

And while you haven’t flipped me over to the other side just yet you have at least made a pretty decent case as to why you have that viewpoint. I told a buddy after the Georgia game in which Tua replaced Hurts that the only coach in the country with enough credibility in the bank to make that kind of change was Saban.  He already had his rings.  People had a trust he knew what he was doing so even if Tua came in and crapped the bed Saban had the resume to back such a gutsy decision.  There is no way a coach without championships would have done that.  I firmly believe that.

Maybe the only other guy in the country (besides Dabo now) who had the reputation to do something like that was Meyer.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 12:58:48 PM
A big student loan for a degree in art history is not a good thing.

A big student loan for a degree in the STEM fields is fine, and manageable. 

It's not hard to connect the dots here.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: NorthernOhioBuckeye on October 31, 2019, 01:06:30 PM
Of course you are right that the coach has hundreds if not thousands of hours of tape and practice on who his QB is. We the fans, get one maybe two practices and game day. We fans also have selective memory, for OSU we all remember Jackson (starter) Germaine (backup) fiasco ("It cost us a national title!") Backups and Rookies tend to get a performance bump, because like us fans opposing coaches and defenses haven't had a chance to study him as well.  I really think the "No Tape On Jones", helped OSU win the 14 title. He looked world beater those 3 games, but seemed human the next year... So, it becomes obvious that the backup is better, especially when the backup can do something the starter has struggled with.
I agree with most of your post. However, I would like to address this paragraph.

While yes, teams didn't have much tape on Jones prior to the BTCG, that is not the primary reason for the teams success. If you watch closely, it is quite apparent that Herman made some tweaks to the offense to take advantage of Jones's arm and his lack of experience in running the trademark zone read. They wanted to put the game in Zeke's hands and give Cardell safe throws that would most likely be either completions or incompletions out of the field of play. That is not to say that Jones didn't run the ball at all, he did. However, the number of zone reads was greatly reduced as compared to their game plans with Barrett.

What worked for them however is that Jones was able to connect on the downfield throws with some consistency thereby loosening up the defense by forcing the safeties to play at a normal depth. This in turn allowed Elliot more room to operate within the box and not having the safety plugging holes. (It also helped that in the Sugar Bowl, Jones ran over their safety essentially putting him out of the game.) 

As for the 2015 season, the offense went back to Urban's style and the tweaks that Herman made for the end of 2014, were put on the shelf. As was quite apparent, Jones was not very effective in that offense. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Big Beef Tacosupreme on October 31, 2019, 01:16:21 PM
A big student loan for a degree in art history is not a good thing.

A big student loan for a degree in the STEM fields is fine, and manageable.

It's not hard to connect the dots here.
Staying on facts only:
my neighbor has a kid going to RIT for robotics. His tuition is $264K for 4 years. All will be loans, he will probably make $60K coming out. Call it $45K after taxes, benefits, health insurance.  That’s $3.75K per month.  $2,800 will be going to student loans. That gives him $900 a month to live on. That’s before housing, food, clothes, transportation, etc. 

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 01:33:44 PM
Daughter #1 majored in French and English at OSU.  I was paying about $16 K a year all in.  Not bad.  She now works in C-bus as a "Senior Web Designer" and is making close to $100 K, which is pretty good there.  The other one in Texas majored in polysci I think and went to law school and is making well over $100 K.  You don't have to major in a STEM necessarily if you are flexible and hard working.  (Our uncle paid for the second one's education, aside from law school.  Not working as a lawyer.)

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 01:38:08 PM
Robotics Engineering?

That salary estimate is very low. Lowly Civil Engineers are getting $60K, right out of school. My friend's son is getting $85K, one year out of school. He has his own place too.

Anyway, that kid you're talking about should have gone to a public school, if he or family can't afford RIT. Life is about choices. People make bad ones too often.

Not my problem, until it becomes my problem. I'm sure it will, eventually.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 01:40:11 PM
Daughter #1 majored in French and English at OSU.  I was paying about $16 K a year all in.  Not bad.  She now works in C-bus as a "Senior Web Designer" and is making close to $100 K, which is pretty good there.  The other one in Texas majored in polysci I think and went to law school and is making well over $100 K.  You don't have to major in a STEM necessarily if you are flexible and hard working.  (Our uncle paid for the second one's education, aside from law school.  Not working as a lawyer.)


Depends what you want to do. If you want to be a licensed engineer, for example, there is no other choice but to get an engineering degree. I wish more kids would go into engineering, because it's really hard to find them these days (probably because it's not easy, and most kids like easy).
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 01:42:31 PM
My daughter's annual cost at UNL was about $16K all in.  I paid for all tuition and books and other college realted expenses.  She paid for rent and food.

She was a server and bartender 2 or 3 nights a week.

She will graduate in May with no debt.

now, it's s degree in education, so she won't have a great salary, but with no debt it should work.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 01:46:28 PM
My kids didn't know what they wanted to do, but they both wanted to avoid any STEM field.  They didn't much like science and math in HS.  OK then.

ANY college degree is worth something IF you are flexible and hard working and go after it.  A STEM degree sets you up very nicely right out of the gate.

Usually, some of the science degrees are not that useful really in terms of employment, like a BS in Physics or Math.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 01:48:12 PM
I hired a lot of "technicians" who had BS degrees in chemistry.  It was not easy to find good ones.  I had an opening and a buddy had been using this guy as a temp.  He had a degree in archeology, but he worked hard and learned quickly.  I watched him around the lab we shared and ended up hiring him as a technician and he was superb because he worked hard and learned quickly.++

He told me he had been doing "digs" in Ohio and earning about $25 K a year which is why he took this temp job.  We started him somewhere around $55 K back when that was solid pay.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 02:16:22 PM
a degree of any sort will help open doors to opportunities

it's up to the individual to make the most of those opportunities
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 02:40:41 PM
There are kids coming out of the local college with AAT degrees making a lot of money, doing things like manufacturing technology, welding, HVAC, etc. No student loans either. These kids will never be my problem. We just need more of them.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 02:46:48 PM
We are doing a refi here.  The appraiser was here yesterday.  He was a chatty type and said he can't find enough appraisers.  He has six in his business.  He's running like crazy to keep up.  I think they attend some school for a few months to get certified.

He showed me how he went about it.  He had a laser range finder and iPad for sketching the floor plan.  He said he was 55 and about to retire to Florida.

