Scuzz Model: The Cats are Marching On…
My moniker last week was a disaster, as the Cats repeated their Penn State performance, and not last year’s Nebraska performance. I am just going to focus on looking forward this week, rather than rehash anything else…. time to march onward.
NU Projections:
From an efficiency standpoint, little damage was done to NU’s game by game projections – the Iowa game jumps to 65% likely win, due mostly to Iowa’s hideous performance last week. NU’s other games are largely unchanged.
As Jonathan Hodges from Hail To Purple mentioned last week, achieving 9 wins this year would tie Fitz with the career win mark for NU. Looking less likely after the loss last week, though I think the model is underrating our chances vs. Michigan State – I still feel really good about the possibility for an 8 win season… I know we’re all disappointed right now cause we think 8 wins should already be in the bag, but that would still be quite an improvement from last year’s record and on par with expectations coming into this season.
NU vs. Iowa
Rivalry Week!!! Wait… it’s not? Oh yeah, we just can’t stand Iowa. This matchup has been a great one for the last several years, and not just because NU has had success against the Hawkeyes. As you can see below, these two teams have been well matched from a statistical perspective too (the last time one was really significantly better was in the ’09 season when Woot ended Iowa’s season). This year, Iowa is unexpectantly struggling on offense, much like our Cats. That said, their offense minus a healthy Mark Weisman is even further diminished; NU should be able to stop that run game without sacrificing pass coverage, unlike against Nebraska. The big question will be can Vandenberg take advantage of the banged up Northwestern secondary? In our pre-season preview we talked about how Iowa really lacks a big receiving threat this year after Marvin McNutt’s graduation. That seems to bear out when you look at Vandenberg’s stats: his completion percentage is close to last year, but TDs and yards-per-attempt are both significantly down. Remember, the Cats lost at Iowa in ‘11, but take away a pick-6, and one of those mis-communications and it’s a different story. If we can establish our option running game, I fully expect the Cats to prevail. The line is NU by 6, but the Scuzz model expects a tight one – favoring the Cats by only 2.
Picks Around the Country:
All games vs. Spread: 219-168
Week 1: 4-1
Week 2: 2-3
Week3: 3-2
Week5: 3-2
Week6: 4-1
Week7: 4-1
Week8: 5-0
The model had its first perfect week on the blog! Picking against favorites worked very well. I won’t lie, this week is looking tough… I had trouble finding a lot of common ground with the model. Here are this week’s picks:
Indiana (+1.5) at Illinois: The model only disagrees with this line by a half-point, but it’s the right direction. I have zero faith in the Illini. Less than zero. Indiana’s performance the last couple weeks on offense makes me think they can roll Illinois, even on the road and after IL’s bye.
BYU (+2.5) at Georgia Tech: The Cougers showed a tough run-defense last week against Notre Dame, while Georgia Tech has looked bad this year, and don’t have much of a pass attack. Model likes BYU by 1.
Notre Dame (+10) at Oklahoma: I have a hard time believing that the Notre Dame defense falters bad enough to lose by 10 against Oklahoma. The model favors OU by 4, which I think is a little more fair given the Sooners’ body of work thus far. However, if the last two games were more than just bad opponents (i.e. if Landry Jones has suddenly found his Heisman-hype form) then the Irish, and this pick, could be in trouble.
Ohio (-9) at Miami-Ohio: The Bobcats and Frank Solich continue their march with a trip to Miami of Ohio. This in-state rivalry could be a bad pick for a blow-out, but Ohio is on fire and Miami has looked real bad against real teams (sorry Akron). The Scuzz Model picks them by 15.
Michigan (+2) at Nebraska: I promise this is not a sour-grapes pick. As bad as Michigan looked last week, I like how they match up against the Huskers. If the Wolverines actually use their mobile quarterback, they should be able to break down Nebraska in ways that they couldn’t against MSU. Model has Michigan by 6.
The Already Obsolete BCS Championship Hunt:
Another one down… Cincinnati falls off the truck (inexplicably, I might add). With their win last week, K-State is looking like the odds-on favorite to meet Alabama for the title. They still have a couple tough matchups, but given the inconsistency of TCU’s defense and the absence of any defense from Texas, the Wildcats just need to avoid an Oklahoma-State-type collapse (too soon?). However, should Oregon or Notre Dame avoid a blemish, I have to think K-State would get leapfrogged in the BCS standings.
Episode 94: Nebraska 29-Northwestern 28
It’s a tough one this week as the West Lot Pirates go over Northwestern’s heartbreaking loss to Nebraska, try to figure out how to get off the schneid against Iowa and look around the Big Ten and the Nation. You can download the episode from iTunes or stream it directly from here.
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Scuzz Model Week 8: Wash, Rinse, Repeat
As much as the Minnesota game was a repeat of last year’s matchup, this week’s game may be even more uncanny. The hallmarks of the 2012 Wildcat run defense were forged in the game against the Huskers last year, and if the Cats can re-produce that effort, this could be a special weekend.
