What is an "Elite" College Football Team?
In case you missed it, there's a lively debate going on in the comments section to Kyle's post on Coach Richt getting slighted by Ron Deinhart. Part of the debate is about discipline. I'm not going to touch that one because a) a certain poster hasn't refuted my Charles Grant example and b)apparently thinks Odell Thurman is the only player who's ever gotten in trouble under Mark Richt and that Marvin Lewis must be a man of character (I guess because he's always there to throw someone's bail). But another more intriguing portion deals with whether or not the University of Georgia Bulldogs are an "elite" team. 34Hawk says no, pointing out that:
"They have never contended for a national championship during Richt's tenure. And one third place finish in 6 years, is not enough to qualify any team in any sport as elite in my opinion."
34Hawk's test for elite status is therefore a two step process: a team must have a) played for a National Championship in the past six years and b) finished 3rd or better in the country more than once in the past six years.
I thought I'd put this theory to the test. If my calculations are correct, eight teams have played in the BCS National Championship in the past six years: Florida (2006), LSU (2003), Miami (2001, 2002), Nebraska (2001), Southern Cal (2004, 2005), Oklahoma (2003, 2004), Texas (2005)and Ohio State (2002, 2006).
Of these, Florida also finished in the AP final top 3 twice (2006 and 2001), as did Ohio State (2002, 2006), Miami (2001, 2002) and LSU (2003, 2006). Only USC finished in the top 3 three times (2003, 2004 and 2005).
That means that five teams would qualify as "elite" under the 34Hawk Rule. However, this criteria is incomplete in my opinion. After all, during the 4 years when they weren't in the final top 3, Florida wasn't even in the top 15 once. That's not elite. It's actually quite pathetic given the athletes and resources at their disposal.
Miami hasn't finished in the top 10 since 2003. They didn't even make the top 25 last year and suffered a season of onfield failure and occasional embarrassment. If they're elite, then I'd rather not be.
That leaves three teams: LSU, Ohio State and Southern Cal. I think we can all agree that Southern Cal, easily the most consistent winner among the three over the past six years, is an elite program. Ohio State has played in the national championship game twice, winning once. They also finished 4th in the AP poll twice. LSU has a more spotty record (relatively speaking) finishing 6th, 7th, 16th and out of the top 25 in the four years they missed the top 3. LSU might also argue that they deserve some credit for winning the BCS Championship Game in a year when the AP ignored them in favor of the well-coifed "Cheaty" Petey Carroll (who may ultimately lose two of his three top 3 finishes to forfeits).
In other words, this method is ineffective because it doesn't reward consistency. It ignores it.
I think a better approach is to add the final AP rankings over the past six years (with a generic "30" used for those years where a team is unranked), then assign a bonus factor of, say, -1, for each BCS Championship. This would yield the following scores:
1)USC: 6.0
2)Texas: 6.0
3)Oklahoma: 8.3
4)LSU: 9.7
5)Ohio State: 10.8
6)Miami: 11.0
7)Georgia: 12.0
8)Michigan: 12.2
9)Florida: 15.7
10)Auburn: 16.5
11)Virginia Tech: 17.0
12)Boise State: 18.0
13)Louisville: 18.0
14)Tennessee: 19.5
15)Wisconsin: 21.5
16)TIE:West Virginia: 21.7
Florida State: 21.7
18)Notre Dame: 22.2

While Coach Tuberville may disagree with my method on soceolojical grounds, I intend to pin my ears back and forge ahead. No pun intended, Tommy.
Now, one might argue that some sort of weight should be assigned to recent success as opposed to more distant accomplishments. This would certainly hurt some of these teams and help others. But I think the above numbers are a good starting point. From these, I would argue that the top 10 teams are "elite". This definition would embrace a) every team to win an AP or BCS championship during the period, as well as b) every team that Kyle hates that has finished undefeated and gotten hosed despite it. This would also include two schools are neither of these things: Michigan and Georgia. Statistically, this would be less than 10% of the 117 D-1A teams, which I think is a good percentage so far as subjective cutoffs go.
Anybody got any better ideas?
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Comments
Interesting thought process
I think you make some great points in breaking down the numbers.
But...
I take exception with your "Cheaty" Petey Carroll reference.
While others may waste their time by keeping lists of supposed infractions, some that have never been substantiated, proven or let alone ever happened it takes the luster off of an otherwise great post.
