The Big Ten and the SEC both have fourteen teams, and that's about where the comparisons end. While the SEC has won seven of the last eight national championships, the Big Ten has to go all the way back to 1954 to claim seven titles. Even if you add in latecomers Nebraska and Penn State, you still have to go back more than thirty years (1982, to be exact) in order to equal the SEC's recent success. It's clear that there is a real talent gap between the two conferences. So what does the Big Ten do in response? They create a perceived talent gap to accentuate the problem.
During the opening week of the 2014 college football season, half the Big Ten teams played patsies from the ranks of the FCS, while only three schools challenged themselves with an opponent from a Power 5 conference. Meanwhile, only two SEC squads dipped into the FCS to snag an easy win and half the teams opened against a Power 5 opponent, including out-of-conference wins over perennial powers from the ACC, Big 12, and Big Ten. So while the Big Ten was masking its weakness, the SEC was proving its strength. And the perceived talent gap between the two conferences widened with both fans and the media.
So what can the Big Ten do? First, stop scheduling FCS opponents, period. Games against undermanned teams can do nothing to help you, but they can certainly hurt you (Michigan having revenge against Appalachian State? Are you kidding me?). Next, make sure that each Big Ten team opens with a respectable opponent. It would be nice to mimic college basketball and see the Big Ten "challenge" another conference to kick off the season, although scheduling difficulties might prevent that from happening, at least for several more years. In the meantime, how about starting the season with intra-conference rivalries such as Michigan versus Michigan State; Ohio State versus Wisconsin; and Penn State versus Maryland. Finally, win some big games early on so that the CFB world takes notice.
If you have to play a few patsies (and let's face it, everybody has to), then at least bury them down in your schedule like the SEC does. By playing the softest cupcakes in week one, the Big Ten renders itself irrelevant before the season has even begun. The Big Ten has the reputation of being a weak football conference, and that reputation only gets worse as the level of the competition declines.
During the opening week of the 2014 college football season, half the Big Ten teams played patsies from the ranks of the FCS, while only three schools challenged themselves with an opponent from a Power 5 conference. Meanwhile, only two SEC squads dipped into the FCS to snag an easy win and half the teams opened against a Power 5 opponent, including out-of-conference wins over perennial powers from the ACC, Big 12, and Big Ten. So while the Big Ten was masking its weakness, the SEC was proving its strength. And the perceived talent gap between the two conferences widened with both fans and the media.
So what can the Big Ten do? First, stop scheduling FCS opponents, period. Games against undermanned teams can do nothing to help you, but they can certainly hurt you (Michigan having revenge against Appalachian State? Are you kidding me?). Next, make sure that each Big Ten team opens with a respectable opponent. It would be nice to mimic college basketball and see the Big Ten "challenge" another conference to kick off the season, although scheduling difficulties might prevent that from happening, at least for several more years. In the meantime, how about starting the season with intra-conference rivalries such as Michigan versus Michigan State; Ohio State versus Wisconsin; and Penn State versus Maryland. Finally, win some big games early on so that the CFB world takes notice.
If you have to play a few patsies (and let's face it, everybody has to), then at least bury them down in your schedule like the SEC does. By playing the softest cupcakes in week one, the Big Ten renders itself irrelevant before the season has even begun. The Big Ten has the reputation of being a weak football conference, and that reputation only gets worse as the level of the competition declines.