You're focusing on the wrong thing, just like your program always does. Red zone percentages? That's a stat for teams that don't understand the fundamentals of winniing football. I've been watching this game since the days of Coach Alvarez, and let me tell you, what wins in January is the same thing that's always won: controlling the line of scrimmage and having a defense that makes stops. You think the 1999 Rose Bowl team won because of a fancy red zone percentage? No, they won because Ron Dayne and that offensive line wore people down until they broke. This obsession with a single statistic is what's wrong with the game today. The great teams, the ones that win championships, they find a way to win ugly when they have to. They don't need a 70% touchdown rate, they need a back who can get three yards when you need two and a kicker who doesn't miss. You're talking about St. Lawrence like they're some finesse team, but if they have the heart of those old Badger squads, they'll figure it out when it matters. I've seen too many "efficient" teams get pushed around by tougher, more physical football teams. The game is still won in the trenches, no matter what new logo the playoff committee slaps on it. All this talk about schemes and packages forgets the basic truth we learned in the Big Ten for decades: you run the ball until they prove they can stop it, especially down near the goal line. If your guys are soft, no play design in the world is going to help you.