Losing Seasons, Consistency, And Competitive Recession In College Football
Around SB Nation's NCAA blogs today:
- Off Tackle Empire takes a look at losing seasons and asks whether Ohio State is the most consistent program in college football. Aside from the obvious joke about the Buckeyes consistently losing to SEC teams in national championship games, it's an interesting analysis. There's a FanPost opportunity in there for some alert and motivated RTT reader: how does Tennessee figure in to that analytical framework? How many losing seasons have the Vols had? How far apart where they? Perhaps there's nothing there, but it would be worth a look, I think.
- Team Speed Kills explains illegal substitution and illegal participation.
- Carolina March, on the latest of how John Blake figures in to the Marvin Austin investigation at North Carolina.
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Heh...
We actually fit OTE’s criteria… but were excluded along with Penn State. No clue why.
We had 10 losing seasons before 1912…
Then we have 1935, 1954, 1958, 1962, 1977, 1980, 1988, 2005, and 2008.
Last back to back losing seasons were 1910/1911.
Your exclusion was a flat out oversight...
I sincerely apologize.
Off Tackle Empire
The quintessential Big Ten smoking room.
by Jonathan Franz on Aug 12, 2010 2:28 PM EDT up reply actions

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