KnightHawk9
Well-Known Member
It's once again time for my annual reminder that the common theme you hear about the Iowa-Northwestern series is wrong. Most people still seem to think that the reason jNW has so much success against Iowa is that their dink-and-dunk offense is the perfect foil for Iowa's bend-don't-break defense. Former Wildcat QB CJ Bacher has even bought into the theory. However, the evidence doesn't really back it up.
I show below the average points the IA defense gave up each season, the points NW scored against IA that year, and the average points NW scored that season. What I would expect is that NW would score some amount between the IA D number and the NW O number.
That's generally what we see. The only exceptions are in 2006 (which actually does support CJ) and in 2011 (which we won anyway). By and large though, I don't see the NW O having an inordinate amount of success vs IA.
Let's look at the other side of the ball. Obviously all the columns are the same idea.
Here, the impact is obvious. Look how the average for all years is less than both the average IA O and the NW D. Also, a very clear rule-of-thumb emerges: if IA scores more points than their season average, they win the game. I'll bring up the 2006 game again to partially deflate CJ's argument. Yes, NW scored more than IA was allowing and quite a bit more than they were scoring on average. But really, if IA's offense had put up what they were averaging or, even better, what NW was giving up, IA still would have won.
So, the end result is, when you're sitting in front of your TV or tailgating this weekend and someone tells you NW always beats IA because our defense, go ahead and tell them they don't know what they're talking about...especially if it's CJ Bacher.
I show below the average points the IA defense gave up each season, the points NW scored against IA that year, and the average points NW scored that season. What I would expect is that NW would score some amount between the IA D number and the NW O number.
Iowa D Avg NW Pts v IA NW O Avg Outcome 2012 22.9 28.0 31.5 L 2011 23.3 31.0 29.5 W 2010 16.4 21.0 25.4 L 2009 15.5 17.0 25.2 L 2008 13.3 22.0 24.5 L 2007 18.8 17.0 25.8 W 2006 20.3 21.0 16.5 L 2005 19.0 28.0 31.8 L Avg 18.7 23.1 26.3
That's generally what we see. The only exceptions are in 2006 (which actually does support CJ) and in 2011 (which we won anyway). By and large though, I don't see the NW O having an inordinate amount of success vs IA.
Let's look at the other side of the ball. Obviously all the columns are the same idea.
Iowa O Avg IA Pts v NW NW D Avg Outcome 2012 19.3 17 22.8 L 2011 28.7 41 27.3 W 2010 29.1 17 27.7 L 2009 23.1 10 23.3 L 2008 30.3 17 19.3 L 2007 18.5 28 31 W 2006 23.8 7 26.2 L 2005 30.5 27 32.5 L Avg 25.4 20.5 26.3
Here, the impact is obvious. Look how the average for all years is less than both the average IA O and the NW D. Also, a very clear rule-of-thumb emerges: if IA scores more points than their season average, they win the game. I'll bring up the 2006 game again to partially deflate CJ's argument. Yes, NW scored more than IA was allowing and quite a bit more than they were scoring on average. But really, if IA's offense had put up what they were averaging or, even better, what NW was giving up, IA still would have won.
So, the end result is, when you're sitting in front of your TV or tailgating this weekend and someone tells you NW always beats IA because our defense, go ahead and tell them they don't know what they're talking about...especially if it's CJ Bacher.