NU Projections:
The win over Minnesota returned NU’s rating in the Scuzz model to where it was prior to the Penn State game. As a result, the simulated likelihood of beating Nebraska has risen a little; neither Iowa or MSU looked particularly good last week, ceding ground to NU in those matchups as well. The big move is Illinois, who just looks like a disaster at this point. For anyone interested, here is a lovely article about the Illini coach, and some of the questions the fan base are starting to raise about his potential. On the flip side, Michigan by way of that blowout gained against NU.
The win against MN plus the favorable matchup vs. Illinois has significantly shifted NU’s wins potential for the season – for the first time 9 wins are looking more likely than 7. NU’s expected number of conference wins in the model right now is 4.0… just under Iowa (4.5) and Nebraska (4.8). As such, these next two weeks are critical for the Cats – two wins can vault them into a showdown with Michigan (6.4 exp. wins) for the division crown.
NU vs. Nebraska
When we previewed Nebraska before the season, none of us were very impressed with what we saw. Sam would be hard pressed to say anything good about Nebraska, but a year after offering glowing praise of the defense John though this year’s product looked weak. That has played out on the field, with a defense that is particularly susceptible to duel-threat QB attacks. Their defensive numbers have never come close to what Nebraska showed during their first 6 weeks in the Big Ten, before Jared Crick went down with injury. Certainly, these defensive numbers are not bad in and of themselves, but the story is Nebraska’s defense has continued to backslide week by week for the last three years:
I also want to highlight Nebraska’s offense, which you can see has been very consistent this season. After adjusting for returning personnel (relative to the rest of the nation) they have been uber steady since week one. That said, I made the point last year that the Taylor Martinez offense that smashed onto the College football scene in 2010 had dropped off, and that remains true; Nebraska has stabilized, but they are not the juggernaut many still make them out to be.
Picks Around the Country:
All games vs. Spread: 187-145
Week 1: 4-1
Week 2: 2-3
Week3: 3-2
Week5: 3-2
Week6: 4-1
Week7: 4-1
The model came back to a more average level last week, but keeps a nice rate of 56% against the spread for the year. Last week was a good week for the picks on the blog – the model only missed on Vandy-Florida, which was close early but UF’s special teams blew the doors off in the 2nd half. Here are this week’s picks:
Kansas State (+4) at West Virginia: I will get this one out of the way… I do not love picking against Geno Smith, at home, in a place K-State has never played. Still, it is hard to argue with what the other purple Wildcats are doing this year. Scuzz Model favors KSU by 5.
Michigan State (+10) at Michigan: This looks like a great pick if you believe MSU is closer to Alabama than it is to Purdue. The Denard Robinson show will not be able to torch MSU on the ground, meaning he will have to throw the ball, which could spell disaster. Both the model and I think Michigan prevails, but not by more than 1 score (model favors Mich by 5).
Baylor (+13) at Texas: Really? Haven’t we learned that Texas can’t stop anybody? And don’t we know that Nick Florence is a fantastic QB? How is this line almost two touchdowns? Granted, Texas should win, but it’ll be closer than this… methinks people are overreacting to Baylor’s big loss to TCU… those people may be forgetting that TCU knows how to tackle – something that continues to evade the Longhorns.
NIU (-13.5) at Akron: You may remember that NIU is pretty good this year, having almost knocked off Iowa to start the season. Let me assure you that Akron is really awful (1-6 awful with a defense that gives up twice as much as the offense scores). Model has NIU by 36.
Miami (+17.5) vs Florida State: Don’t get me wrong, if Miami wins this game I’d be shocked… but the model doesn’t think FSU wins by quite that much. This one pretty much hinges on the first half: the Canes seem to come apart once they get down big, but if they can keep it close they’ll stay interested and play to the end. I also don’t think FSU has the type of running game that KSU and ND used to obliterate Miami’s D.
The Already Obsolete BCS Championship Hunt:
Here they are… the last 11 teams standing (at least the ones the model gives a greater-than-0% chance to go undefeated):
Here’s the problem: Kansas State, Florida, and Oregon State face much tougher roads in the 2nd half; Oregon and Notre Dame still have their two hardest games to play yet; and the Big East will probably cannibalize itself. I think we’re looking at Alabama and a 1-loss team (sorry Ohio). I just really hope that team isn’t from the SEC – with any luck South Carolina will help punch another perfect record this weekend. Who has an edge right now to meet ‘Bama? The eye test tells me Oregon, but there is a part of me that thinks Kansas State has the best shot… if they win this weekend their road should be the easiest, given no conference championship game.
Episode 93: Northwestern 21-Minnesota 13
The West Lot Pirates celebrate Northwestern’s bowl eligibility with a win in Minnesota, preview the massive matchup against Nebraska and take a look around the rest of the Big Ten. the wounds from Northwestern’s first loss, preview this weekend’s matchup in Minnesota and look at the rest of the Big Ten games. You can download the episode from iTunes or stream it directly from here.
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Go Cats!
Scuzz Model: “In the Bank” or Gopher Meatballs?
