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Muck

Enjoy Every Sandwich
....Nebraska joined the Big Ten in 1996?

BTN Partners with WhatIfSports.com Simulating Last 15 Big Ten Conference Seasons

CHICAGO ? What if Nebraska had joined the Big Ten 15 years ago? What if the Leaders and Legends Divisions were established in 1996? Who would have won the most Big Ten championship games? Would Nebraska or Michigan have won the 1997 national title (hint: the simulation says ?maybe Ohio State?)?

BTN is teaming up with WhatIfSports.com for the simulation project, ?Big Ten Legends & Leaders: 1996-2010,? to find out the answers to those questions and more.

WhatIfSports.com split the 12 current Big Ten teams into their respective divisions and used the actual team rosters and statistics to simulate the Big Ten regular-season schedules from the 1996-2010 seasons.

Every day through August 26, a simulated season in Big Ten history will be highlighted on www.BTN.com, including box scores and play-by-plays for every mythical Big Ten Championship Game.

.../cont/...

Nebbie fans should particularly enjoy the '97 results.
 
John Cooper be an untouchable folk hero in Columbus if this is how things actually would have went down.


1996: Undefeated conference season in 1996, Defeat Nebraska in Big Ten title game

1997: 1 loss conference season...we lose to Michigan in Ann Arbor..but then completely dash their national championship hopes the very next week in what sounds like possibly the greatest ending in Ohio State football history:

1997 BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIP GAME - OHIO STATE 37, MICHIGAN 34

Ohio State pulls out last second victory over Michigan

In the tenth week of our simulated 1997 Big Ten football season, Michigan of the Legends Division visited Ohio State of the Leaders Division. The game between the Buckeyes and the Wolverines came down to the final play, culminating when Dan Stultz kicked a 29-yard field goal as time expired to clinch a 37-34 victory.

The winning play came after Ohio State drove 42 yards in 18 seconds.

The two teams combined for 968 total yards of offense. With both offenses running wild, the Buckeyes took the lead in the fourth quarter and refused to give it back.

Joe Germaine and David Boston had a passing connection going, as Boston racked up 106 yards and two touchdowns on six catches en route to a win for the Buckeyes.

Ohio State's passing game looked flawless, despite the efforts of Michigan's secondary. The Buckeyes' air attack was uncontainable, as they torched the Wolverines for 315 yards and three touchdowns. Germaine completed 16 of 26 passes for Ohio State.

Michigan's Brian Griese went 19 of 27 through the air for a total of 202 yards. Griese finished the game with one touchdown and no interceptions.

The Wolverines' offense finished the game having gained 454 yards. Michigan's rushing attack contributed 252 yards on 45 carries in addition to Griese's passing effort.

1998: Run the table again and defeat Nebraska soundly in the Big Ten title game.

2000: Another perfect conference season for the Buckeyes..and another win over Nebraska in the Big Ten title game
 
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BUCKYLE;1968499; said:
Having Nebraska in the B1G made us more focused. Plaxico shot himself on the night before the game.

We actually did skip MSU, the schedule had to be adjusted to reflect the divisional alignments. We played Mich, Northwestern and Iowa from the legends division
 
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If Nebraska joins the B1G in 1996 then scUM's last NC goes back to the 40's because if they actually had to play UNL in 1997 they get worked like the last rib on Brady Hoke's plate.
 
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zwem;1968640; said:
OSU scoring 37 points against that Michigan defense is laughable. Hell Michigan scoring 34 points is too. Nebraska with 3 conference loses. This some ole bullshit.
Nebraska joining the league caused the NCAA to assign a full time investigator to the new super conference, Woodson wasn't eligible.
 
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DECADE IN REVIEW: LOOKING BACK AT THE BIGGEST 'WHAT IFS' OF THE 2010S

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Hindsight is a hell of a drug.

The 2010s were an unquestioned success for the Ohio State football program. The Buckeyes dominated their rival by winning nine of 10 matchups by an average of more than two touchdowns. They won four Big Ten titles, made three College Football Playoff appearances and won a national championship in 2014.

It was the kind of decade all but two other programs in the country would've killed for, and yet, there are still moments you can look back and ask the question:

What if?

Eleven Warriors assembled a collection of the biggest what ifs of the decade. These scenarios aren't meant to be tied together — they stand alone as moments that had an enormous impact on the trajectory of the program, a given season, legendary careers, and potential national titles.

WHAT IF JIM TRESSEL HAD SENT THAT APRIL, 2010 EMAIL TO COMPLIANCE?

Few people here need to revisit the specifics of Jim Tressel's fall from grace, but just to jog your memory — in April, 2010, Ohio State's head man received an email from a lawyer alerting him to the fact that several star players were selling signed Buckeye memorabilia in exchange for cash and free tattoos.

Instead of alerting compliance and taking the tip to the proper channels, Tressel handled the matter internally, which was of course a major NCAA violation that ultimately cost him his job and ended his legendary coaching career.