I think we would all agree that the Bush Situation is a very big deal and that there could be some pretty tough penalties for Bush himself, though they are fairly meaningless at the end of the day, and possibly some penalties for SC, but that's hardly a Pete Carroll problem if he, the coaching staff or USC as a whole didn't know about it. So I guess I'm not sure how your reference fits the coach.
Otherwise your post is a great read and it makes some sense.
by Paragon SC on May 9, 2007 11:40 PM EDT 0 recs
Re: "cheaty" Petey
by MaconDawg on
May 10, 2007 9:51 AM EDT
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Cute...
But I like your style. ;-)
by Paragon SC on
May 10, 2007 12:22 PM EDT
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order of magnitude
Entreaties over spanakopita and a misplaced speaker-phone: trifling non-events. I think your best bet is lack of institutional control: they just can't stop scoring! (ba-dum-dum, try the shrimp, it's on special...)
by DC Trojan on
May 10, 2007 5:23 PM EDT
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Question:
Truthfully, I only ask because I noticed it in your response to 34hwwk's points, and I've seen it mentioned before a few times on the site. I've never seen the relevance of his religious faith and his football ability. As you obviously noticed, his faith did little to help the Dawgs against Tennessee this season when he prayed on field with the players instead of taking the time to coach them (which, I would not say was the direct cause of our loss, but I wondered at the time what value came from praying instead of coaching). In the same way, people who assume that his Christianity makes him somehow a better coach leave me perplexed. Do you only include Christian coaches in your "elite" coach decision? If so, any particular reason why beyond your own religious persuasion?
Please don't take this as a combative post, by the way. I well know that questions of a religious nature are often loaded, but this is meant truly because I wonder why and how that connection is made, and what justifies that consideration (such as the implication that Donnan or Goff were somehow less polished as coaches because they were not as outstatedly Christian). In other words this is not meant as an attack on your faith personally, but as a serious question as to why Richt's faith somehow qualifies him for his job more than it would, say, a highly moral and upstanding atheist.
by blackertai on May 10, 2007 4:45 AM EDT 0 recs
Fair enough
In that respect, someone who shares my religious faith and provides a good role model of how a Christian life should be lived, in addition to being a good football coach, seems ideal as someone to whom I may point when raising my son in the way that I believe he should go.
If Mark Richt were a morally upstanding atheist or Jew, he would, of course, still be a good man and a legitimate role model, but he would not seem to me to be so perfectly tailored as an example, in the same way that Mark Richt would be an equally good coach and person if he were coaching at a rival school, but I would have a hard time pointing at a rival coach as a role model when I am trying to raise my son to share my team loyalty as well as my religious faith.
I appreciate the question and I hope I have answered it adequately. If not, please feel free to ask a clarifying follow-up question, which I will do my best to address.
by T Kyle King on May 10, 2007 7:38 AM EDT 0 recs
That's a plenty good answer
by blackertai on
May 10, 2007 12:35 PM EDT
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Public piety
Mindful that I am not to be the judge of anyone's faith, observable data suggest that Richt's Christianity in practice is a simple one (usually the best kind, although often the most difficult). I have no reason to think that he expects God to win football games for him. Does is it make him a better coach? I don't know. I do know that it can make anyone better at anything one does (but we'd have to look at what "better" means). The same is true for Judaism and Buddhism (and probably others).
Again, by my limited observation, there's no reason to think that Richt wields his religion like a sword, cleaving the world into "the saved" over here and "the damned" over there. As far as I can tell, Richt believes that he is to let God guide his thoughts, words, and actions, not expect God to arrange the world around him as a reward or convenience. As long as that's the case, then his calling himself Christian is reassuring, since it summarizes a set of values that I understand and admire.
And, by the way, if Richt were a pious Jew or Buddhist, not only would I be just as reassured, but his religious beliefs would get so much more press than his Christianity does, if only for the novelty.
