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Would love it! I live 2 hours from Nashville. The Purdue v. Vandy basketball game in December was a lot of fun - well, the game not so much but the the huge Purdue crowd that gathered before the game was a lot of fun.
Nashville is fine, prefer it would be Athens, GA.I'll say the same thing I always say. This is great. Perceived quality opponent is always good from a big 5. Just depends on who this is supposed to replace. If this is instead of a directional team great. If this is supposed to be the marquee game I'm not so sure. Depends on who else we play that year can't remember. That far off though who knows where each program will be for all we know this could be a top 10 match up by then.
I care more about the opponent too, just sayin about the cityI don't care about the city as much as the opponent. Almost all college towns you can get in trouble in.
Why?Army would be great. Every football fan should attend at least one game at West Point in his life.
Why?
I've never heard anybody say this.
Here is a link for the current 2019 schedule....just add in the Vandy game.
http://www.fbschedules.com/ncaa-19/2019-purdue-boilermakers-football-schedule.php
The game at Nevada, which has become one of the stronger non-P5 teams and Vandy, it looks like a strong start to the non-conference schedule. Personally, I wouldn't mind adding in two teams from this list:
Kentucky, UCONN, Temple, Iowa St., Kansas, Colorado, Syracuse, Army, Kansas St., Navy, Air Force, or Navy.
History I guess. I dont think any of these teams sound particurally great except Vandy and thats just by their association in SEC.
I want to play top 25 teams or dont care.
You do realize that the programs I listed, most have been or are part of the P5 Conferences right? If you are wanting to shell out money for a home/home against Alabama, Florida, Texas, Oklahoma, USC, Oregon, Arizona...you are setting yourself up for massive failure at this point in the program's rebuilding process.
The goal should be to get to a bowl game and if that means scheduling cupcakes in the OOC, then go for it. Look at Kansas St. under Bill Snyder and Minnesota under Jerry Kill. They have built strong foundations for successful programs on the back of getting to consecutive bowl games. You won't get the big time recruits (or even better recruits at this point) to take the program to the next level without picking up wins and getting to bowl games.
also what has helped Minny is that really nice new stadium. I went to an Army - Lehigh game up at West Point and it's worth the trip to see the place. It's in the Hudson river valley and in the Fall it's a nice place to visit.Jerry Kill's played USC home/away and TCU home/away. This isn't the same scheduling as when Glen Mason was the coach.
Also, putting Arizona at the same level as Alabama, Florida, Texas, Oklahoma, USC, and Oregon is an absolute joke. Texas and Florida have been down a couple years but they are on their way back up the rankings. Every one of the teams you listed has won a NC in the last 10 years, except for Oregon. And Oregon has played in two NC games, I believe.
What has REALLY helped Minny is Jerry Kill!!! We could have the same success and upward trend as Minny if we too had Jerry Kill even in our currently nearly empty rusting stadium.also what has helped Minny is that really nice new stadium. I went to an Army - Lehigh game up at West Point and it's worth the trip to see the place. It's in the Hudson river valley and in the Fall it's a nice place to visit.
So what are the Boilers numbers against their similarly weak OOC schedule?I simply put Arizona in there as an example, mainly because they were very good last season and seem to be trending up under the direction of RIch Rod going 8-5, 8-5, and 10-4 under his command.
2013: UNLV, @ New Mexico State, Western Illinois, San Jose State
2012: @UNLV, New Hampshire, Western Michigan, Syracuse
2011: @USC, New Mexico State, Miami (OH), North Dakota State
Those are Jerry Kill's first three seasons of non-conference teams. Other than the game @USC, it seems to be a similar strategy for Kill as it was under Mason. Remember, that USC game was first under Mason, so you can't really claim that schedule to be for Kill.
Let's look at the 2014 and 2015 non-conference for Minnesota:
2014: Eastern Illinois, Middle Tennessee State, @ TCU, San Jose State
2015:TCU, @ Colorado State, Kent State, Ohio
Those non-conference schedule don't really appear to be world beaters like you claim they are, do they.
A total number of wins for the out of conference schools Minnesota scheduled from 2011-2014 resulted in 67 wins. That comes to an average of 5.15 wins per season per team, but when you remove the two highest win totals (USC-10 and TCU-12) for a single season the total is now 45. That leaves just 4.09 wins per season. I left out the 1AA (FCS) schools because I didn't want to really go through hunting for their win totals.
Now, you may be thinking that 4 wins isn't too bad, but remember a lot of these teams play in lower conferences as well.
So what are the Boilers numbers against their similarly weak OOC schedule?
OOC Schedules:
2011: MTSU (2-10), @ Rice (4-8), ND (8-5), Southeast Missouri State (FCS)
2012: Eastern Kentucky (FCS), @ ND 12-1, Eastern Michigan (2-10), Marshall (5-7)
2013: @ Cinncy (9-4), Indiana State (FCS), ND (9-4), NIU (12-2)
2014: WMU (8-5), CMU (7-6), @ ND (8-5), SIU (FCS)
So comparing the data to Minnesota over the same time period, you are looking at 86 wins in the OOC over the last 4 years spread over 12 teams. That right there shows the story that Minnesota's OOC is ridiculously weak compared to even what Purdue fans recognize is a pretty weak schedule at 19 more wins in the same time period (Minnesota had 67). That then leaves an average win total of 7.16 of non-conference team wins per team which means, on average, Purdue's non-conference teams average going to a bowl game every year. In fact, only 4 OOC teams haven't made a bowl game (and one of those was only a single win away from getting bowl eligible). Now, I don't claim to be a math guy at all, so if my numbers aren't correct then someone can correct me. But to say Minnesota has a quality non-conference and Purdue doesn't...well the numbers tell a different story.
Even taking the top two win totals from the overall (which is what I did with Minnesota), it still leaves an average win total of 6.2 which is still bowl eligible average.