Husker Psycho
New member
But they didn't win... they were soundly beaten last year by a team that had met the metric... Ohio State.You don't know what you're talking about.However, these articles do not prove that regular top 10 classes are NECESSARY to winning a championship (though they certainly help the cause). As was pointed out, he even acknowledges that MSU and other teams are outliers even this year, just like Nebraska was an outlier in its day.
For the last 11 years in a row... without fail... 100% of the time... the team that has won the national championship has achieved the elite player metric (number of elite players on the team - 4 and 5 star players).
If a team has met that metric then they have a chance to win the national championship. If they don't meet that metric they have 0% chance to win the national title... as in zero.
Reality... fact.
2010 and 2014 Oregon did not meet that metric. They had a chance to win the national championship.
No team has won the national championship in last 11 years... that did not meet that metric.
The elite player metric is a cold hearted... brutal... fact.
We need to come to grips with reality.
So should all the schools that sign classes between 11-whatever just not compete that year?
To answer your question... no.
What they should do is everything in their power to be like and recruit like the elite teams... which would include learning from them and facing the reality of the task at hand.
Instead we get fairy tale, make believe thinking... which means no learning and no dedication to the task at hand.
And that gets us to where we are now. A team of average players while the elite teams that win national championships are teams with huge numbers of elite players.
Some may wonder... why is this person so negative?
I'm NOT.
I'm a Nebraska fan who knows something no one else knows. That we will never get to where we all want to be... we will never achieve at a top level... never have the respect we deserve... never win national championships... until we face REALITY.
Honesty and reality are nothing to fear... in fact accepting and acting on those things gives us our best chance to succeed.
That's why I'm here. To bring honesty and accountability back to our program.
If I care about something then I owe it to the thing I care about to be honest.
Honesty is a sign of respect.