these data do not include the 2019 season
I defined an elite season as minimum finishing in the top 10 or a NY6 bowl
Out last elite season was in 2001
Listed is what other blue blood programs have accomplished since that time (2001)
Texas - 7 top 10s, 5 major bowls, 1 nat title
USC - 9 top 10s, 9 major bowls, 2 nat titles
Alabama - 12 top 10s, 9 major bowls, 5 nat titles
Michigan - 5 top 10s, 6 major bowls
OSU - 15 top 10s, 14 major bowls, 2 nat titles
ND - 3 top 10s, 5 major bowls
OU - 11 top 10s, 13 major bowls
Penn State - 5 top 10s, 4 major bowls
Nebraska is the only program without an elite season in the past 5 years
Nebraska is the only program without an elite season in the past 10 years
Nebraska is the only program without an elite season in the past 15 years
when it comes to blue bloods and winning we hear things are cyclical quite often
List of longest streaks (cycles) without a top ten finish or major bowl appearance by a blue blood (+ Penn State)
1960 - current
Michigan - 4 years
Alabama - 5 years
OSU - 6 years
USC - 7 years
ND - 7 years
Texas - 8 years
PSU - 8 years
OU - 12 years
Nebraska - 17 years and counting
we are hoping that Frost gets us back to that elite status ... it didn't take very long for other blue bloods when they got their coach
Blue Blood programs and time to elite status. In parenthesis is the number of wins the program had in the 3 years prior to being hired. Jury is out for some - Harbaugh and Herman. Urban took over a team already performing at an elite level so I did not include him. Kept the list to the 90s onward.
Of the 10 coaches listed (not including Frost)
6/10 - elite season in year 2
9-10/10 - elite season by year 3 - can debate Mack Brown
6/9 had won a national title by yr 3 (excluded Herman)
7/9 had played for a national title (above 6 + Kelly)
Blue Blood + Great Coach = elite program by years 2-3 (modern era)
Mack Brown - yr 3 - 7 -1 in conference top 15 -- yr 4 top 10 - (22 combined wins the 3 yrs prior)
Tom Herman - year 2 NY6 win -- (16 wins 3 yrs prior)
Pete Carrol - year 2 top 5 -- Nat Title yrs 3-4 -- (19 wins the prior 3 yrs)
Lloyd Carr - year 3 nat title (25 wins prior 3 years)
Jim Harbaugh - year 2 - top 10 + major bowl (20 wins the prior 3 years)
Jim Tressel - year 2 nat title (25 wins the prior 3 years)
Bob Stoops - year 2 - nat title (12 wins the prior 3 years)
Lou Holtz - year 3 national title (19 wins the prior 3 years)
Brian Kelly - year 3 nat title game (16 wins the prior 3 years)
Nick Saban - year 2 ranked 6th - year 3 nat title (22 wins the prior 3 years)
Scott Frost - ????????????? (19 wins the prior 3 years)
Not a blue blood, and a bit of a micro versus macro approach, but what about Baylor and former AAC conference winner Matt Rhule?
The same Baylor of the 63% winning percentage from 2008-2017 and four ranked finishes higher than a single one Nebraska has had since 2001 (all since 2011) and the same Matt Rhule who took over a 7-win team, but went 8-17 in his first two years.
Pretty solid comp between that and Nebraska's 65% winning percentage over the previous decade and its AAC winning coach who took over a 4-win team and has gone 9-15 in two seasons, no?
Props to Rhule for winning a bowl game in year 2, which Frost failed to do, and for going to a NY6 bowl game in year 3, which Frost isn't projected to do, but it's crazy that Frost is considered dead in the water by some after year 2 despite having more wins and a better winning percentage than Rhule through two years after taking over a program with 10 fewer wins than Baylor over the previous five years.