There are a LOT of jobs like this that are almost forgotten where a person can make some pretty decent money.

Show up for work on time, be honest, do a reasonable job with reasonable effort ....
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 02:48:55 PM


Show up for work on time, be honest, do a reasonable job with reasonable effort ....
bingo

degree or not
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 31, 2019, 02:51:21 PM
Get it together kid. Grow up. Get a life. Stop being a burden on society.Why don't you go play your little college football game that no one is interested in - thicko.You're wrong UFM had a man crush on JT.You and BAB win Haskins and Burrow both SUCK HAPPY?
Are you okay?  Do you want to talk about it?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 03:02:22 PM
get a haircut and get a REAL job
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 03:07:58 PM
Nubbz, I’ll give you this, you’ve made a good case.  Because I have to admit every time I’ve heard an Ohio St fan complain about JT Barrett my knee jerk reaction has always been, “You spoiled brats are complaining about a guy who won a ton of games and set a ton of records?  Give me a break.”

Thanx K60 I followed it pretty closely 3 yrs back,and I shouldn't be so passionette for sure.It's just for years-n-years following the Browns/Indians it is never a given you'll get back there.Had to wait 34 years for Ohio State to get one then lose two more.JT wasn't bad and maybe a platooning thing could have worked.When the opponent can effectively remove 20-30% of the field to cover then Earl Campbell,Jim Brown or Barry Sanders better be carrying the rock not JT.Urban promised after that shellacking there would be change and... did...nothing.That's what chapped many a moons.There were 2 gunslingers right there with itchy trigger fingers wanting into the fray - that was the WTF moment
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 31, 2019, 03:09:33 PM
Show up for work on time, be honest, do a reasonable job with reasonable effort ....
This really is the key.  I hire people here and unless you are just REALLY dense I can train you to do the work but I can't train somebody to show up sober at 8am every morning and put in a reasonable level of effort.  

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 03:10:20 PM
Are you okay?  Do you want to talk about it?
Go play with your game boy
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 03:10:47 PM
How many of the recent NC teams have featured a "mobile QB" (however defined)?  Seems like several, maybe most.  Clemson might be an exception depending.

Cardale wasn't exactly "mobile" but he was, um, hard to bring down.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 03:11:24 PM
This really is the key.  I hire people here and unless you are just REALLY dense I can train you to do the work but I can't train somebody to show up sober at 8am every morning and put in a reasonable level of effort. 


Sober ...at 8am ......well I was going to ask
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 31, 2019, 03:17:17 PM
https://www.aps.org/publications/apsnews/200511/history.cfm (https://www.aps.org/publications/apsnews/200511/history.cfm)

The EPR paper is a famous one from the period where quantum mechanics was being discussed (and disputed).  Einstein had a very deterministic view of the universe.  QM was/is clearly contrary to that view, so he fought against it, or more correctly he challenged it as being incomplete.

Werner Heisenberg, Niels Bohr and others who helped create the theory insisted that there was no meaningful way in which to discuss certain details of an atom’s behavior: for example, one could never predict the precise moment when an atom would emit a quantum of light. But Einstein could never fully accept this innate uncertainty, once famously declaring, “God does not play dice.” He wasn’t alone in his discomfort: Erwin Schrödinger, inventor of the wave function, once declared of quantum mechanics, “I don’t like it, and I’m sorry I ever had anything to do with it.”

In a 1935 paper, Einstein, Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen introduced a thought experiment to argue that quantum mechanics was not a complete physical theory. Known today as the “EPR paradox,” the thought experiment was meant to demonstrate the innate conceptual difficulties of quantum theory. It said that the result of a measurement on one particle of an entangled quantum system can have an instantaneous effect on another particle, regardless of the distance of the two parts.


Heisenberg , Shrodinger and Ohm are driving in a car and get pulled over by a police officer.  Heisenberg is driving and the cop asks him "Do you know how fast you were going."  Heisenberg responds that he does not so the officer says "You were doing 55 in a 35."  Heisenberg throws up his hands and shouts "Great, now I'm lost!"  

The cop thinks that's suspicious so he orders him to pop the trunk.  He takes a look and says "Do you know you have a dead cat back here?"  "We do now, asshole!" shouts Shrodinger.  

The cop proceeds to arrest them.  Ohm resists.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 31, 2019, 03:19:46 PM
There are kids coming out of the local college with AAT degrees making a lot of money, doing things like manufacturing technology, welding, HVAC, etc. No student loans either. These kids will never be my problem. We just need more of them.
I've been pushing this for YEARS.  Voc Ed is massively under-utilized in our society.  

Upthread you some people were talking about how getting a degree is helpful for everyone.  I strongly disagree.  There are a LOT of people today who go to college and get useless degrees and end up only marginally more employable at age 22, 23, 24, or 25 than they would have been at age 18 with no degree and with a huge pile of debt.  

Worse, about half of the people who go to college immediately after HS will never graduate.  Sources:


For the ~35% of HS Graduates who go to college but never graduate, college is nothing more than an ENORMOUS waste of time and money.  

The problem, bottom line, is that WAY too many kids are going to college.  It probably *should* be around 25% of HS graduates or lower.  Instead, see above, it is nearly three times that number.  Roughly a third of them can actually do college level work and benefit from attending college.  The other two thirds do one of two things:
In either case, College was a massive waste of time and money for them.  They would be MUCH more likely to be employed and would make more money in almost all cases if they had Vocational training in something like what you listed, Manufacturing Tech, Welding, HVAC, etc.  

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on October 31, 2019, 03:22:26 PM
Entropy isn't what it used to be.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 03:23:04 PM
Sober ...at 8am ......well I was going to ask
I guess you won't be working for Medina
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 31, 2019, 03:23:42 PM
A big student loan for a degree in art history is not a good thing.

A big student loan for a degree in the STEM fields is fine, and manageable.

It's not hard to connect the dots here.
+1

I learned this pretty early.  My family manages Rental Property.  As a kid I learned wiring, carpentry, plumbing, all of the trades.  The problem is that I am the proverbial "jack of all trades, master of none".  I'm not certified in any of them.  When I was in college I looked for jobs in the trades thinking that I could make more than typical college student jobs would pay because I knew how to do a bunch of stuff that most college students don't know how to do.  It was hard to find anything because I didn't have any certifications.  

