Heres how I see the Big Ten shaping up this year:
1. Ohio State The Buckeyes will win with a ball-control
offense and staunch defense trademarks of Jim Tressels
four Division I-AA national championship squads. A favorable schedule
that includes home games with Michigan and Penn State and no game
with Michigan State will help.
2. Michigan Watch out if this team rediscovers a
running game to take some of the heat off quarterback John Navarre.
The Wolves veteran defense may be on par with that of the
1997 national championship team. Yes, they gave up 45 points to
Tennessee in the Citrus Bowl, but they also logged 50 sacks and
held opposing teams to an average of 90 yards rushing.
3. Penn State I may be expecting too much too soon
from sophomore quarterback Zack Mills, but I dont think so.
Not after seeing him last year against the Buckeyes. JoePas
team is ready to bust out after back-to-back losing campaigns. The
Lions finished 5-2 in their last seven games in 2001, averaging
30 points in that span. Their undoing may be a four-week stretch
where they play OSU, Michigan and Wisconsin on the road.
4. Wisconsin A lot hinges on the health of Ohio-bred
wideout Lee Evans. He set a Big Ten record last season with 1,545
receiving yards, but suffered a serious knee injury in the spring.
Even without Evans, the Badgers boast tailback Anthony Davis (the
nations fifth-leading rusher: 1,466 yards) and one of the
leagues few veteran quarterbacks in Brooks Bollinger. In fact,
Bollinger would love to finish his career the way it began
by leading UW to a Rose Bowl victory.
5. Illinois Everyone is dissing the poor Illini.
If Michigan was the defending champ and returning 14 starters, like
Illinois, theyd probably be picked to win the national
championship, lamented coach Ron Turner. Figure it out, Ronnie.
Your embarrassing loss to LSU in the Sugar Bowl (a 34-7 game at
halftime) and the loss of four-year starting quarterback Kurt Kittner
cost you major points with the pundits.
6. Michigan State A lot of forecasters see the Spartans
as a darkhorse candidate for the title, thanks to a potent passing
attack. But I cant see past coach Bobby Williams 5-11
Big Ten record and MSUs four losses last season to non-bowl
teams. Im not convinced a dime could buy Williams a clue.
7. Purdue I think Joe Tiller is one of the best coaches
in the Big Ten, and this team will squeeze into the bowl picture.
But sophomore quarterback Kyle Orton is probably a year away from
leading the Boilers into title contention, and there are some questions
about the receiving corps because of the skull fracture suffered
by top wideout Taylor Stubblefield.
8. Northwestern Coach Randy Walker says this team
has more talent than the one that won a share of the Big Ten in
2000. Im not convinced. The Cats have lost major producers
in quarterback Zak Kustok and running back Damien Anderson and defenses
are catching on to the spread attack that worked so well for Northwestern
two years ago. Walker has hired new offensive and defensive coordinators,
which tells you hes rebuilding, not reloading, doesnt
it?
9. Minnesota Im picking the Gophers ahead of
Iowa because they return key players in quarterback Asad Abdul-Khaliq
and tailback Marion Barber III. The question is, will coach Glen
Mason whose failure to beat out Tressel for the OSU job is
still bemoaned in some corners (even in Minnesota) achieve
a hat trick and lose to a MAC school for the third year in a row?
10. Iowa Im picking the Hawkeyes behind Minnesota
because they lost their starting quarterback, leading rusher and
top receiver from last years 7-5 bowl team. Kirk Ferentz is
a good, young coach, but hes not that good yet.
11. Indiana If Bobby Knight were still in Bloomington,
hed throw a chair at this lousy excuse for a football program.
Whaddaya mean, only 49 non-freshmen on scholarship? Its a
good thing new coach Gerry DiNardo has a great sense of humor because
hes going to need it to survive the season.