At the same time you cannot be out there telling me the Honda Civic you are selling is gonna turn into a Lexus or a Tesla. If you believe that you will be in for a huge disappointment.
Nothing wrong with expectations, as long as you can accept the pain that unreasonable expectations are going to bring.
I get where Pollard is coming from on this, if he is out there saying the program should win 9 or 10 on a consistent basis HCPR should have been axed after last year.
Like it or not sometimes people need to get a reality check. And the reality its Ames Iowa, not Ames Texas, not Ames California, not Ames Florida. Its the northern most school in a conference that has 6 of its 10 members located in or on the border of the largest high school football factory in the country. It has no true rival within its conference. The closest major conference schools are 3 Big Ten schools sitting to its West, East and North.
It plays in a state with a small population, and limited division 1 talent which it shares with a Big Ten affiliated university that has had moderate success over the year. Look on a map, I would bet that aside from WV, Iowa State is the only school in the nation where we do not have a conference affiliated school on the border of our state. (Talking major conferences ) How F'd up is that? I mean you trying to go into these states to recruiting knowing if they come to ISU they will never play against schools they are familiar with.
It hot and humid in the summer, its cold snowy and windy in the winter. And lately it seems to flood every other year
So tell me again what kind of advantages ISU has so it can consistently win 9 games a season year in and year out? I am all ears. Because 85% of the programs in the country do not win 9 games a year, year in and year out.
This is the most accurate assessment of the reality of Iowa State football that I have read on this site in a long time. The #1 problem that Iowa State football has is the lack of local talent, period. If you have never lived outside the state of Iowa in a southern state, you just can't grasp the talent difference. Oklahoma high school football is night and day vs. Iowa high school football. The commitment to football here is in on a whole different level than in Iowa. Texas high school football is then night and day vs. Oklahoma. The lack of local talent to draw from in Iowa, and the small population base, is just a very tough thing to overcome.
Not saying that Iowa State can't be a consistently competitive program, but my goal for ISU every year is bowl eligibility. If we can consistently play in bowl games, we stay relevant.