That was a big motivation for me to major in accounting.  I wanted to get a degree that offered a test and certification at the end.  After I graduated I passed the CPA exam and became a CPA.  I'm still not certified to fix your sink, light fixture, or deck, but I am certified to do your taxes.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 31, 2019, 03:24:50 PM
Heisenberg , Shrodinger and Ohm are driving in a car and get pulled over by a police officer.  Heisenberg is driving and the cop asks him "Do you know how fast you were going."  Heisenberg responds that he does not so the officer says "You were doing 55 in a 35."  Heisenberg throws up his hands and shouts "Great, now I'm lost!" 

The cop thinks that's suspicious so he orders him to pop the trunk.  He takes a look and says "Do you know you have a dead cat back here?"  "We do now, asshole!" shouts Shrodinger. 

The cop proceeds to arrest them.  Ohm resists. 
LoL, this cracked me up!
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 03:25:37 PM
Entropy isn't what it used to be.
Entropy isn't what HE used to be either

Husker Prick Squad is no longer
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on October 31, 2019, 03:43:18 PM
Thanks, I love data like this. Very interesting.

Another point of interest, millennials and Gen X are far more liberal than older generations. As those groups become larger voting blocks it will be interesting to see if that will counter the red shift in some of these states.
We'll see.  As @FearlessF (https://www.cfb51.com/index.php?action=profile;u=10) pointed out above, there is a general tendency for people to shift somewhat toward the right as they age but a lot of that has to do with getting married*, buying a house, and having children.  The thing is that all three of those are things that the younger generation is doing later and later in life if at all.  


*The marriage gap is ENORMOUS, much larger than the much more hyped gender gap.  Here is exit poll data from CNN for the 2016 Presidential Election (https://www.cnn.com/election/2016/results/exit-polls).  


Unfortunately, this data isn't sortable (I'll see if I can find that).  If you have sortable data, you can detect that the Married/Single gap is actually bigger than it even looks above because part of the difference is that single people in general are from demographics more likely to vote D in the first place (ie, young, minority, etc).  That skews the overall comparison because the Single group is younger and browner while the Married group is older and whiter.  When you break it out and look at apples-to-apples it is apparent that the marriage gap is a major driving force in US elections.  Where they do break it out a little bit:



Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 04:01:14 PM
I'd trust Medina to fix my sink.

Maybe do my taxes, I'm not as sure on that.

I think Entropy just go spread all around.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on October 31, 2019, 04:10:30 PM
yup, I always trust experience over certificates
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 04:24:45 PM
I trust both, and only at the same time.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on October 31, 2019, 04:42:37 PM
Obviously, some certificates are worth a lot more than others, just like diplomas.  A real estate "license" at least around here isn't worth much.  

Passing the bar is nice, but not necessarily a big deal.  Not passing it is bad.  Passing the Patent Bar is a fairly big deal.  It's much tougher.

The PE thing seems from what I've heard to be one of the loftier things to achieve, aside from "honors" like the Nobel.

It reminds me of used cars that are "Certified Preowned".  Dude, I already know it was "preowned", it has 40,000 miles on the clock.  I don't need that certified.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Riffraft on October 31, 2019, 04:46:28 PM
There are kids coming out of the local college with AAT degrees making a lot of money, doing things like manufacturing technology, welding, HVAC, etc. No student loans either. These kids will never be my problem. We just need more of them.

We are opening up a new plant and we are scraping to find Welding, HVAC, Plumbers, electricians, carpenters, machinists, etc.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: 847badgerfan on October 31, 2019, 05:27:08 PM
We are opening up a new plant and we are scraping to find Welding, HVAC, Plumbers, electricians, carpenters, machinists, etc.
You are preaching to the choir. And these are living wage jobs!!


Beats the hell out of trying to force $15/hour to sling burgers.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 31, 2019, 05:54:35 PM
Go play with your game boy
You seem angry.



Maybe a HC not putting in a QB with a cannon for an arm has good reasons and it isn't just idiocy.  Perhaps the QB doesn't have the playbook down.  Perhaps he stutters when calling out the play.  Maybe he loafs it in practice.  Maybe he's loose with the football.

To pretend you know better is more childish than anything I've said or done here.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Honestbuckeye on October 31, 2019, 05:56:39 PM
Ha ha.  This thread took on a life of its own!   Maybe we should change the title to just “REALITY”
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 06:01:59 PM
I guess you won't be working for Medina
Maybe he has a 12 step program.If you can take 12 straight steps - you're in
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 06:03:57 PM
You seem angry.



Maybe a HC not putting in a QB with a cannon for an arm has good reasons and it isn't just idiocy.  Perhaps the QB doesn't have the playbook down.  Perhaps he stutters when calling out the play.  Maybe he loafs it in practice.  Maybe he's loose with the football.

To pretend you know better is more childish than anything I've said or done here.
Is there anything else this week you'd like to correct humanity on while you have your soap box.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on October 31, 2019, 06:07:10 PM
Obviously, some certificates are worth a lot more than others

There are some contributors here that are certifiable
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on October 31, 2019, 07:18:39 PM
Is there anything else this week you'd like to correct humanity on while you have your soap box.
I don't understand why I irk you.  I'm posting on a forum.  That's what it's for.  



Why is it that when I have an opinion supported by facts and statistics and the other side basically says, "nuh uh" - I end up being the jackass?  How am I the bad guy?  I'm the jerk.  I'm the ignorant one...because I provide support for my opinions?  Guilty!


Maybe you could share with me how I'm so abrasive while doing nothing more than what anyone else is doing here.  We all have our takes, and some are more substantive than others, but to be bothered by it?  I must have missed something somewhere along the way on that one.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Brutus Buckeye on October 31, 2019, 10:22:18 PM
Oh, you're such a victim. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 31, 2019, 10:30:12 PM
Interestingly, I can’t quote Nubbz’ last post, but if we can’t agree that at points OSU fans raged about Pryor, Miller and Jones spraying balls and called for JT to replace Jones in 2015 or Guyton to replace Miller in whatever year that was, we just won’t see eye to eye.

I yield. JT playing cost OSU two made up alternate universe titles. He should be remembered as the failure he was. If only he could’ve been what we imagine Burrow three years ago was.

(I’ll admit, understanding OSU football in some ways through the message board posts of OSU fans does feel a little like taking drugs. Thanks for the high, I guess? I’m impressed how mad that part made you)



Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Brutus Buckeye on October 31, 2019, 10:38:05 PM
JT was a good College QB.