So here’s the good news after last weekend’s loss: The Cats season is not over. And most importantly, there was nothing in the course of that game that changed what we all believed about the Cats last Friday. The only worry I have is what sort of impact a loss like that can have on a team psychologically… I hope the players and coaches have been able to get back to normal this week, and have no lasting effects.
NU Projections:
Northwestern’s offensive rating didn’t drop too much as a result of last week’s game. The defense however, took a hit in the Scuzz model. This hardly seems fair given what we know about that game: the offensive production was predominantly driven by special teams; and the defense was really hurt by the lack of production on offense, and that last garbage time TD. That said, the negative impact on NU’s expected winning percentage seems about right. As a result, the game by game projections have dropped for NU vs Michigan, Iowa, and Minnesota. The match-up with the Gophers this week presents a 50% toss-up.

NU’s projection for the year still keys on 7 or 8 wins, while the possibilities at the high-end of the spectrum are way down. This is mostly because Michigan is looking real strong again, so to get to 10 wins the Cats would need to beat them, or sweep all of their other games. That said, a win against MN would shift very close to last week’s results.
NU vs. MN
The Golden Gophers started out this year better than anticipated, but really fell flat two weeks ago against Iowa. Without Marquis Grey, the running game, passing game, and subsequently defense all suffered.
If we examine Minnesota’s expected winning percentage during the Jerry Kill era, we notice a similar trend from the beginning of the 2011 season… pretty good performance during the non-conference, and then a drop off come big ten season.
MN never recovered after that drop in 2011… the last third of the season showed some promise (namely by beating Iowa), but the Gophers never really came close to even a 50% expected winning percentage. This year, the team had an even more noticeable rise in performance, particularly in weeks 3 and 4. The Iowa matchup has curtailed that slightly, but even without that loss, MN’s stats are not good. And unlike with Penn State last year, we don’t need any assumptions to create a gap in performance between NU and Minnesota.
It doesn’t look like the QB Grey will be back 100% this week, which makes me feel pretty good about NU’s chances in this game. Grey with a tender ankle will be much easier to pressure and not nearly the same type of threat to run (he won’t quite be one-dimensional, but he won’t be as dynamic either). I certainly expect him and Max Shortell to put up some points on NU, but unlike the Penn State game, Minnesota can’t defend either one of the Northwestern offenses. That said, hopefully NU will be a bit more balanced this week and will really exploit the youth up front, and the holes in the middle of the Gopher D.
Picks Around the Country:
All games vs. Spread: 162-120
Week 1: 4-1
Week 2: 2-3
Week 3: 3-2
Week 5: 3-2
Week 6: 4-1
The model was on fire last week – 77% against the spread – and is now hitting a robust 57% of games through the year. This is a big improvement from last year, which at this point I have to attribute to the addition of recruiting rankings and adjustments I’ve made to last year’s stats for injuries, suspensions, etc. There were two wins last week I’m particularly happy about – the shellacking that KSU put on Charlie Weis, and the continued brutality from Illinois. Here are this week’s picks:
Oklahoma (-3) vs Texas: The model only favors Oklahoma in this matchup by 4, but I just think Texas has too many problems on defense. Also, unlike West Virginia, the Sooners are a bit tougher on that side of the ball.
Iowa (+11.5) at Michigan State: The model is bearish on the Spartans this week. It still likes them to win at home, but only 3. Given MSU’s troubles with the pass, and the fact that Iowa has been able to run the ball effectively makes me think this should be a close game (not a blowout as Vegas has listed).
Mississippi (-1) vs Auburn: Ole’ Miss looked alright against A&M last week, and now hosts probably the worst team in the SEC West. The line is only 1, but the model says Rebels by 5.
Vanderbilt (+8.5) vs Florida: The Commodores are not good, but this looks like a pretty good trap / letdown game from the Gators. The model says Florida by only 8… that’s a pretty tight window to be picking on, but the intangibles look good for Vandy at home this week.
Wisconsin (+1) at Purdue: Can the Badgers do it again this week? Purdue is much better than Illinois, and the Badgers have been awful on the road, but are the Badgers really going to lose this game? Purdue gave up 44 to Michigan, and 300 yards of rushing. Model has Wisconsin by 11.
The Already Obsolete BCS Championship Hunt:
A great weekend of football has derailed three more would-be-challengers for the National Title game – FSU, LSU, and Georgia. The only real surprise is FSU, who lived up to their billing of the last 10 years by blowing a game they really should’ve won against an inferior opponent. Some are saying “Clemson-ing” could be re-coined “Nole-ing”. Can we just agree to say “ACC-ing”?
Alabama remains the front-runner (though some are predicting a tougher-than-expected match up at Mizzou this weekend), followed now by Notre Dame. The Irish looked vintage on Saturday, dominant at the line of scrimmage, suffocating on defense (after the 1st couple Miami drives), and running the ball with authority. I think their remaining schedule is too tough (they’ve yet to play their 3 toughest opponents), probably leaving Oregon as your most likely challenger to Alabama. We’re getting close to the point of a single upset being able to cause major BCS chaos (wouldn’t that be ironic with a playoff game only two years away).










