Big victory tonight for the Iowa Hawkeyes in Iowa City, as they defeated Michigan 30-28 on a final minute interception of Denard "Shoelace" Robinson. Kirk Ferentz, Ricky Stanzi, and crew are now 6-0 (2-0 in conference) and are the Big Ten's sole unbeaten team. This is the same team that squeaked by Northern Iowa 17-16 in the season opener.
Without further ado, my Big Ten (Week Six) Power Rankings:
1. Iowa - They're unbeaten. They've played good teams in Penn State and Michigan, and major conference opponents in their early schedule, defeating Arizona and Iowa State. The Wildcats and Cyclones aren't exactly good this year, but they're not Temple and Eastern Illinois, either (*cough JoePa cough*).
I have been blown away by the play of junior DT Adrian Clayborn, he of the blocked punt-and-TD run against Penn State.
Huge road tests coming up the next two weeks at Madison and East Lansing. If they survive, they're the front runner for the automatic BCS bid. My bet is they don't, and settle for a nice Rose Bowl berth.
2. Ohio State - Terrelle Pryor has to be the best individual player in the conference. The Bucks handled Wisconsin with ease today. Ohio State has playmakers on offense (Pryor, Dane Salzenbacher, B. Saine) and defense (Bryan Rolle looks like a first rounder). At 5-1, with an unblemished 3-0 conference record, OSU is one miracle Matt Barkley drive away from being a top three team nationally.
Side note: I really dislike Matt Barkley.
Anyway, their remaining road games include a date next week at Purdue, then huge November games against Penn State and perennial rival Michigan. They get Minny at home, a freebie against New Mexico State, and then what is shaping up to be the Game of the Season, November 14 against Iowa at the Horseshoe. Ohio State can easily keep themselves in the BCS conversation if they keep playing like they have been.
3. Penn State - Mostly here by virtue of their #14 national ranking. The good includes a solid defense that has only yielded fifty points all season (seventeen of those to the Fighing Illini last week). The bad includes their soft schedule, with only Syracuse posing an out-of-conference challenge, and Daryll Clark's inability to stand up under pressure.
In that respect, he reminds me of the Titans' Vince Young - great in comfortable wins, freaks out when things go wrong. Definitely not Texas' VY, I'm talking about the pro version here. Not a good sign when you still have to play half of the Big Ten on the road in the second half of the season.
At least one of Michigan, Northwestern, or Michigan State will upset PSU on the road. And Ohio State will probably beat them in Happy Valley, too. That's three losses and a trip to the Outback Bowl, in my mind.
4. Minnesota - If T. Pryor isn't the Big Ten's best player, Gopher WR Eric Decker might be. A supremely talented athlete, he has been a stud at wideout for a long time in Minneapolis. Just get him the ball, and Minnesota has a shot in any given game.
But on the downside, this team got beat by a Cal squad that's looking worse and worse as the season goes on, and let Wisconsin get away with Paul Bunyan's Axe at home. Standing 4-2 (2-1) after six weeks, I forsee at least two more losses for the Golden Gophers. They've got road games against Penn State and Ohio State the next two weeks. 'Nuff said. If they get home 1-1 from that stretch, we can take them a little bit more seriously.
5. Wisconsin - I was wrong about Brett Bielma. Coming into the season, I thought he would be on the hot seat by now. Well, a 5-1 record (2-1 B10) with good wins against Michigan State and at Minnesota pretty much puts that to rest. John Clay reminds me an awful lot of Ron Dayne, and the power running game reminds me an awful lot of Barry Alvarez.
But the Badgers were overmatched and outplayed today at Ohio State, and must bounce back next week against Iowa, which will probably land in the Top Ten nationally coming into the game. An upset on the road would legitimize their season. A loss puts them about where they belong - squarely in the middle of the pack.
6. Michigan - Explosive, mistake-prone offense. Defense that allowed Indiana to roll up 476 yards. They've got a 4-2 record, but are 1-2 in the Big Ten and on the outside looking in to the championship conversation.
On the bright side, a bowl bid would be a nice step in Rich Rod's rebuilding project. And with Illinois, Purdue, and Delaware State on the menu, seven wins is well within reach.
