First here are the 2012 Big 10 standings.
And here are the 2012 Big 10 SDPI standings. The standings are sorted by division by total SDPI with ranking for each category (out of 12 teams) in parentheses.
So Who Was Better Than Their Record Showed?
Wisconsin lost six games in 2012, a total very unbecoming of a champion from a major conference, much less a Rose Bowl participant. However, each loss came by seven points or fewer, and an amazing four losses came by exactly a field goal. In their four Big 10 losses, the combined margin of defeat was 16 points. None of their four Big 10 wins came by fewer than 17 points. Wisconsin bludgeoned the teams they were superior to and lost tight contests to their equals. If the Badgers had caught a few more breaks, 2012 could have resulted in a third-straight top-10 finish.
So Who Was Worse Than Their Record Showed?
The Buckeyes rang in the Urban Meyer era with an undefeated campaign. Unfortunately, they were ineligible for the conference crown and the postseason, so no banners will be hung. That could be poetic justice since the Buckeyes hardly had the makings of a powerhouse. The Buckeyes were solid on both sides of the ball, but this was hardly a juggernaut that rolled through the Big 10 leaving wolverine, lion, and badger carcasses in its wake. Fully half of their 12 wins came by a touchdown or less, including narrow escapes over luminaries like Cal, Indiana, and Purdue. Give the Buckeyes credit for their wins, but this team was not elite. More on that in just a bit.
Conference Superlatives:
Best Offense: Penn State 1.11
Bill O'Brien took over a reeling program and improved its offensive output from 345 yards per game in Big 10 play to 437 yards. No one will confuse the Penn State offense with the vintage Texas Tech teams of Mike Leach, but they were the best the Big 10 had to offer in 2012.
Worst Offense: Illinois -1.62
If you looked really closely on the Illinois sideline, it almost appeared as if Ron Zook was still coaching the team. The Illini averaged just 272 yards per game in league play and now are the proud owners of a 14-game conference losing streak.
Best Defense: Michigan State 1.12
Only a single Big 10 team gained more than 400 yards against the Spartan defense all season.
Worst Defense: Indiana -2.11
The Hoosiers had an interesting statistical sandwich in 2012. In their first three conference games, all defeats, they allowed 564 yards and 42.3 points per game. In their next two league games. both wins (their first conference winning streak since 2007), they allowed 359 yards and 19 points per game. Then, with bowl eligibility still a feasibility, they allowed 570 yards and 54.3 points per game in their final three league games (all losses).
Putting the 2012 Buckeyes in Historical Perspective
Ohio State finished the 2012 season undefeated and ranked 3rd in the AP Poll. It marked their third undefeated regular season since 2002. However, thanks to shenanigans during the previous administration, the Buckeyes were ineligible for the postseason and were not given a shot to play for the national championship. Did they deserve one? How good were they? To attempt to answer those questions, I looked at every team from a BCS conference that finished with an undefeated record prior to their bowl game since 1998 (the beginning of the BCS era). Including Ohio State last season, 20 teams have accomplished this feat. To objectively rate those teams, I used the Simple Rating System at college football reference dot com. The SRS uses margin of victory and strength of schedule to calculate how many points above average a particular team is. For instance, last season, Ohio State finished with an SRS of 13.81, meaning they were about two touchdowns better than an average team. This ranked 13th nationally. The results for the 20 teams are summarized in the table below.
Last year's Buckeyes were clearly in a class all by themselves. No other undefeated team from a BCS conference had performed at such a low level. No team had finished with an SRS score outside the top-six. Only one other team had finished below 17 points above average, and that was last season's Notre Dame team that was waxed by Alabama in the BCS National Championship Game. Remember, Ohio State didn't have a bowl game against an elite team to drag down their rating. Ohio State was good last season, but they didn't belong in the national championship game. Any team that struggled to put away Cal and Purdue at home, and Indiana on the road was probably not worthy of gridiron immortality.
4 comments:
After reading through this again it looks like the 2011 chart is pasted incorrectly into the 2012 post. Please update... this is good stuff.
I think it's amazing how people continually try to downplay Ohio State's undefeated. Before the season it was, "There's no way Ohio State goes undefeated in Urban's first year". After they do it everyone tries to pick it apart.
"Any team that struggled to put away Cal and Purdue at home, and Indiana on the road was probably not worthy of gridiron immortality."
It's irrelevant since they won every game. Other things you seem to ignore is Ohio State lacked Carlos Hyde in against Cal. Lets also downplay the significance of losing Braxton Miller against Purdue. Against Indiana, they were up double digits, and took their foot off the gas. Acting as if Indiana had a chance at winning is just ignorant.
QuizWhiz, thanks for the heads up. I have made the change.
JAC, the fact that they beat Purdue and Cal by a touchdown at home is relevant when evaluating how strong the Buckeyes were. Cal of course, beat just two IA teams on the season, and the Buckeyes were down six points to Purdue late in the third quarter when Miller went out. The fact that they allowed 49 points to Indiana (the second most points the Hoosiers scored all season) is also important. I'm not implying that Ohio State didn't win every game, but their narrow margin of victory in games against teams such as the ones mentioned above probably means they were not among the most elite teams in the country. I'll even call them a top-10 team, but let's not pretend they were in the same class as Alabama, Oregon, Texas A&M, Georgia, etc.
Judging and rating teams simply on wins and losses is fine, but if you take that to its logical extreme, then the 1999 Marshall team that finished undefeated is better the 2007 national champion LSU Tigers that lost twice.
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