Hmm... I can see it now: pre-game, just before what I call "The Chill-Bump Show", the crowd grows silent; a solitary chime rings and as it resonates, Richt appears on the giant scoreboard, eyes closed and wearing a look of bliss and serenity; he says calmly, "The jewel is in the lotus;" The crowd responds "Om Mani Padme Hum", gradually fading on the last consonant with the still-resonating chime. Cue the Munson recording and the highlight clips. You know the rest.
by NCT on May 10, 2007 8:53 AM EDT 0 recs
Richt's faith... and others
Also, I don't know that being a Christian makes him an "elite" coach in the X & O's or W-L's areas, but I do believe it CAN make him a better person. Of course, as you stated, this is because of my personal persuasion.
by fotodog on May 10, 2007 9:28 AM EDT 0 recs
Dan Hawkins
by 34hawk on
May 10, 2007 10:20 AM EDT
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Refreshing the commenter's memory
On one occasion, I noted the "sly mockery" of Coach Hawkins by another weblogger.
On one occasion, I observed that it would be interesting to see Boise State play Colorado now that Coach Hawkins, who previously coached the former, is the coach of the latter. On another occasion, I mentioned that Coach Hawkins left a successful W.A.C. team to coach a Big 12 team in distress.
On one occasion, I stated that Colorado's non-conference game against Arizona State would be worth watching. On three other occasions, I declared that Colorado-Colorado State was among the national games of interest but that Baylor-Colorado and Colorado-Texas Tech were the national games of disinterest..
On two occasions, I noted Coach Hawkins's penchant for strange quotations. The first odd line concerned whether Thomas Edison would have taken a knee. The second dealt with his willingness to play a two-quarter game. Neither seems directly related to his religious faith.
On one occasion, I referred to Coach Hawkins's lack of offensive success against S.E.C. opponents.
On two occasions, I mentioned Coach Hawkins's current and former teams when explaining my BlogPoll ballot.
On two occasions, I made mention of Coach Hawkins while previewing the Georgia-Colorado game. On another occasion, I made mention of Coach Hawkins while reporting on the outcome of the Georgia-Colorado game. Although I once again cited other sources (including Every Day Should Be Saturday and Pat Forde) regarding Coach Hawkins's use of numerous motivational techniques, I also praised Coach Hawkins's coaching abilities repeatedly. In addition, I cited his coaching ability as an example in another instance and referred to his team's improvement in yet another.
I believe that I might fairly be accused of having "poked fun at Dan Hawkins' spirituality" in a single instance. On that occasion, I wrote:
In that passage, I linked to the outside sources cited and linked to above, which had more to do with "his grab-bag philosophy" and "Star Wars" references than with the fundamental tenets of Buddhism. The only mention of any religious faith was Orson's reference to "bits of pop Zen."
In that same posting, I also wrote:
This should have come as no surprise. In preparation for Boise State's season-opening trip to the Classic City, Coach Hawkins spent the entirety of the summer of 2005 reviewing Georgia game film. He probably has a more intimate knowledge of the Bulldogs' tendencies than some S.E.C. coaches have.
Add to that the fact that Coach Hawkins no doubt had redemption on his mind, then throw in the pertinent detail that Colorado has shown steady improvement in each of the Buffaloes' four losses, and it becomes clear, in retrospect, that the Red and Black should have been ready for as good a game as they got.
In response to my praise for Coach Hawkins, 34hawk offered this retort:
I leave to the reasoned and informed judgment of my readers the determination whether I am among those who "respect other faith based coaching approaches" or whether I am among those "others" who "clearly do not."
by T Kyle King on
May 11, 2007 7:19 AM EDT
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You've said many nice things
And yet can you imagine what would happen if someone wrote of Mark Richt: "We like to make fun of his born again Christian piety, but he designed a plan of attack that effectively used the opponents' own strengths against them."
Why would anyone want to make fun of Mark Richt's faith? He is, by all accounts, a good and sincere man, and not the kind of notorious and obvious hypocrite that invites ridicule. By the same token, why would anyone want to make fun of Dan Hawkins beliefs? The courtesy should be a two way street, and unfortunately, it is not.
by 34hawk on
May 11, 2007 8:53 AM EDT
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Fair enough
I was trying to relate Dan Hawkins's Eastern philosophy to his martial arts-style use of an opponent's strength again him, but you are quite right that I could and should have made this connection without belitting his views, which, however unconventional, are entitled to respect.
Thank you, 34hawk. You have given me food for thought and I will not hereafter demean Coach Hawkins for his faith, no matter how much I may disagree with it.
by T Kyle King on
May 11, 2007 3:15 PM EDT
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Oops!