7. Michigan State - They have shown a lot of grit coming back from a 1-3 start to land at .500, and they boast a 2-1 Big Ten record. I'm still not sold, but next week's home game against Northwestern means a whole lot for both teams. Sparty and Willie Wildcat are going to be scrapping for the league's final bowl bid, and the winner on the Seventeenth in East Lansing will have a major advantage.
8. Northwestern - Simply put, NU hasn't beaten anybody yet. They got hosed by the officials at Syracuse, and couldn't come back against Minnesota at home. Wins against Purdue, Miami (OH), Eastern Michigan, and Towson aren't going to win you any style points at season's end.
See above for significance of next week's game. A win gets you to five, with a winning Big Ten record. Also, they get Indiana at home for Homecoming (surprise, surprise - see IU section), and a road date at scuffling Illinois. Just three wins gets Pat Fitzgerald's Cats to 7, and a bowl bid. But they're going to have to step up, especially on defense, and play like they are capable of doing.
9. Purdue - 1-5 (0-2 B10). Games coming up against Ohio State, Wisconsin, Michigan State, and Michigan. Basically the best they can hope for is a couple more wins against their fellow Big Ten bottom feeders, and frankly I doubt they're going to get them. They're here by virtue of hanging tough against Notre Dame, Oregon, and Northwestern. But I wouldn't be shocked if they finish below ninth in the league.
10. Indiana - Hoosiers fans have it rough. Every year, it seems like Indiana starts strong, then shows its true colors as the season progresses. It's hard to get a bandwagon started when you let Al Freakin Groh (?!?!) shoot your tires off 47-7.
Indiana has looked awful now for two straight weeks following their mugging by the officials at the Big House, and the best hope is that redshirt frosh Darius Willis can get healthy and make some more big plays. The defense isn't awful, but they aren't good either. Ben Chappell would look better at a MAC school. The wideouts are talented yet inconsistent. The coaching staff... let's not go there. Bill Lynch couldn't win at Ball State, and this is year three of his B-Town tenure. Let the Tuberville Watch begin. Next week is an absolute must win, with sad-sack Illinois coming to town for Homecoming.
Speaking of Homecoming, Indiana has served so far as patsy for two HC's (at Michigan, at Virginia), and has at least one more coming up in Evanston. You never want to be the team everyone wants to schedule for Homecoming. Again, where are you Tommy T??
11. Illinois - This team was ranked preseason? Hahahahahaha... ahahahahaa..... hah. Apparently neither quarterback can start, Arrellious Benn doesn't want to be a NFL wideout, and defense? Oh no. The Chief is 1-5, and Ron Zook looks like a goner. On the upside, I still think he's a better coach than Bill Lynch.
Have I mentioned that Larry Coker is starting a I-AA football program at UT- San Antonio, while these guys have BCS jobs? Tell me again why Big Ten schools can't pull coaching talent from the South, because there are a ton of unemployed guys (and underemployed guys) down there.
Wrapping it up, this is not a "down year" for the Big Ten. The conference will field at least six worthy bowl teams, and has eight that can contend in December if not January. There's still a lot of season left, but a few more losses at the top and a single BCS bid could easily put the Eleven in line for a very good bowl season.
Heard a stat today that Indiana is 1-12 in their last 13 games against BCS schools. There needs to be some changes if this is going to change
ReplyDeleteI have no qualms about Illinois being 11. They've sucked this season, they don't even have a decent running back. The only reason they went to the Rosebowl two years ago was because of Mendenahall and a decent defense led by that middle linebacker whose name escapes me right now, but I met him in a bar once and made sarcastically made fun of him and the defense to his face (not one of my smarter moments). Zook still sucks as a game day coach. Illinois should hire another coach as the co-coach. Leave Zook in charge of most of the recruiting, and hire said coach to do the gameday planning. Would never work though.
ReplyDeleteAnd Illinois had Vonte Davis. The real reason they went to the Rose Bowl is cause Jim Delany said he would never team up with the Rose Bowl again if they had not selected Illinois.
ReplyDeleteAs for IU, I think IU Illinois is looking to match the all time stinker of a game in 2004 or 2005.
We are terrible and I want to move to Tuberville