Could he throw it 40 yards on a rope, and hit the guy in stride on his right shoulder? No. That's not who he was.

Could he extend a play with his legs just long enough to find that one guy that shaked off his man and got wide ass open? Yeah, most of the time.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 31, 2019, 10:44:16 PM
It is a point of interest for sure, and I'm pretty certain we all know why.

Interesting, also, is that the several who work for me are not liberal. Two of them still live with their parents though. I guess that's a thing too, with that generation.

That bugs me.
Ooo, you hit on a topic I enjoy.

The living at home thing, it irks a lot of people, but I can’t help but wonder if it’s just a reversion to the way things used to be. A contraction of a historical blip.

So how long ago was it assumed a person was automatically out of the house at 18, maybe since WWII? So about 60-65 years? That’s not all that long. It’s about as long as pensions existed, which are economically nonsensical, but were normalized and took a while to phase out.

So going to college, never coming back became normalized, but what if it’s not economically advantageous short term? Let’s do the math. You’re going to end up with minimum $600 a month in costs between rent and bills, and $700 is more likely still on the low side. So that’s $7,200 or $8,400 on the low end to just feel like more of an adult.

If one of you’re kids said I’m spending $7,200 a year to feel more like an adult, you’d tell them to be responsible. I see a measure of responsibility, using an unused room. You can’t just be a drain, but I think it’s an outlier only in a recent historical term.

(To be clear, this is in a short term world rather than a long term. If you’re home a year or even six months, you best be helping out in a big way.)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on October 31, 2019, 10:46:08 PM
JT was a good College QB.

Could he throw it 40 yards on a rope, and hit the guy in stride on his right shoulder? No. That's not who he was.

Could he extend a play with his legs just long enough to find that one guy that shaked off his man and got wide ass open? Yeah, most of the time.
I think this is mostly true. And I’m also a tad skeptical Burrow was throwing all those ropes in 2016.

Have any players come out and said he did? I assume if he was killing it then, someone has spoken up. (Shoot, Montee ball wrongly came after Chryst, but he at least spoke up)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: NorthernOhioBuckeye on November 01, 2019, 07:39:42 AM
Interestingly, I can’t quote Nubbz’ last post, but if we can’t agree that at points OSU fans raged about Pryor, Miller and Jones spraying balls and called for JT to replace Jones in 2015 or Guyton to replace Miller in whatever year that was, we just won’t see eye to eye.

I yield. JT playing cost OSU two made up alternate universe titles. He should be remembered as the failure he was. If only he could’ve been what we imagine Burrow three years ago was.

(I’ll admit, understanding OSU football in some ways through the message board posts of OSU fans does feel a little like taking drugs. Thanks for the high, I guess? I’m impressed how mad that part made you)
I see you have resorted to reductio ad absurdum in claiming that everyone that questions Meyers decision was saying that JT was a horrible QB and cost tOSU multiple titles. That is NOT what I was saying.

All I was saying was that Meyer had a habit, history, whatever, of settling on something and then resisting any future input  that might not support his original decision. He became loyal to players, coaches and offensive philosophies. He was very stubborn, just as I believe most high profile coaches are. 

I won't argue that JT was not a very good college QB; he was. He just did not have the ability to win the games against the best competition due to his inability to effectively pass down field. And the frustrating part of that is when you see that they had QB's on the bench that were very capable doing just that. 

Again, I am very happy with the results over the past 7-8 years, but it just makes you wonder what else could have been done differently. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Brutus Buckeye on November 01, 2019, 08:30:53 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yoFW9JezXOk
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on November 01, 2019, 08:38:08 AM
I see you have resorted to reductio ad absurdum in claiming that everyone that questions Meyers decision was saying that JT was a horrible QB and cost tOSU multiple titles. That is NOT what I was saying.

All I was saying was that Meyer had a habit, history, whatever, of settling on something and then resisting any future input  that might not support his original decision. He became loyal to players, coaches and offensive philosophies. He was very stubborn, just as I believe most high profile coaches are.

I won't argue that JT was not a very good college QB; he was. He just did not have the ability to win the games against the best competition due to his inability to effectively pass down field. And the frustrating part of that is when you see that they had QB's on the bench that were very capable doing just that.

Again, I am very happy with the results over the past 7-8 years, but it just makes you wonder what else could have been done differently.
(This was more a response to some comments about the drugs I was apparently doing, not your comments. I think we’re like 2 percent apart, which happens, and our passion for arguing makes it seem wider)

In the end, nothing wrong with wondering. I’ll be fully honest, I look at as two scenarios: Burrow vs JT in 2016 and Haskins vs JT in 2017. The second one, that feels closer. That speaks to how good DH was the next year that benching the ninth rated passer in the land feels more logical. The burrow one less so, if only because I don’t think he was near as good a player at that point, mostly relying on a three sort of data points.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: TyphonInc on November 01, 2019, 09:59:07 AM
If you can't see that I can't help you.By Einsteins definition - that's insanity.

Pretty much every conversation, ever, with OAM. If you stop feeding the troll, they get bored and go away. It obvious he doesn't contain the mental faculties to comprehend the obvious and legitimate criticism of JT, and continues to harp his own bias perspective.

JT was an amazing leader in the locker room and on the field. And except for one hiccup seemed to be a genuine high class character.  He was a record setting QB for Ohio State, that lead the Buckeyes to numerous wins. None of this is questioned or debated.

What is also obvious is JT was not accurate downfield passer over 20+ yards. While his backups (Jones, Haskins and Burrow) seemed quite capable of making said downfield pass. To wonder 'what if', is a very normal process to take place. Hell we let one back up play 3 games, win a B1G and National title and IMHO was the best 3 games strewn together I've ever seen.

Both of these truths can coexist simultaneously. "Every" Buckeye poster on this board seems to comprehend this, there is only one outlier who has an agenda that We Buckeye fans hated our record setting QB. It's not accurate, let him vent his final biased opinions and just ignore it and we can get back to talking about "OSU and Reality."

"Never Argue with an Idiot, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with Experience." - Mark Twain

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MarqHusker on November 01, 2019, 10:04:52 AM
This is one of the stranger debates I can recall on this message board.    Not sure anybody has been covered in glory.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 01, 2019, 10:07:35 AM
I have been completely covered in glory here, by staying out of it.  I realize that different people can have different opinions about a thing, and it's OK with me (unless they are factually incorrect or off the wall).

