calumnus said:
Strykur said:
calumnus said:
Strykur said:
JSC 76 said:
Now it feels like the whole conference is tougher, even when the Bears are good.
This year (and even last year too), the conference has had no one elite, a la a Chip Kelly Oregon squad or the Pete Carroll SC teams of the 2000s. The PAC-12 is for the taking, and we're just tanking it.
It is almost exactly like the late 90s when it seemed like all of the PAC-10 took turns going to the Rosie Bowl, even Stanford, but we just stuck with Tom Holmoe and never got close.
Even with a different coach during the late 90s, would have been difficult to rise above the Northwest programs who ran the show out west until SC took it back over. All comes back to not paying Snyder which would have kept us going past 93 and Dave Barr's injury basically ending our last real shot at it until Tedford came in.
Late 90s was Holmoe. Snyder was early 90s. He went to ASU and went to the Rose Bowl there. A different team won with very year. Stanford went to the Rose Bowl with Willingham in a weak PAC-10.
OK, a discussion where both people who are both getting things wrong.
"Even with a different coach during the late 90s, would have been difficult to rise above the Northwest programs who ran the show out west until SC took it back over." The NORTHWEST programs ran the show in the late 90's? If we define the late 90's at its broadest, 95-99, the northwest got ONE Rose Bowl, when the 1997 WSU team tied with UCLA for the conference title. The 1995 season it was USC, 1996 ASU, 1998 UCLA, and 1999 Stanford. That is hardly Northwest programs running the show in the late 90's.
If you want to say the Northwest "ran the show" for a 2 year period from 2000-2001, well, maybe. UW, Oregon, and OSU tied for the conference title in 2000, with UW getting the Rose Bowl, Oregon won the conference in 2001. By 2002, SC was tied for first, although WSU got the Rose Bowl, and , and WSU and USC tied for the title in 2002, as SC did "take it back over," a 7 year run of either ties for first or outright conference championships. But since WSU got the 2003 Rose bowl from the 2002 season, I suppose you could argue that the Northwest "ran the show" for 3 years, 2000-02. But not the late 90's.
Willingham did take the mediocre 1999 Stanford team to the 2000 Rose Bowl -- Stanford lost to Texas 69-17 to open the season and also lost to San Jose St. 44-39. They did eek out a win over Notre Dame 40-37 after clinching the Rose Bowl with a win over Cal. The 1999 conference was so weak that Holmoe's 1999 Cal team beat UCLA 17-0 in LA and beat USC 17-7 in Berkeley. Yes, the late 90's was kind of there for the taking, perhaps hitting bottom in 1999.
But when you try to prove the point by saying "UW sucked, which is why they hired Willingham away from Stanford," you are trying to prove the point with a whopper of a falsehood. Notre Dame hired Willingham away from Stanford after the 2001 season, UW hired Willingham after he was fired by ND after the 2004 season.
UW initially had trouble coping with the idea that competing for national titles wasn't their birthright.
UW expected Jim Lambright to keep up the results of Don James. When Lambright ended up with only one tie for the Pac-10 title from 1993-98 (NOT having the Rose Bowl tiebreaker) and dared to have a 6-6 season capped off by a lower tier bowl loss (a record at Cal that got Mooch the 49ers HC job), Lambright was fired and Slick Rick hired. Slick Rick got a Rose Bowl his second season, 2000, but after a 7-6 2002 season with a Sun Bowl loss, UW wasn't willing to keep him after the gambling scandal, and their expectations were lowered enough that they were willing to hire Gilby, a coach designed to put a team in the toilet bowl.
After a season of 1-10 and 0-8 in conference gets Gilby canned after two years, and UW fails to lure Tedford away from Cal, the fired Willingham seemed good. He didn't seem so good after he finished 10th, 9th, 10th, and 10th, capped off by an 0-12 season in 2008.
Anyway, no Northwest "running the show" in the late 90's, and no Willingham hired away from Stanford by UW.