thebigabd
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The following breakdown is courtesy of Mike Noteware of Oklahoma State. These averages are as of Oct. 15, 2009.
1.) OSU
2.) Colorado
3.) Iowa State
4.) Oklahoma
5.) Missouri
6.) Texas A&M
7.) Baylor
8.) Kansas
9.) Kansas State
10.) Texas
11.) Nebraska
12.) Texas Tech
The "experience" category basically is the average number of years the members of the team have been playing (i.e. A senior is given a 3, a junior a 2, a sophomore a 1 and a freshman a 0). The findings did not take into account redshirt years, and it's obviously not based on Division I experience, since a juco transfer would be assigned a 2 just like a third-year junior. Missouri's Tyler Stone is the youngest player in the Big 12 (born Sept. 8, 1991), while Brady Morningstar of Kansas is the oldest (born Jan. 23, 1986).
You can see the chart from this link, about midway down...
http://www.cubuffs.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_LANG=C&DB_OEM_ID=600&atclid=204834385
1.) OSU
2.) Colorado
3.) Iowa State
4.) Oklahoma
5.) Missouri
6.) Texas A&M
7.) Baylor
8.) Kansas
9.) Kansas State
10.) Texas
11.) Nebraska
12.) Texas Tech
The "experience" category basically is the average number of years the members of the team have been playing (i.e. A senior is given a 3, a junior a 2, a sophomore a 1 and a freshman a 0). The findings did not take into account redshirt years, and it's obviously not based on Division I experience, since a juco transfer would be assigned a 2 just like a third-year junior. Missouri's Tyler Stone is the youngest player in the Big 12 (born Sept. 8, 1991), while Brady Morningstar of Kansas is the oldest (born Jan. 23, 1986).
You can see the chart from this link, about midway down...
http://www.cubuffs.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_LANG=C&DB_OEM_ID=600&atclid=204834385