I think nearly everyone here understands this as well.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Riffraft on November 01, 2019, 10:30:49 AM
I think it is funny that someone brought up the "reductio ad absurdum" fallacy, (Which was true) When what we have mostly seen on both sides is ad hominin.

Never can understand why it is necessary when we disagree with someone. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 01, 2019, 11:01:42 AM
This Fields guy looks to me like a really capable QB.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on November 01, 2019, 11:14:50 AM
The living at home thing, it irks a lot of people, but I can’t help but wonder if it’s just a reversion to the way things used to be. A contraction of a historical blip.

So how long ago was it assumed a person was automatically out of the house at 18, maybe since WWII? So about 60-65 years? That’s not all that long. It’s about as long as pensions existed, which are economically nonsensical, but were normalized and took a while to phase out.

So going to college, never coming back became normalized, but what if it’s not economically advantageous short term? Let’s do the math. You’re going to end up with minimum $600 a month in costs between rent and bills, and $700 is more likely still on the low side. So that’s $7,200 or $8,400 on the low end to just feel like more of an adult.

If one of you’re kids said I’m spending $7,200 a year to feel more like an adult, you’d tell them to be responsible. I see a measure of responsibility, using an unused room. You can’t just be a drain, but I think it’s an outlier only in a recent historical term.

(To be clear, this is in a short term world rather than a long term. If you’re home a year or even six months, you best be helping out in a big way.)
This is a fascinating take.  I think there is a lot of truth in what you have said here.  I also think that we are getting poorer (or at least not getting richer nearly as quickly as we were in the 40's, 50's, and 60's) and that has a lot to do with it as well.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: NorthernOhioBuckeye on November 01, 2019, 01:35:34 PM
I think it is funny that someone brought up the "reductio ad absurdum" fallacy, (Which was true) When what we have mostly seen on both sides is ad hominin.

Never can understand why it is necessary when we disagree with someone.
I refuse to engage in ad hominin attacks as they generally say more about the person attacking than they do of the person on the receiving end. I know that my opinions are just that, opinions. And I also understand that they may differ from others, and that is fine. I just want to be sure that I express my opinion correctly so that those reading it will understand what I wish to convey as opposed to what they may want to believe. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 01, 2019, 01:46:43 PM
I lived with my father into my upper 20's

I was working construction management building pork slaughter plants.  Living in hotels on site out of town.  Didn't seem like a great idea to have a house or an apartment that I could only visit a few days a month.

My daughter lives in my basement.  She's 25 and still wondering what she wants to do with her life.

Sharing a house with someone, especially a parent or a child, just makes good finacial sense under the right situation.

I don't look down on young people for this....
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 01, 2019, 01:55:28 PM
Different people obviously face different situations and judging them based on some generality without knowledge of the individual issues involved is not worthwhile in my view.  I don't see any inherent absolute reason for bias against those who live with their parents.  It's their business anyway, not mine.

I'm "glad" mine are gone, but happy when they visit.  If something happened and they needed to come back, they would be welcome.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 01, 2019, 02:29:52 PM
I think it's Okay to judge George Costanza

but he's a fictional character
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on November 01, 2019, 03:19:11 PM
This is one of the stranger debates I can recall on this message board.    Not sure anybody has been covered in glory.

I thought my physics joke was pretty funny.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on November 01, 2019, 03:21:30 PM
This Fields guy looks to me like a really capable QB.

He transferred to OSU so he never had to play LSU again.

Oh wait, the two won't play for another 65 years anyway, nm.....
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on November 01, 2019, 03:36:20 PM
I'm getting back to @bwarbiany (https://www.cfb51.com/index.php?action=profile;u=19) 's comment about the political drift of the upper midwest in part because at least a couple of other people expressed an interest in it.  

The following chart shows how the popular vote by state for most of the B1G states along with @bwarbiany (https://www.cfb51.com/index.php?action=profile;u=19) 's chosen home state of California compared to the national popular vote in each presidential election for the 15 US Presidential elections from 1960-2016:
(https://i.imgur.com/CzayPWp.jpg)
How this was derived:

I used WIKI and entered the national popular vote republican and democratic percentages for each of the 15 Presidential elections.  Then I eliminated third party candidates by calculating the republican percentage of the two-party vote*.  Next, I did the same thing for each of the nine states that I included.  Finally, I subtracted the national republican percentage of the two party vote from the republican percentage of the state popular vote.  Ie, looking at 2016, Indiana is the most Republican state at 11.23%.  That means that the percentage of the two party vote in Indiana that went Republican in 2016 was 11.23% more Republican than the percentage of the two party vote that went Republican nationally.  Conversely, California is the most Democratic state at -15.02%.  That means that the percentage of the two party vote in California that went Democratic in 2016 was 15.02% more Democratic than the percentage of the two party vote that went Democratic nationally.   


Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 01, 2019, 04:09:47 PM
we all know that Nebraska is a BIG RED state
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on November 01, 2019, 04:21:47 PM
Trends in my above chart:

Indiana:
The Hoosier State has been Pretty solidly Republican for the entire duration of the chart.  It only went Democratic in the Democratic landslide victories of 1964 and 2008 and even in those it was still much more Republican than the nation as a whole.  It appears to be perhaps trending somewhat more Republican with the exception of 2008 which looks like an outlier.  

Iowa:
The Hawkeye State is the toughest one to get a read on.  It is the only of these nine states that has been both the most strongly Republican (1960) and the most strongly Democratic (1988).  Amusingly, when Iowa was the furthest of these nine to one side, both time that side lost.  I honestly have no idea why Iowa was so strongly Republican in 1960 and 1968 nor why it was so strongly Democratic in 1972, 1984, and 1988.  Other than those five and 2016, Iowa has been very close to the National vote.  

Ohio:
The Buckeye State bounced back-and-forth between being slightly Democratic and slightly Republican from 1960-1972 then settled in slightly more Republican for nine of ten elections from 1976-2012 (and only VERY slightly more Democratic in the lone exception of 2004) then took a sharp right turn in 2016.  There does appear to be a slight righward trend that predates 2016 but it is VERY slight.  

Wisconsin:
The Badger State was Republican in 1960, 1968, and 1976 but Democratic in 1964, far left in 1972, and pretty strongly Democratic in the three elections in the 80's.  There was a sudden rightward shift between 1988 (5.76% more Democratic than the Nation) and 1992 (0.66% more Republican than the Nation) and I don't know why.  What is interesting is that the 88-92 shift appears to have been more-or-less permanent as Wisconsin has been slightly left or slightly right ever since.  

