Zurp;1344147; said:
I would say that you ought to try putting more emphasis on wins and losses, and who those wins and loses were against, rather than statistics. In my mind, an 8-4 team that averaged 550 yards on offense a game should be ranked lower than an 11-1 team that averaged 290 yards on offense. But, like I said, nice work. I'll check it out after this weekend's games and see if the rankings have been updated.
hmmm... not sure i completely agree with that. W/L weight is obviously the most important statistic. but who the win or loss is to can be just as important. lets say team a plays texas, oklahoma, usc, florida and bama back to back going 3-2. they average 300yrds, give up 260, and looses by an average score of 4.5 points per game wining by an average of 11.5. now, lets say team b plays air force, army, navy, ntre ame, and washington going 5-0. they put up 500 yrs per game, gave up 120 and win by an average score of 30 points. could just be me, but i personally have a hard time thinking team b should get more points for its quality of work over those 5 games than team a.
this is my take. each team should be given a weight (a power rating as it were). while this rating would not be solely measured by its statistics they certainly need to be calculated into the formula. yrds allowed, points allowed, turnover margin, offense, special teams etc... these values obviously would fluctuate throughout the year and a team would gain or loose weight based not only upon their performance, but who their performance was against. in every game a team plays a certain number of points would be available based upon the weight of both teams. each "stat" in the formula would provide a team with either positive or negative points based upon performance. obviously W/L would be the highest. but performance comparatively to the other team would also be measured. the score available and each individual stat such as yrds allowed and score would provide either positive or negative points to the total value of your win.
sounds confusing i know but for example. tOSU vrs. USC. for USC tOSU is ranked #10 in the nation and for simplicity sake we will say it would be worth 109 points possible (max). 80% of those points are given if USC wins. however, they also get additional points for the various statistics in the game. score might be worth 5% of the total, turnovers 5%, yrds allowed 4%, yrds gained 4%, etc...
this would provide a measurable value to dominating a team but not overly reward a team for hanging 70 on a directional U.
for example if the full value of beating tOSU and getting full % points in every category is worth 110 points, doing the exact same thing against say duke would net a max of 15 points. so the potential value for points scored alone against tOSU might be 1-4 points in value where the value against duke would be .2 - 1.4. in this scenario beating tOSU by 10 might actually be worth more than hanging 80 on duke. in fact, scoring that many points on anyone would have little value as there is a point cap for each category. once you have scored enough points to get the max allowable points, no matter how many more you score, the # of points earned for that statistic is unchanged. so while beating duke by 3 might net florida .2 points for that stat. beating duke by 20 or 120 would give the same 1.4 points.
BB73;1344179; said:
I'm not too keen on the idea of using statistical categories to rank teams. It would provide an incentive for teams to rack up yards, etc. in addition to just winning games, and could have a negative impact on the way games are played.
It's interesting stiff, but I'd really dislike any such system being used for BCS rankings.
but didn't that happen before the bcs though? in fact, aren't the voters far more swayed by huge point totals and offensive statistics than computers? could be me, but all i hear this time of year is how teams are trying to put up sexy wins for the "voters". i never hear anyone say they are trying to impress the computers. could be that they don't understand how the computers work. but i suspect you have a better chance of limiting the value placed on pounding a weak school into oblivion with a mathematical formula than with a person who only catches maybe 3% of the games and relies on sportscenter highlights to determine how they rank the top 25.