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Inroducing...The Pythagenmelt Rankings

11
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by Leftyloon

The goal of every statistical analysis in sports is to find out how 'good' a team really is. Many formulas exist to rank teams, and now I am throwing my hat into that ring. I would like to reveal to you I like to call the Pythagenmelt rankings. While it may sound like some sort of grease fest you are likely to be served at Carl's Jr., it is actually a college football power ranking system.

It is basically, the Pythagorean Theorem with schedule strength adjustments (and a few other minor adjustments). It is displayed like a team's winning percentage. For example, a team with a Pythagenmelt rating of .500 is an average team. This season, beginning with the first week in October (after most teams have played 4 or 5 games), I will be posting the Pythagenmelt rankings of the current season here at Statistically Speaking on a bi-weekly basis.

However, as a little off season exercise, I calculated the Pythagenmelt rankings for all 119 teams from last season (before the bowls) to get a good idea of how the ratings would work. I am pretty satisfied with the results. Below you will find the rankings for every team by conference, with a national rank in parentheses. A short commentary will follow each conference, listing some observations I found while doing the rankings. I invite you to join the discussion in the comments section with feedback and/or suggestions. One final note, the rankings only include games against Division IA foes. All games against other competition are excluded.

Image:acc.jpg No real surprises here in the ACC. I don't think most people believe that Wake Forest and Georgia Tech were the best teams in the ACC last season.

Image:bee.jpg The one team that jumps out here is the Cincinnati Bearcats. Consider this: Of their five losses last season, four came to Ohio State (Pythagenmelt #1), Louisville (#4), Virginia Tech (#6), and West Virginia (#8) all on the road. While their head coach, Mark Dantonio, made what may end up being a lateral move to Michigan State, they nabbed one of the lesser-known big time coaches in Brian Kelly from Central Michigan. Fresh off a MAC Championship in his third year at Central Michigan, Kelly, like Bobby Petrino at Louisville is a great hire to take this program to the next level. He also won two national titles at Division II Grand Valley State. This year they drop the Buckeyes and Hokies from the non-conference slate and get both Louisville and West Virginia at home. I'm not saying they will win the Big East, but keep your eye on them.

Image:b10.jpg Remember,these are pre-bowl rankings, so the debacle in the desert is not included for Ohio State. Minnesota was much better than their record indicated in Glen Mason's final season. Methinks the Gopher faithful will find out how good of a coach Mason was very soon.

Image:b12.jpg Could Texas Tech fall to fifth place in the Big 12 South in 2007? Performance-wise, they were already there in 2006.

Image:pac10.jpg Despite the loss to UCLA, the Trojans still finished #3 overall. The reason? They dominated Arkansas (#15), Cal (#17), Notre Dame (#20), Nebraska (#25), and Oregon (#38).

Image:sec.jpg The best conference by far in 2006. Seven teams finished in the top 30, and the worst team in the conference finished #79. I was surprised by the Vols high ranking. The SEC East will be a bear in 2007, with Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, and Tennessee all harboring realistic hopes of taking the crown. Don't be surprised in Phil Fulmer is in Atlanta in early December for the second time in four seasons.

Image:indep.jpg Notre Dame was pretty good. Army and Temple were very bad. Navy was solid. groundbreaking stuff.

Image:mwc.jpg At the top the Mountain West was a BCS-caliber league. Elsewhere...Not so much. BYU is actually the highest ranking mid-major from last season. And that's before their dominating bowl win over a solid Oregon team.

Image:wac.jpg In you were wondering how Boise was ranked behind BYU, a fellow mid-major with two losses, have a look at all the teams below Nevada. Three WAC school finished 109th or worse, and only a third of the league had a Pythagenmelt winning percentage greater than .500.

Image:cusa.jpg Not a lot to say here. The best team won the league and gave a pretty good SEC team all they could handle in the bowl.

Image:mac.jpg Not a banner year for the MAC as only Central Michigan finishes with a winning Pythagenmelt winning percentage.

Image:sunbelt.jpg Once again the weakest of all the conferences. Louisiana-Monroe had some hard luck last season. Five of their 8 losses were by a combined 15 points, including a pair of two-point losses to Kansas (#52) and Kentucky (#54).

For more stat-intensive articles, check out http://leftyloon.blogspot.com/ And be sure to join the predictomatic contest


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
Behbigben15All-Star
848 days ago
Score 0+-
I made that same mistake, when I tried putting in a picture I did it wrong, and the example picture just popped up.
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Davis21wylieMVP
848 days ago
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I love it, Lefty, even if it does underrate Tech's great season a year ago... :)
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RynoWaterboy
848 days ago
Score 1+-
Notre Dame were total frauds last year. This system gives them a top twenty ranking based on wins against Stanford, North Carolina, Army, Navy...etc Every ranked opponent they played, they lost.
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LeftyloonJV Squad
848 days ago
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I definitely agree they were overrated and did not belong in the BCS. However, #20 seems about right. Remember they beat a good GT team, whipped Penn St, and beat a solid UCLA team too.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
848 days ago
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Hmmm - VPI at #6? How do you explain them getting pounded by #19 Boston College, drilled by #32 Georgia Tech and collapse against #29 Georgia? Keep working.
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LeftyloonJV Squad
848 days ago
Score 1+-
Unfortunately, the transitive property does not apply to sports. Case in point. Louisville beat West Virginia. West Virginia beat Rutgers. Rutgers beat Louisville. Witthout looking at the rest of each team's schedule and results, it would be impossible to differentiate between them. BC, GT, and Ga were all better than VT on the days they played them. However, college football teams also play 11-12 other games. BC lost to Wake 21-14, while VT creamed them 27-6. BC lost to NC St and Miami (who VT also beat). GT also lost to Wake and were destroyed by Clemson, who VT beat handily. Georgia lost to Vandy and Kentucky and barely held off some pretty bad teams (Colorado, Mississippi, and Mississippi State).
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