Pennsylvania:
The Keystone State was, rather notably, part of Trump's winning coalition in the last election but their rightward drift started long before the 2016 election.  As recently as 1988 Pennsylvania was to the left of California and about even with Illinois at around 3% left of the nation as a whole.  Since then, Pennsylvania has become more competitive.  In the seven elections since 1988 Pennsylvania has averaged just 1.10% left of the nation and never been more than 2.5% left of the nation.  That said, Pennsylvania voted left of the Nation in every election from 1960-2012 but moved sharply right in 2016.  

Michigan:
In 1960 and 1964 Michigan was the furthest left of the nine states shown here.  Even in 1968 and 1972 Michigan was still one of the furthest left.  The 1976 election is a bit of an outlier due to Michigan native (and former Wolverine Football Player) Gerald Ford heading the Republican ticket.  Maybe it was a carry-over from voting for Ford or maybe those "Reagan Democrats" that you may have heard of were a real thing, at least in Michigan because Republican Presidential candidates did pretty well in Michigan in 1980, 1984, and 1988 but then Michigan drifted back toward where it had been in the 60's peaking with Obama doing 4.68% better in Michigan than he did nationally in 2008.  The last two elections saw Michigan make a sharp rightward turn moving to just 3% more Democratic than the Nation in 2012 and a little over 1% more Republican in 2016.  

Minnesota:
This one has the most clear long-running rightward drift.  From 1968-1988 (six elections) Minnesota was either the most Democratic of these nine states or the second most Democratic and the state was at least 5.49% more Democratic than the nation in each of those six elections.  In the 90's the state was about 4-5% more Democratic than the Nation and since then it has been a competitive state.  In the five elections from 2000-2016 the State has averaged just 1.45% more Democratic than the Nation and only once (3.01% in 2004) was it more than 2% more Democratic than the Nation.  In 2016 the State voted slightly more Republican than the Nation which had not happened previously within the bounds of this analysis.  

Illinois:
Illinois has gone from being a battleground state in the 60's, 70's and 80's to being solidly Democratic today.  In the eight elections from 1960-1988 Illinois averaged just 0.49% more Democratic than the Nation with a range from 2.89% more Democratic in 1988 to 2.07% more Republican in 1976.  In the seven elections since 1988 Illinois has averaged 6.56% more Democratic than the Nation and never been less than 4.86% more Democratic (1996).  

California:
In the eight Presidential elections from 1960-1988 California averaged 0.26% more Republican than the Nation.  However, that is probably a big skewed by the fact that Californians headed the Republican ticket in five of those eight elections (Nixon in 1960, 1968, and 1972; Reagan in 1980 and 1984).  California's leftward drift started long before it became apparent.  Californians Nixon (in 1972) and Reagan (in 1984) actually did WORSE in their home state than they did nationally and in the last five elections Republicans have done increasingly worse in California than they have done Nationally each time out.  

I don't know that there is an overall trend in the upper midwest but there was a massive rightward shift in 2016.  Note that in 2016 the Republican candidate did much better than their 2012 predecessor in Indiana, Iowa, Ohio, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Minnesota while doing worse in Illinois and California.  That sentence pretty much tells you everything you need to know about the 2016 election:  Trump did better than his Republican predecessors in competitive states where it mattered and worse in non-competitive states where it didn't matter.  

The big question going forward is whether the massive Republican improvement in those competitive great lakes states in 2016 is a sustainable structural change (like the rightward shift in WI in 1988-1992) or a one-time blip (like the rightward shift in Iowa in 1964-1968).  If it is only a one-time blip then Republican's are in serious trouble because with Virginia turning blue (or at least purple) and some other formerly solidly red states turning purple the Republicans can't compete unless one of two things happens:


Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on November 01, 2019, 04:25:40 PM
we all know that Nebraska is a BIG RED state
That is why I didn't include them in the chart.  There isn't much worth discussing because Nebraska is to the right of Indiana.  They haven't voted Democratic in a Presidential election since LBJ's landslide in 1964 (and even that was close in NE).  Prior to that it was 1936 when Nebraskans voted for FDR over Alf Landon who didn't even carry his neighboring home state of Kansas.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on November 01, 2019, 04:45:48 PM
I thought my physics joke was pretty funny.
It was....after I looked it up
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MarqHusker on November 01, 2019, 05:03:05 PM
WI even at the state level (house and senate) has volleyed back and forth for a few generations.  Rs have had more years in control of Gov since 84, opposite of Presidential vote in WI.  I'd guess at the Presidential level they've had 4 of the closest 15 results nationally as a % of votes cast since 2000, despite being Red every time but once since 1984.

I'd like to order that chart Medina, please.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on November 01, 2019, 05:19:18 PM
I'd like to order that chart Medina, please.
I emailed it to you.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on November 01, 2019, 05:48:20 PM
Interestingly, I can’t quote Nubbz’ last post.It didn't stop you from starting in on me in the 1st place,so by all means continue.

but if we can’t agree that at points OSU fans raged about Pryor, Miller and Jones spraying balls and called for JT to replace Jones in 2015 or Guyton to replace Miller in whatever year that was, we just won’t see eye to eye. I was never bitching about Pryor, Miller and Jones - where ever that came from.So direct that to your phantom fanboys here or where ever.

I yield. JT playing cost OSU two made up alternate universe titles. He should be remembered as the failure he was. If only he could’ve been what we imagine Burrow three years ago was. Oh you yield - then proceed to turn an assinine assumption into an astute observation.Go find those quotes,Ill wait,I simply pointed out the need to platoon/substitute maybe replace.So if something isn't working don't dare to take creative/corrective measures to perhaps get the desired results - is that your take?After the 31-0 white washed waxing Urban still handed the job right back to a lobber.With Joe Burrow & Dwayne Haskins waiting in the wings.The beat writers,reporters,bloggers and season ticket holders never noticed this at all.It was just that morose,misguided yapping jackel NUBBZ on the media back waters that questioned the head coach,gotcha.

