JonDMiller
Publisher/Founder
We begin a multipart series titled ‘Decade of Average’ that will look at some concerning trends related to the Iowa football program. The last decade was not without some great moments. The 9-0 start to the 2009 season was an amazing ride and run with some fantastic moments. The 2008 season ended so well and was a lot of fun to watch when the team was hitting on all cylinders. But outside of those two seasons, the Hawkeyes have struggled to be much more than average.
Since Drew Tate completed the pass to Warren Holloway in The Capital One bowl, Iowa is:
*73-53 overall, somewhere in the 40’s nationally in winning percentage
*41-39 in Big Ten play
Let’s play with some numbers. Say you take out the 2008 and 2009 seasons, the lone really bright spots in the Decade of Average. That leaves you with:
*53-47 overall on those eight years
*30-34 in Big Ten play
Here are some more numbers from Iowa’s last 10 years; their performance against teams with above .500 records overall and in the Big Ten, as well as losses to teams with records below .500 (far right column)
The asterisk on the 13 losses to sub .500 teams is a note I inserted into my spreadsheet. It reads:
“Wisconsin has just two losses to teams with a sub .500 record since Tate to Holloway, including 6-7 Ohio State in 2011.”
Wisconsin is a program on Iowa’s level (or once was). On the field? It’s not even close, something we’ll also underscore on Sunday night when talking about ‘Developmental Programs’.
That’s a 39% winning percentage against better than .500 FBS teams and of those 26 wins, ELEVEN (42%) of them came against teams who finished their seasons 7-6.
For the last decade, this has been a program who has struggled mightily against Top 25 caliber programs, something Iowa fancies itself as. Iowa definitely has Top 25 facilities (probably much higher) and a Top 25 revenue producing Athletic Department (11th last year) as well as Top 25 fan support (attendance) and a Top Nine head coaches salary.
But what it doesn’t have is Top 25 results. It doesn’t even have results that would rank it in the Top 40 of FBS teams during that time.
What it has done is certainly average in the Big Ten. And between 2005-2013, Iowa’s winning percentage ranked 33rd out of 64 Power Five Conference teams.
Average.
Since Drew Tate completed the pass to Warren Holloway in The Capital One bowl, Iowa is:
*73-53 overall, somewhere in the 40’s nationally in winning percentage
*41-39 in Big Ten play
Let’s play with some numbers. Say you take out the 2008 and 2009 seasons, the lone really bright spots in the Decade of Average. That leaves you with:
*53-47 overall on those eight years
*30-34 in Big Ten play
Here are some more numbers from Iowa’s last 10 years; their performance against teams with above .500 records overall and in the Big Ten, as well as losses to teams with records below .500 (far right column)
The asterisk on the 13 losses to sub .500 teams is a note I inserted into my spreadsheet. It reads:
“Wisconsin has just two losses to teams with a sub .500 record since Tate to Holloway, including 6-7 Ohio State in 2011.”
Wisconsin is a program on Iowa’s level (or once was). On the field? It’s not even close, something we’ll also underscore on Sunday night when talking about ‘Developmental Programs’.
That’s a 39% winning percentage against better than .500 FBS teams and of those 26 wins, ELEVEN (42%) of them came against teams who finished their seasons 7-6.
For the last decade, this has been a program who has struggled mightily against Top 25 caliber programs, something Iowa fancies itself as. Iowa definitely has Top 25 facilities (probably much higher) and a Top 25 revenue producing Athletic Department (11th last year) as well as Top 25 fan support (attendance) and a Top Nine head coaches salary.
But what it doesn’t have is Top 25 results. It doesn’t even have results that would rank it in the Top 40 of FBS teams during that time.
What it has done is certainly average in the Big Ten. And between 2005-2013, Iowa’s winning percentage ranked 33rd out of 64 Power Five Conference teams.
Average.