
1. Beaver Stadium (Penn State): 107,282
2. Michigan Stadium: 106,201 (After 2009 renovations, will be biggest stadium)
3. The Horseshoe (Ohio State): 102,329
This is important because home field advantage is huge in college football. Good teams don't lose at home.

So this brings us to the true Big 10 battle. It comes down to Ohio State v Penn State.

We will really learn about Ohio State after their second game. Playing USC at home is a revenge game and with a win, it will place them in the driver's seat for the National Championship game. Aside from USC and possibly Penn State, OSU will be favored and will win all their other games. Ohio State does not have a difficult schedule as they only have 4 true road games. The road games at Indiana and Purdue will be like a practice and unless Michigan improves its offense, defense, special teams, and even the water boy, OSU will dominate the Wolverines. The toughest road opponent is Penn State. By Nov. 7th, Pryor will be well on his way into the season as a starter. Pryor's throwing accuracy has been questioned all last season and this is the season to prove all the doubters wrong. This will be a challenge because OSU is very thin at WRs and will certainly miss the strength of Beanie Wells. OSU's strong defensive line and a very experienced secondary will take OSU to the top. If this team can come together quickly, they will win the Big 10.

Everyone is screaming that PSU lost its trio of awesome receivers. The fact is they did; however, no one is talking about their replacements. All the receivers are over 6 foot, and though not as fast as D. Williams, they can still run and catch with the best of them. Bracket is 6-6, Moye 6-5, Powell, 6-1, AJ Price 6-4, and Zug is 6-2. Not to mention, their starting and back-up TEs are absolutely amazing. The running back tandem of Royster and Green will rack up monstrous numbers. Where PSU may fall is there lack of depth at secondary. The secondary got torched against USC last year and they all graduated or moved on. In some respects, that could be a good thing. There are a lot of new faces in the secondary, but with Penn State's very easy schedule, there is plenty of time to develop. Again, PSU will be strong on both the O and D lines. Also, they don't call PSU "Linebacker U" for nothing. They are very deep in that position and everyone aside from opponents is anticipating Lee's return. Looking at PSU's schedule and factoring their weakness at secondary, they should still go undefeated at least until Nov. 7 because, aside from Illinois, all the other teams PSU plays are weak at throwing which will give the Lions an advantage.
Big 10 Champs: PSU and OSU are co-champs (they will both somehow lose 1 conference game)*
*If you have the dying urge to make a bet and pick one, go with PSU, they have a much softer schedule and their skill players are better than OSUs. PSU will also beat OSU in Happy Valley.
Next Up: The long lost ACC
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