My bad.
by T Kyle King on
May 11, 2007 3:17 PM EDT
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Likewise
As to the "grab-bag philosophy" characterization I agree with it in a literal sense without attaching any pejorative meaning. Most faith traditions, including my own, can be characterized as a "grab-bag" if one examines them closely.
by 34hawk on
May 11, 2007 4:00 PM EDT
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Always the contarian
In high school, the top 10% were tapped for National Honor Society. In Law School the top 10% made Order of the Coif. (I was tapped for NHS and told them to go to heck and if you mention my name and Order of the Coif in the same breath you will draw loud gaffaws and risk being struck dead on the spot).
So it seems that the top 10% of schools would be "elite". 119 Div I school - 10% is 11.9 schools... lets call it an even dozen.
Being elite is not only a matter of numbers. Left out of the list above is Penn State. Is there anyone who can really argue that Penn State is not perceived as an 'elite program'?
Similiarly for reasons that have been hashed out ad nauseum in these pages, so too is Notre Dame an elite program.
Not to say that numbers have NO role in determination of 'elite programs' - USC has to be on the list, as does Ohio State -- and given more than a decade of top of the heap or nearly so, Florida is a no-brainer.
5 spots filled - 7 to go.
Anyone really arguing with Texas, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Michigan? Tradition has to be a part of this. The designation 'elite' should reflect a longer history and a broader perspective than 6 years.
Alabama's search for a coach made front page news (at least front page of sports section) all over the country - so 'Bama has to be on the list.
The first 10 were easy. The remaining two spots is when it gets hairy. FSU and Miami based on 20++ years of excellence both make a good claim - but 3 teams from Florida are too many -- both field teams that have a criminal element. Bobby Bowden has been at FSU forever - so FSU makes the list and Miami is out.
Last one -- Auburn doesn't make the list because most casual football fans probably don't know where Auburn is -- LSU doesn't make the list because Louisiana is known for cajun cooking and brothels, not football. Boise State doesn't make the list because... blue turf says 'gimmick' and not 'elite'. Tennessee is bourbon, Wisconsin is cheese, Louisville is baseball bats and horses. West Virginia - 2 words: Jed Clampett. Va. Tech - nobody knew you played football until 7 years ago.
That leaves one school whose name is instantly recognizable, even by the most casual fan. It is located in a region of the country known for its love of football. It has the best mascot in the country; a slogan known even in college football wastelands; it is an 'elite program' for the same reasons that Penn State and Notre Dame are --- just because it is. Georgia makes the list (but just barely).
To recap (in no particular order):
Penn State
Notre Dame
USC
Ohio State
Florida
Nebraska
Texas
Oklahoma
Michigan
Alabama
FSU
Georgia
by Blogger who came in from the cold on May 10, 2007 12:37 PM EDT 0 recs
Nicely done
by 34hawk on May 10, 2007 1:19 PM EDT 0 recs
thanks ... but
by Blogger who came in from the cold on
May 10, 2007 2:11 PM EDT
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I agree with your sentiments...
by 34hawk on
May 10, 2007 2:24 PM EDT
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34hawk, I don't follow
So, you agree we have an elite quality tradition (Uga the mascot, our fans, our slogan being recognized throughout college football), and you agree we've got the wins, but whenever someone brings up just one side of this argument you defer to the other as evidence for our not being elite. Well, here are both sides presented together. We've got the wins (more than Stoops and slightly less than Carrol), we've got the tradition, what more do you want? It took Brown at Texas more than 6 years to win his first championship, but would anyone have denied that Texas was one of the elite prior to winning the title in 2006? I doubt it. They might have laughed at Brown's inability to beat Stoops, but Texas was still a force to be reckoned with (ask Michigan's defense in the Rose Bowl from 2005).
by blackertai on
May 10, 2007 5:17 PM EDT
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Winning it all
by 34hawk on
May 10, 2007 6:54 PM EDT
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Again...?
by blackertai on May 10, 2007 10:12 PM EDT 0 recs
-1 for a BCS Championship?
by Ahab on May 11, 2007 11:37 AM EDT 0 recs
-1 adjustment
Though I think it's a valid criticism, and one which I'm surprised no one has made earlier. This system is designed to reward consistentcy over 1 stellar performance. That's why Florida is ranked so low. While they deserve a lot of credit for their outstanding season last year, we can't reasonably pretend the Zook years never happened. Only Orson Swindle can plausibly do that.
by MaconDawg on
May 14, 2007 9:25 AM EDT
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