While blindly touting Stanley as the best thing since sliced bread, even after an objectively bad performance, is cute, it's not accurate. It's easy to blame the wind for him hitting on less than 50% of his passes, but that would only make sense if this game was a statistical anomaly. It was not. Stanley's super man performance against Indiana was the statistical abnormality, while his Maryland performance was simply, as Jon Miller likes to say, a regression to the mean.
1. NIU game (played in perfect conditions) 11/23 for 108 yrds, 1 td 1 int
2. ISU game (played in perfect conditions) 16/28 for 166 yrds, 0 td
3. Maryland (played in windy conditions) 11/22 for 88 yrds, 1 td 1 int
He laid eggs in 1/2 of this season's games so far. He played really well in half of this season's games as well. That's not "bias" or an "agenda," and it's not the "wind." It's simply stats. Given his body of work, things tend to regress to the mean. NIU, ISU, and Maryland wins were each attributed to our top 5 national defense. Each game would have been won regardless of whether Stanley, Petras or Mansell playing QB.
Here's to hoping Stanley plays above the mean in the games that need it, and saves is "off" performances for the Nebraskas of the world.