What would've happened had Tressel forwarded that email directly to the compliance department? How long would he have coached at Ohio State before hanging it up for good? And how would've his program stood up to the Alabama and Clemson dynasties that emerged during the decade?

WHAT IF OHIO STATE HAD SELF-IMPOSED A BOWL BAN ON ITSELF IN 2011?

Tressel's fall from grace wasn't an individual affair. Ohio State's name was drug through the mud for an entire year. The Buckeyes replaced Tressel by giving an interim head coach title to former defensive coordinator Luke Fickell, who went on to produce an uninspired 6-6 regular season.

Throughout the summer and fall of 2011, the NCAA conducted an investigation that many expected would result in serious sanctions on the Buckeye football program. A bowl ban was certainly on the table, and it was a penalty many expected.

What if Ohio State had imposed a bowl ban on itself in 2011? The season didn't make the midway point of October before falling off the rails, and the Buckeyes could've gotten ahead of the punishment by incurring a penalty on an already lost season.

Instead, they accepted an invitation to the Gator Bowl for a matchup against 6-6 Florida. They lost that game 24-17, two weeks after the NCAA levied a one-year bowl ban on the Buckeyes that would take place in 2012.

You know how this played out. The Buckeyes turned things around that season, going a perfect 12-0 in regular season play. They would've faced a Nebraska team in the Big Ten title that they beat by 25 points earlier that fall. It's safe to assume they would've won, and a 13-0 Ohio State team would've gotten the nod over Alabama from the BCS to play undefeated Notre Dame in the title game. That Irish team got flattened by the Tide, and it's hard to imagine Manti Teo's squad fairing much better against the Buckeyes.

WHAT IF URBAN MEYER DIDN'T RETURN TO COACHING?

With Fickell tagged as an interim head coach, everyone knew the Ohio State administration was on the hunt for a new head man. Meyer way always option 1a, and it's a credit to Gene Smith's leadership and ability that he got his man in the end.

But what if Smith hadn't landed Meyer? What if the former Florida coach had been happy with his new role in the media and had no desire to coach again?

The other candidates who were tossed into the ring of consideration by media were big-time hitters at the time. There was of course Fickell, whose shine dimmed a bit during the 2011 season. Then there was Oklahoma head coach Bob Stoops, a Youngstown, Ohio native who had led the Sooners to national prominence.

But the consensus was that the Buckeyes wanted someone with stronger ties to the state of Ohio, and if it couldn't land Meyer, then none other than... Bo Pelini was a legitimate candidate.

Imagine your Ohio State Buckeyes led by Bo Pelini. I apologize for ruining your morning.

WHAT IF OHIO STATE HAD RUN THE DANG BALL AGAINST SPARTY IN 2015?

Some losses sting more than others. There's a defeat that took place fewer than four weeks ago that will assuredly haunt my dreams for the rest of my life (that's foreshadowing, for you folks who miss those kind of things).

Another one of those losses came in the second-to-last week of the 2015 college football season. The Buckeyes boasted the most loaded roster in the country that year, came into the season as the first-ever consensus No. 1 team in college football history and were riding a 23-game win streak when they hosted a Michigan State team that was a significant underdog.

In miserable conditions, Ohio State kept star running back Ezekiel Elliott involved early, giving him seven first-quarter carries that helped the Buckeyes build an early 7-0 lead. But for no other possible reason outside of self-hatred, the coaching staff effectively shut Elliott out of the action the rest of the game, giving him five carries in Ohio State's final eight drives.

The result was a stunning 17-14 loss to the Spartans that kept Ohio State out of the Big Ten title game, and in turn, the 2015 College Football Playoff.

Had the Buckeyes won that game, would their annual rivalry with Michigan to close the season have woken them up from their 11-week sleepwalk? They certainly responded that week with a 42-13 thrashing of Jim Harbaugh's first Wolverines team. Instead, we were robbed of one of the most talented Ohio State teams in school history from having a shot at a national title.

WHAT IF OHIO STATE HAD TURNED THE KEYS OVER TO BURROW IN THE SPRING OF 2018?

Oh, you've been thinking about this a lot lately.

After Ohio State lost record-setting quarterback J.T. Barrett to graduation, a competition arose between fourth-year junior Joe Burrow and third-year sophomore Dwayne Haskins.

The race between the two was neck-and-neck through winter conditioning and spring camp, as Meyer routinely said he couldn't name a guy who was even slightly ahead.

The spring game was a big deal, and by all accounts, Burrow outplayed Haskins. But with the totality of spring camp reps combined with the scrimmage, Meyer and the coaching staff were leaning Haskins' way, and they rightfully allowed Burrow to transfer away with immediate eligibility.

But what if the scales had tipped the other way?

Imagine Burrow, as you saw him at LSU this past season with an uncanny ability to find space in the pocket and deliver the ball down the field, in Day's offense for two full seasons.

Would he have developed so amazingly in Columbus? Would he have stayed for two full seasons if he had? Would that have been enough to get Ohio State a title (or two)?

Entire article: https://www.elevenwarriors.com/ohio...ing-back-at-the-biggest-what-ifs-of-the-2010s
 
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