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Predicting the Winners of College Bowl Games

15
Vote

by user Leftyloon

Ever notice how bowl games seem to be such crap shoots? Take for example the case of the Cal Golden Bears circa 2004. They roll through the regular season with a 10-1 record losing only to eventual national champion USC by 6 points in Los Angeles. Besides USC, the only other close game they played was against Oregon, whom they beat by a single point. They throttled everyone else. Then in the Holiday Bowl against Texas Tech, a mediocre 7-4 team who lost to New Mexico, they get beat by 14 in a game that was not that close. Or how about 2005, when a 9-2 Auburn team whose only setback since Labor Day was a 3 point loss at Death Valley against LSU. In the Capital One Bowl against a 9-3 Wisconsin team that lose to Iowa (7-5) and Northwestern (7-5) and needed a miracle blocked punt to beat Minnesota (7-5) they manage only 10 points and lose 24-10.


Is this a common refrain or do bowl games follow some sort of pattern in their results? To find out I examined every college bowl game from the 2000-2001 bowl season to the recently completed 2005-2006 bowl season. I included 5 categories in the study. I looked at how often the team with the better overall record, better point differential, better conference record, better offense (points per game), and better defense (points allowed per game) pre bowl won the game. Here are the results for each season.

2000-01

Better Record: 15-6 (4 bowls matched teams with the same record) .714

Better Point Differential: 14-11 .560

Better Conference Record: 10-6 (9 with same record or Independent teams) .625

Better Offense: 15-10 .600

Better Defense: 13-12 .520


2001-02

Better Record: 13-12 .520

Better Point Differential: 16-9 .640

Better Conference Record: 9-11 (5 with same record or Independent teams) .450

Better Offense: 13-12 .520

Better Defense: 15-10 .600


2002-03

Better Record: 14-11 (3 bowls matched teams with the same record) .560

Better Point Differential: 15-13 .536

Better Conference Record: 9-10 (9 with same record or Independent teams) .474

Better Offense: 13-15 .464

Better Defense: 15-12 (1 bowl matched teams with the same average point allowed) .556


2003-04

Better Record: 14-8 (6 bowls matched teams with the same record) .636

Better Point Differential: 17-11 .607

Better Conference Record: 9-11 (8 with same record or Independent teams) .450

Better Offense: 13-15 .464

Better Defense: 18-10 .643


2004-05

Better Record: 9-7 (12 bowls matched teams with the same record) .563

Better Point Differential: 16-12 .571

Better Conference Record: 10-9 (9 with same record or Independent teams) .526

Better Offense: 14-14 .500

Better Defense: 16-12 .571


2005-06

Better Record: 11-7 (9 bowls matched teams with the same record) .611

Better Point Differential: 14-12 (1 bowl matched teams with same point differential) .538

Better Conference Record: 6-13 (8 with same record or Independent teams) .316

Better Offense: 13-14 .481

Better Defense: 16-11 .593


Total:

Better Record: 76-51 (34 bowls matched teams with the same record) .598

Better Point Differential: 92-68 (1 bowl matched teams with same point differential) .575

Better Conference Record: 53-60 (48 with same record or Independent teams) .469

Better Offense: 81-80 .503

Better Defense: 93-67 (1 bowl matched teams with the same average point allowed) .581

A few things. Its amazing how consistent most of these measures are. With the exception of 2000-01, the better offense has alternated winning slightly more than half and slightly less than half the time. The better record has been either the best predictor or second best predictor every year except for one (2001-02). It appears the bowl upsets mentioned above are relatively rare. The team with the superior record wins almost 60% of the time. These upsets simple stick out tin our minds more so than the games that play out like we expect. If you're predicting bowl games, and the team have the same record, err on the side of the better defense or the team with the better point differential. If you go with the better offense, you might as well flip a coin. If you go by better conference record, then your the guy book makers love. Speaking of which, look for a post next week analyzing the same thing, but this time looking at how bowl games play out against the spread.


Date

Fri 07/21/06, 6:17 pm EST


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DNLLegend
1228 days ago
Score 0+-
Interesting... any numbers for combining two measures? That is, when you have a team w/a better record and better defense, how high is the Win %?
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ChachiOSUDraft Pick
1228 days ago
Score 1+-
It's never enough for you is it DNL? Always wanting more. Geez!
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ChristofMVP
1228 days ago
Score 1+-
I am just curious: for the bowls with teams with the same record, what is the winning % of that sub-category based on Better Point Differential, Better Offense, and Better Defense?
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LeftyloonJV Squad
1228 days ago
Score 0+-
Good questions. I'll break those down sometime next week when I see how each category rates when predicting bowl games against the spread.
Permalink | Reply
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