greghammel
Well-Known Member
The Big Ten helps to ensure Ohio State gets advantages in conference play. In the last 10 years for example. 11 teams playing 8 games meant you were going to miss two of them. Ohio State consistently drew the top challengers as games they "missed out" on. Most notably missing Iowa in 2002, 2007, 2008. Ohio State has not played at Iowa since 2006, and only twice in the last decade and are off the hook again the next two years.
Ohio State has 680 Big Ten conference games, and out of the 680 has had the weakest SoS... by far. Additionally they have played 391 of the 680 at home and only 289 road games.
So, although the W-L record for Ohio State is impressive it has shamefully been built through strategic scheduling and a history of unfair home field advantages. But... it looks good when you say "Ohio State is 461-191-28 all-time in conference games UNTIL you look at the facts.
Ohio State has 680 Big Ten conference games, and out of the 680 has had the weakest SoS... by far. Additionally they have played 391 of the 680 at home and only 289 road games.
So, although the W-L record for Ohio State is impressive it has shamefully been built through strategic scheduling and a history of unfair home field advantages. But... it looks good when you say "Ohio State is 461-191-28 all-time in conference games UNTIL you look at the facts.