(I’ll admit, understanding OSU football in some ways through the message board posts of OSU fans does feel a little like taking drugs. Thanks for the high, I guess? I’m impressed how mad that part made you)I'm mad?Don't flatter yourself,you wanted an argument - ya got one,stop acting appalled.I've come to the realization that you are the same guy that thought I came down too hard on John Cooper for beating Michigan twice in 13 years.Ya unreasonable Buckeye Fans.Strange they are 16-2 vs that same team since he was terminated,Michigan Fans get that.I don't demand perfection far from it but when excellence is within reach pull out the damn stops



Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on November 01, 2019, 06:23:49 PM
Good stuff, @medinabuckeye1 (https://www.cfb51.com/index.php?action=profile;u=1547) 

Unfortunately I'm not going to touch it with a 10-foot pole. So much of the analysis makes me want to talk about the reasons 2016 is such an outlier, and it's impossible to do that and keep this place above board. 

So kudos on the data, but I'm bowing out on that front.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MarqHusker on November 01, 2019, 06:36:11 PM
WI even at the state level (house and senate) has volleyed back and forth for a few generations.  Rs have had more years in control of Gov since 84, opposite of Presidential vote in WI.  I'd guess at the Presidential level they've had 4 of the closest 15 results nationally as a % of votes cast since 2000, despite being Red every time but once since 1984.

I'd like to order that chart Medina, please.
I guess this isn't the thread to joke around.  Thanks. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: CWSooner on November 01, 2019, 08:58:44 PM
I thought my physics joke was pretty funny.
I did too.  Enough so that I posted it on another board.
But it did not cover you in glory.
Or maybe it did for a moment.  But all glory is fleeting.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on November 01, 2019, 09:16:00 PM
Sigh. Nubbz, let’s stop this. Your anger toward how OSU did it’s thing is reasonable, and you’re not mad at me. 

Done and done. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on November 01, 2019, 09:24:24 PM
Can whoever is on MrNubbz' lawn please get off it?!?!?  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Drew4UTk on November 01, 2019, 09:52:59 PM
@bayareabadger (https://www.cfb51.com/index.php?action=profile;u=1571) the reason you can't quote the last quote is I have nested quotes turned off... recall the old page where there would be page after page of quotes inside quotes inside quotes?  yeah... selfish, I know, but that drove me crazy.   The downside is if someone quotes someone else and then enters text into the quote in response, it won't be able to be quoted because the system see's it as a 'nested quote'.  

I got a report from this thread... seems some figure it to be coming off the rails?  Every time i see that i automatically go to Area 51... but not this time.  I went there and nuthin' (well, 'nothing' being relative there), and came back to the report to see the B1G was sideways? Oh hell no... this is the best and purest CFB conference site on all the interwebz- ranking #1~#4 on google for "Big Ten Message Board"... this doesn't happen here!!! 

I love the passion, fellers.  all because of a game we all love.   don't forget that, y'all, as it's a game that drags us together and something we can debate within the reasons of our own perspectives.  

an aside- tOSU is playing about as tight as any team i can recall... ever... Bama dropped out of the #1 spot and rightfully so.  LSU is damn good. I don't think they're good enough to beat tOSU.  you know what they don't have?  Meyer- who had an outright peerless talent at not only preparing a team, but keeping them focused.  I recall pre-Meyer, in the year of 1998... tOSU was a shoe in to play in the MNC... and lost to MSU DO WHA??? ... that was one badarse D, and they let the Spartans win.  Well, they didn't 'let' them, MSU played their butts off.. but.. it was tOSU's to lose.  they did.  Because they did, we saw the sloppiest MNC game of the BCS era- UT/FSU... and a game where i can't help but think wasn't the best teams playing... well, FSU anyway... :) 

if they keep it on track and focused, i just don't see them losing this season.   
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: bayareabadger on November 01, 2019, 10:07:42 PM
@bayareabadger (https://www.cfb51.com/index.php?action=profile;u=1571) the reason you can't quote the last quote is I have nested quotes turned off... recall the old page where there would be page after page of quotes inside quotes inside quotes?  yeah... selfish, I know, but that drove me crazy.  The downside is if someone quotes someone else and then enters text into the quote in response, it won't be able to be quoted because the system see's it as a 'nested quote'. 

Yeah, I figured that out after second. Probably for the best.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on November 01, 2019, 10:17:06 PM
Can whoever is on MrNubbz' lawn please get off it?!?!? 
You can start worrying when i get to pulling the weeds
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 01, 2019, 10:34:47 PM
grumpy old man!
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 02, 2019, 08:09:27 AM
Ohio State looks to be very very good, to me.  AS noted, mobile QBs are often a feature of NC level teams.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 02, 2019, 09:03:45 AM
Ohio State looks to be very very good, to me.  AS noted, mobile QBs are often a feature of NC level teams.
would you knock it off!

are you waiting for the Dawgs first loss before you defile Kirby for allowing Fields to get away?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 02, 2019, 09:17:01 AM
The Dawgs already lost one.  In my opinion, UGA is better off with Fromm and OSU is better off with Fields, and both are better off where they are.  I do think Fields would be a terrific QB at UGA obviously, and anywhere else.  I was always high on him, but I believe Fromm is better in their offense.

We also lost Jacob Eason, who is doing "OK" at UDubb, not lighting it up though.  He's 6'6" with a canon arm but apparently is not a great QB.

The two teams that have impressed me thus far are OSU and LSU, both from states where the "State" university is better known than the University of.  Penn State is another of course, and I guess Rutgers in a way.

Georgia STATE University has the largest enrollment in this state, but many are part time commuters.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 02, 2019, 09:22:59 AM
obviously, we'll never know how Jacob or Fromm would perform leading the Buckeye offense

finding the right situation is paramount for players

Dan Ellington's perfect fit could be Georgia St.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 02, 2019, 09:27:36 AM
I think Fromm would do fine at OSU, just not as good as Fields.  The mobility factor is an more of an advantage.  Fields is obviously a year older now, so he has "matured", so it's not a fair comparison to think back to last season where he got few chances to do much.  When he came into a game, he nearly always was used as a runner (aide from garbage time).

