A writer on this site recently wrote "most Big Ten point spreads are typically between 3 and 7 points." Of course, a writer isn't a reporter until they check their facts. And that statement is not a fact. In 2021, 23 of 63 conference games (36.5 percent) were decided by one score, and only 20 of those (31.7 percent) featured a point spread of 3 to 7 points.
In short, expect about one-third of a team's conference games (three of nine) to be decided by one score or less.
Anyway, it's interesting to note how other teams did in one-score games, given that Nebraska's claim of "being close" is supposed to translate into a better record next year. The converse: if a team excelled in one-score games, that team is most vulnerable to a regression to the mean next year. In most cases, teams broke even or came close. There are four notable exceptions, two at the top of the list and two at the bottom.
Big Ten one-score game records, teams that played at least four of them, or almost half of the nine conference tilts:
In short, expect about one-third of a team's conference games (three of nine) to be decided by one score or less.
Anyway, it's interesting to note how other teams did in one-score games, given that Nebraska's claim of "being close" is supposed to translate into a better record next year. The converse: if a team excelled in one-score games, that team is most vulnerable to a regression to the mean next year. In most cases, teams broke even or came close. There are four notable exceptions, two at the top of the list and two at the bottom.
Big Ten one-score game records, teams that played at least four of them, or almost half of the nine conference tilts:
- Iowa 4-0
- MSU 4-0
- Michigan 3-1
- Illinois 3-3
- Minnesota 2-2
- Penn State 1-4
- Nebraska 0-7
- Indiana 0-2
- Maryland 2-0
- Northwestern 0-1
- Ohio State 0-0
- Purdue 2-1
- Rutgers 1-1
- Wisconsin 1-1