Friday, June 11, 2010

Michigan Friday: Welcomes Nebraska to the Big 10

It's Official, Done, lock it.  Nebraska is moving to the Big Ten and accepted the invite today

Michigan has some recent history with Nebraska.  The two that come to mind is the joint National Championship in 1997 (the year Nebraska won a game on a kicked ball) and the 2005 Alamo Bowl where Michigan and Nebraska played a game where neither teams defense showed up and Nebraska won after Michigan tried a crazy kick off return pitch play.

Michigan did beat Nebraska in the 1986 Fiesta Bowl 27-23

Welcome Nebraska, please know the Big Ten only knows one Bo! 

Is the Big 10 the new Big 12?

4 comments:

Bugeater said...

The Big 10 is the new Big 12. I'm very excited the Huskers will be a part of the new Big 10 tradition.

Bugeater said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

1997 Nebraska vs Missouri - Matt Davisons catch

1. NCAA rules say -player may use any part of his body to try and bring the ball under his control

2. Shevin Wiggins admits kicking the ball - trying to bring it up to HIS hands to catch it.

3. Being pulled over backwards by the defender added extra effort to the kick and it went over his head.

4. Wiggins had no idea a NU reciever would be behind him - Matt Davisons pass route on the play took him to the other side of the field. He just ran to the play when he saw the ball going away from him.

5. In order for the play/kick to be illegal, the official would have to be certain that the player was intentionally kicking the ball to a teammate. Any doubt and it is a legal play.

6. Both the Big 8 head of officals and the NCAA head of officials stated that the play had been called correctly

Unknown said...

With one more win, Nebraska deserves national title

(c) 1998 Copyright Nando.net

1998 Scripps Howard

MIAMI (Jan 2, 1998 - 05:12 EST) -- If Nebraska beats Tennessee in the Orange Bowl by the margin the odds makers say it should, then the Cornhuskers should win the national championship. They wont, but they should.

Too many voters are too reluctant to drop a winning team. And that's unfortunate for Nebraska.

In voting unbeaten Michigan over unbeaten Nebraska for the last third of the season, I based that first-place vote, in part, on Michigan's tougher schedule. The bowl games have changed my perspective.

The Big Ten was overrated. That became more evident with every bowl game: Michigan State lost to Washington 51-23. Iowa lost to Arizona State 17-7. Wisconsin lost to Georgia 33-6. Penn State lost to Florida 21-6. Ohio State lost to Florida State 31-14. Purdue, which Michigan didn't play, was the only other Big Ten winner (33-20 over Oklahoma State in the Alamo Bowl).

Michigan's opponents, five Big Ten teams and Notre Dame, went 0-6 in the bowls.

Nebraska's opponents went 2-2 in the bowls. Washington and Kansas State won; Missouri and Texas A&M lost.

Here's what I jotted down on a notepad after Michigan's 21-16 Rose Bowl victory over Washington State: Records: If Nebraska beats UT in the Orange Bowl, it will be 13-0. Michigan is 12-0.

Opponents: If Nebraska beats UT, its opponents record will be 76-74; Michigan's opponents are 74-67.

Dominance: Nebraska outscored its opponents by 30.7 points per game; Michigan outscored its opponents by 17 points per game.

More dominance: Nebraska outscored its opponents with winning records by 23.6. Michigan outscored its opponents with winning records by 10.8 points.

It's too easy to say Michigan was No. 1 and won its game, so it should stay No. 1. That's not the way the system is supposed to work. Our archaic method of choosing a college football champion is based on style points. Nebraska lost style points because it beat Missouri in overtime and beat Colorado by three after leading by 17 late in the game.

However, against good teams, Nebraska, not Michigan, has been more stylish. The Cornhuskers beat 11-1 Kansas State by 30 points. They beat Washington by 13. They beat Texas A&M by 39 points just three weeks ago.

In Thursday's Cotton Bowl, those same Aggies almost upset a UCLA team that had won nine consecutive games. Don't forget that Michigan only beat Notre Dame by seven points, Iowa by four and Wisconsin by 10. Its most-convincing victory was against Penn State, which for much of the year was the most-overrated team in the country.

Michigan deserves tremendous credit for an unbeaten season. But if Nebraska plays well in beating Tennessee, it deserves the national championship.

By JOHN ADAMS, Scripps Howard News Service