He could have red shirted obviously at UGA and put a year between him and Fromm, but there is some doubt Fromm will come out this year for the NFL, I think.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on November 02, 2019, 12:26:25 PM
I think Fromm would do fine at OSU, just not as good as Fields.  The mobility factor is an more of an advantage.  
Obviously not.  UM kept trotting Barrett out there because of his mobility factor, and look how poorly that turned out.  :88:
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on November 02, 2019, 01:46:50 PM
Stick to flaming-witty humor doesn't become you  :hee20hee20hee:
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on November 02, 2019, 01:54:02 PM
It's be nice if you knuckleheads called a truce for a little while. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on November 02, 2019, 02:06:52 PM
as long as a clueless flamer has a need to troll,I'm sure you take his misplaced ruminating.He starts then has to get his twisted last word in.Go back and look for yourself
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on November 02, 2019, 02:22:05 PM
I DON'T CARE WHO STARTED IT DON'T MAKE ME FINISH IT! 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on November 02, 2019, 02:43:26 PM
See Ya
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on November 02, 2019, 05:40:20 PM
It's be nice if you knuckleheads called a truce for a little while.
I've been having a conversation.  The 'fighting' has been a bit one-sided, no?
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on November 02, 2019, 05:53:50 PM
I see. Enjoy yourselves, knuckleheads.

I shan't bother you further. 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on November 04, 2019, 09:09:37 AM
Whatever happened to Stingray66?  By far the coolest Buckeye here.  

No offense to the rest of you BuckNerds :)
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on November 04, 2019, 09:12:53 AM
One Bayou Bengal too many.He was kinda scarce in the last year of the CFN Board.Just hope he's on this side of the dirt
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 04, 2019, 10:26:38 AM
Whatever happened to Stingray66?  By far the coolest Buckeye here. 

No offense to the rest of you BuckNerds :)
well, coolest message board name for sure
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on November 04, 2019, 11:09:53 AM
Whatever happened to Stingray66?  By far the coolest Buckeye here. 
No offense to the rest of you BuckNerds :)
The guy who told the Physics joke is calling other people nerds?  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MikeDeTiger on November 04, 2019, 01:36:34 PM
Yeah, well, that was just pretention on my part.  I can't even spell fisics.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: TyphonInc on November 04, 2019, 10:14:08 PM
Per ESPN - Ohio State's schedule won't get enough respect.

"Among the remaining P5 unbeatens, Ohio State's schedule grades out as the most difficult. A top-five team's expected win percentage against the Buckeyes' schedule to date would enjoy about a 0.895 win percentage. That's not exactly Texas A&M-level difficulty, but it ranks 36th overall, a hair ahead of LSU's (47th) and Penn State's (53rd), and well ahead of Baylor's (70th), Alabama's (79th), Clemson's (91st), and Minnesota's (98th)."
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 05, 2019, 06:57:09 AM
I think at the end of the year, a 13-0 OSU of course won't need to argue SOS, and a 12-1 OSU who still wins the B1G won't either.  The most likely 12-1 would be a loss to UM, horrible as that would be for their fans, but it's very survivable in terms of the playoff.  The Pac 12 is obviously back in the picture with two one loss teams.

Clemson is the team most liable to a 12-1 record being left out, if they say lose to USCe.  A 12-1 SEC champ is going to be "in".  If every conference champ is 12-1, I think the ACC gets left out.  If Clemson is 13-0, then there could be 4 12-1 conference champs and 3 spots, and that would be a mess.

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 05, 2019, 09:49:22 AM
12-1 tOSU with a loss to the boat rower in Indy?

chaos 
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on November 05, 2019, 11:18:33 AM
If Clemson is 13-0, then there could be 4 12-1 conference champs and 3 spots, and that would be a mess.
I don't think that is all that messy.  Clemson, the 12-1 SEC Champ, and the 12-1 B1G Champ are in.  That leaves one spot for either:

Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: medinabuckeye1 on November 05, 2019, 11:19:50 AM
12-1 tOSU with a loss to the boat rower in Indy?

chaos
I think that would keep Ohio State out barring chaos elsewhere.  OTOH, if it came down to 12-1 tOSU with a loss to Minnesota in the B1GCG vs 11-1 Bama/LSU with a loss to Bama/LSU in the regular season I would certainly advocate for Ohio State.  
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 05, 2019, 11:56:32 AM
I don't think that is all that messy.  Clemson, the 12-1 SEC Champ, and the 12-1 B1G Champ are in.  That leaves one spot for either:
  • The 12-1 B12 Champ, or
  • The 12-1 Pac Champ, or
  • A potential 11-1 Bama/LSU or tOSU/PSU loser


the two that are left out are going to make a helluva mess of this
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 05, 2019, 12:58:10 PM
In the year 2555, we shall have 140 teams in the playoff, and folks will still be mad about being left out.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: FearlessF on November 05, 2019, 01:09:29 PM
yup, it would be less messy if:

Clemson, the 12-1 SEC Champ, and the 12-1 B1G Champ are in.  That leaves one spot for either:

The 12-1 B12 Champ, or
The 9-4 Pac Champ, or
A potential 9-4 Bama/LSU or tOSU/PSU loser
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: rolltidefan on November 05, 2019, 02:45:00 PM
i mean, it is 4 quality losses.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 05, 2019, 03:36:19 PM
i mean, it is 4 quality losses.
Any SEC team with 4 conference losses has 4 quality losses, obviously, we can all agree to that.

If they lost to a nonconference opponent, of course it was because they weren't up for that game etc.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on November 05, 2019, 06:00:04 PM
yup, it would be less messy if:

Clemson, the 12-1 SEC Champ, and the 12-1 B1G Champ are in.  That leaves five spots for:

The 12-1 B12 Champ, and
The 9-4 Pac Champ, and
The top G5 team, and
Two worthy at-large teams
Fixed that for you. You're welcome.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on November 05, 2019, 06:41:25 PM
If Minnesota plays OSU in Indy and stays within 30 points, I'd be stunned.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on November 05, 2019, 08:12:40 PM
In the year 2555, we shall have 140 teams in the playoff, and folks will still be mad about being left out.
In the year 2555, if man is still alive,If woman can survive,.......
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: MrNubbz on November 05, 2019, 08:17:02 PM
Any SEC team with 4 conference losses has 4 quality losses, obviously, we can all agree to that.
Why of course who could possibly disagree as the mountain of evidence surely points this out.Just ask Gary Danielson - if his head is above the table
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: CWSooner on November 05, 2019, 08:42:04 PM
In the year 2555, we shall have 140 teams in the playoff, and folks will still be mad about being left out.
Only if man is still alive.
Title: Re: OSU and reality
Post by: Cincydawg on November 06, 2019, 02:40:30 PM
I agree with OSU at #1 obviously.  It really is that 4-5-6 position that matters (but not yet).