Orange_Crush
Resident windbag genius
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2004
- Messages
- 43,518
- Likes
- 89,688
Your "points" were based on an attempt to make an "apples to apples" comparison of recent records and such. I showed you that was invalid. If USU had played UT's schedule over the past couple of years then you would have struggled to win 10 games in two seasons combined I suspect it would have been more like 7 or 8. You don't have the talent or depth of talent to face what UT has faced.
UT is more talented overall. Composite, the Vols will bigger, faster, quicker, and stronger. That's not in question, is it? Your chances lie in other things... like the fact that you play football. You don't compare workout charts or ht/wt rosters. But all other things being equal... put your money on the big, strong, fast team.
You play UT 2500 miles from home in front of probably the largest crowd anyone on your team has seen. Neyland will rock... literally as the voices of 100K cause the stadium to sway.
Both teams will have some experienced players but replace many major contributors. So again... both team with new starters and new faces in the 2 deep... put your money on the inexperienced guy with more athleticism.
It comes down to coaching. This is a game that helps UT to see what it has in Jones. If he is as good as your guy or as all of us here hope then UT controls the game and wins "comfortably" (11+ pts). If you manage a win then he has a VERY long uphill climb to convince anyone he's the right guy for the job.
So it isn't a matter of "juggernauts" but a matter of players, games, and coaches. The major unknown is Jones. The talent levels are known. The game setting is known. Your coach is known.... Jones is the variable that can swing the game in YOUR favor.
Very good post, however I would say that CBJ is known. He did some very good things at his previous two stops and he is at least as known as USU's coach. Interestingly, he has shown struggles in year one with marked improvement starting in year two at each of his last two stops. This gives me hope.
Is he proven at the SEC level? No. But then, neither is USU's coach, and neither is USU SEC level. Will CBJ be a success in the SEC? No one knows for sure, but he's given reason to beleve he is a good coach that knows what he's doing. There is reason for hope.
But I agree. Marked struggles against USU would deflate the hope a bit. ag4fr needs to come to grips with that. They are a litmus test, and little more. Their "competitive" is our "failure". The funny thing is that that's the point he's inadvertently made for the past three pages.
