Toughest Schedules of 2012

NDPhilly

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Top 10 list: Toughest schedules of 2012 - CBSSports.com

This week's Top 10 list: Toughest schedules in 2012. To help figure things out, I awarded a point system to every team's opponents: 1 for a “cupcake;” 2 for a decent team; 3 for a top 40 caliber opponent; 4 for a top 20ish opponent; 5 for a Top 5 heavyweight. I'd also bump up the point total, usually half a point if it were a road opponent.

1. Notre Dame: Wait, where are the cupcakes? Notre is one of the few programs that doesn't play any FCS programs. The closest things to “cupcake games” are the opener against Navy in Ireland (the Midshipmen have won 24 games the past three seasons); Purdue (a Big Ten team which won seven games in 2011); at BC (who did beat both NC State and Miami last year) or against Wake Forest (which has beaten FSU four of the past six times they've met.) More impressively, the Irish face five teams that have a good shot to be in the top 15: at Michigan State, Michigan, Stanford, at Oklahoma and then the Irish finish at arch-rival USC. Perhaps the best proof of how hefty this route is for the Irish, consider that Miami--after BYU (a team that may win 10 games this fall)--could prove to be the seventh toughest game on the schedule.

2. Washington: The Huskies, who are completely overhauling a dreadful 2011 defense, don't have too much time to ease into things. They start with San Diego State (who's won 17 games the past two seasons), then venture off to Baton Rouge to face a loaded LSU squad. After the encounter with the Tigers, they get FCS Portland State before the Huskies get into the teeth of their schedule: a three-game stretch against Stanford, the most physical team in the Pac-12, at Oregon and then home against USC to wrap things up against the league's three most talented teams. That means Steve Sarkisian's team faces three teams that figure to be ranked in the preseason Top 5 (USC, LSU and Oregon) and two of those games are on the road. It'll also be interesting to see how healthy and focused the Huskies are after enduring so many heavyweights early because the latter half of the season is packed with road trips.

3. Oregon State: Nicholls State is a comfy opponent to open with, but then a punishing Wisconsin team comes to Corvallis. The Badgers, combined with a trip to BYU, translate into a pretty unpleasant non-conference schedule even with Nicholls as the third part of things. In the second half of the season, when coach Mike Riley very likely will be battling to keep his job, his team has to deal with Utah, Washington, Arizona State, Stanford, Cal and Oregon, which translates to probably five of the six best teams in the league. The good news: at least the Beavers miss out on USC. The bad news: Washington State or ASU is probably the second-easiest match-up the entire season.

4. Michigan: Year Two for Brady Hoke begins against the defending national champion Alabama Crimson Tide in Arlington, Texas. Good luck with that one. The Wolverines then don't have much time to bounce back after dealing with such a punishing opponent since they get Air Force in Week Two. The Falcons are always a headache to prepare, coming off a game Alabama figures to make them that much more of a problem. The easiest match-up of the season comes in Week Three against UMASS, which is transitioning into becoming a MAC team. Then, the Wolverines visit Notre Dame to wrap up a brutal non-conference slate. In Big Ten play, they have two ominous road trips: to Nebraska (which comes the week after playing rival Michigan State) and then the finale at Ohio State.

5. Kansas: Charlie Weis inherits a two-win team and a schedule that, after the first two weeks, features 10 consecutive solid opponents that include a trip to face an underrated NIU team, at K-State, at OU, at Texas Tech and a finish in Morgantown. It also makes things seem more ominous for a team when you're the only real hapless program in a league where everyone else is dangerous as the Big 12. Just ask OU and Oklahoma State, who each were knocked off by Texas Tech and Iowa State last year. And then by adding in TCU and WVU, things only got rougher in the Big 12.

6. Ole Miss: If you only look at the first month of the season, things seem quite favorable for new coach Hugh Freeze. The Rebels have three straight home games, with a Week Three visit from Texas being the only one where they'll be an underdog. In Week Four, Ole Miss goes to a rebuilding Tulane program. That means before the end of the September, the Rebels should've surpassed their entire win total of the previous year, and that's really without having beaten anyone too imposing (assuming they are 3-1 with the lone loss against Texas.) But it's after that where things get nasty: the Rebels crack the top six on this list for this reason alone: they have four road games at Alabama; Arkansas, Georgia and LSU, probably the four most talented teams in the country's toughest league. Throw in games against Texas A&M, Auburn and Miss. State and it makes you think it's going to be another dismal fall for the Rebels.

7. Auburn: The Tigers open with one of the most explosive teams in the country, facing Clemson in Atlanta. Then visit Miss. State. Their conference schedule isn't as ominous as Ole Miss because at least Auburn gets to host LSU, Arkansas, Georgia. Of course, the Tigers do have to go visit their arch-rival Alabama.

8. Iowa State: Tulsa and at Iowa aren't easy matchups for the Cyclones to open the non-conference with. Aside from Kansas, which is sandwiched in between late games at Texas and against WVU, no other Big 12 team seems like it won't be a bowl contender in the league.

9. Cal: The Bears get seven home games, which is nice but they also have back-to-back road trips to Ohio State and USC in the opening month of the season. There is also a four-game stretch of Stanford, at Utah, Washington and Oregon and that comes right after a trip to Wazzu, which is going to be a handful for teams to prepare for this fall.

10. South Carolina: The SEC East teams typically have the easier road these days of the two sides of the country's top conference. The Gamecocks, though, get to go to LSU this fall, which is obviously no cupcake trip. The game with the Tigers also is sandwiched between games against Georgia and at Florida. South Carolina then finishes up at arch-rival Clemson this year.
 

Chamellion

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Knew that we had a tough schedule. To see it put like that though... Not exactly setting ourselves up for a run are we?

I do love to see good games though, so if given the choice, I'd take the more difficult schedule.
 

phork

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But but but but, we play cupcakes every year!

Says the Michigan fan whining about us playing AirForce.
 

DomeX2 eNVy

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Why do we have to go against arguably the two best QBs in college this year with so little experience in the backfield?

<a href="http://s1089.photobucket.com/albums/i346/NDABaer/?action=view&current=bear-covering-eyes.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1089.photobucket.com/albums/i346/NDABaer/bear-covering-eyes.jpg" border="0" alt="Photobucket"></a>
 

pumpdog20

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What a ridiculous list! You can't have a top 10 toughest schedule ranking without all 14 teams from the SEC being on it.
 

Irish Houstonian

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And, pure numbers don't do this year's schedule justice. Even the "hard-scheduling" teams alway know to schedule cupcakes in-between big games, and ND hasn't even done that.

ND has MI State, MI, Miami, Stanford, BYU, Oklahoma and Pitt all in a row.

No Troy, no College of Charleston, no Middle Tennessee State, no Akron, no Ohio, I could go on...

One thing civilians who never played college football don't realize is that it's more difficult by serveral orders of magnitude to "have a good game" week after week. Going undefeated almost always requires cupcakes you can beat when you're "off".
 
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rock_knutne

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IMO, this is ND's toughest schedule since Holtz was there........absolutely brutal!!
 

Black Irish

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Knew that we had a tough schedule. To see it put like that though... Not exactly setting ourselves up for a run are we?

I do love to see good games though, so if given the choice, I'd take the more difficult schedule.

I'll 2nd that
 

ACamp1900

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What a ridiculous list! You can't have a top 10 toughest schedule ranking without all 14 teams from the SEC being on it.

Indeed, because of course, no schedule is legit unless you refuse to leave your own region, even for bowl games, play Kentucky, Vandy, Tennesee and the Mississippi's and two bowl sub divison teams all in the same year...

;)
 

peoriairish

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ND has a harder overall schedule than an SEC team.

Fitting 14 teams into a top 10.

imgres-6.jpg
 

peoriairish

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I doesn’t matter, most SEC fans, B1G fans, and just plan ND hatter will never give ND credit for a hard schedule.

I've heard he makes some good, quality hats.

Fans of those conferences will give us credit if they actually know what they are taking about and can name the teams we play. The uneducated and Walmart fans of the SEC, B1G, Pac 12 etc will say our schedule is weak because they think we play Air Force, Army, Navy, and the Merchant Marines every year, 2x a year, but they don't realize their teams play worse teams than those such as Lafayette and Kent State, who are actually far worse than the service academies we play. It's simple, just stay above the slanderous nonsense thrown our way by the uneducated fans of the major conferences. There are many fans who know what they are talking about and agree that ours is the toughest this year, and many years.
 

mgriff

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I don't honestly think it's going to be easy to judge progress this year. Normally I'd be clamoring for Kelly to produce ten wins in his third year, but that is just ****ing brutal and we'll be lucky to get eight wins. I like to think we are awesome and get back to our barnstorming days, but this is just lunacy.
 
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