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Checkdowns: FCS ratings and the FCS playoffs

In connection with calculating my college football SRS ratings at the FBS level, I also calculate them at the FCS level but rarely publish them. But with the FCS playoffs underway, I figured, why not? Here are the FCS ratings as of November 25th, 2012:

RkTeamGMOVSOSSRSRECTeam
1North Dakota St1118.923.542.410-1North Dakota St
2Sam Houston St111919.838.88-3Sam Houston St
3NW Missouri St1322.115.93810-3NW Missouri St
4Montana St1114.521.736.210-1Montana St
5Minn St-Mankato1217.418.335.712-0Minn St-Mankato
6Minnesota-Duluth1220.315.435.610-2Minnesota-Duluth
7South Dakota St129.325.7359-3South Dakota St
8Georgia Southern1111.522.834.28-3Georgia Southern
9Missouri Western1318.614.833.312-1Missouri Western
10Cal Poly SLO1113.22033.29-2Cal Poly SLO
11Eastern Washington118.124.732.99-2Eastern Washington
12Northern Iowa116.226.432.75-6Northern Iowa
13Central Arkansas1112.419.431.89-2Central Arkansas
14Indiana St117.422.6307-4Indiana St
15Illinois St115.724.129.88-3Illinois St
16Towson116.323.529.87-4Towson
17Wofford1110.41929.48-3Wofford
18Ashland12227.329.211-1Ashland
19Eastern Kentucky1110.11929.28-3Eastern Kentucky
20Southern Illinois112.526.629.16-5Southern Illinois
21Youngstown St114.224.528.77-4Youngstown St
22Henderson St1123.74.528.210-1Henderson St
23Appalachian St11424.128.18-3Appalachian St
24Old Dominion1113.814.328.110-1Old Dominion
25McNeese St118.91927.97-4McNeese St
26Sioux Falls1110.717.227.99-2Sioux Falls
27Winona St119.91827.99-2Winona St
28Chattanooga115.622.227.86-5Chattanooga
29Stony Brook1217.79.827.410-2Stony Brook
30Villanova128.518.927.48-4Villanova
31Northern Arizona117.119.9278-3Northern Arizona
32Harvard1017.39.126.48-2Harvard
33Samford114.221.425.67-4Samford
34Southern Utah11-2.127.725.65-6Southern Utah
35Richmond1110.415.125.48-3Richmond
36Tennessee-Martin114.42125.48-3Tennessee-Martin
37West Texas A&M1318.36.524.811-2West Texas A&M
38Michigan Tech1013.111.724.87-3Michigan Tech
39Montana112.921.624.55-6Montana
40Eastern Illinois121.123.224.37-5Eastern Illinois
41Missouri St11-7.531.624.23-8Missouri St
42St Cloud St117.416.6247-4St Cloud St
43Coastal Carolina128.215.8248-4Coastal Carolina
44The Citadel112.820.623.47-4The Citadel
45James Madison115.817.523.37-4James Madison
46New Hampshire116.916.323.28-3New Hampshire
47Albany NY1111.411.723.19-2Albany NY
48Stephen F. Austin110.821.722.65-6Stephen F. Austin
49Murray St11-123.522.55-6Murray St
50North Dakota11-123.522.55-6North Dakota
51Bemidji St104.417.822.26-4Bemidji St
52Wayne St NE114.517.722.26-5Wayne St NE
53Jacksonville St11-2.924.922.16-5Jacksonville St
54Harding1114.97.222.19-2Harding
55Tennessee St11616228-3Tennessee St
56UC-Davis11-224224-7UC-Davis
57Sacramento St11-0.222.2226-5Sacramento St
58Bethune-Cookman129.812.121.89-3Bethune-Cookman
59Portland St11-2.32421.73-8Portland St
60Central Missouri106.514.921.46-4Central Missouri
61Pittsburg St10813.321.27-3Pittsburg St
62Maine113.917.321.15-6Maine
63Grand Valley St111011.121.18-3Grand Valley St
64Valdosta St1117.33.7219-2Valdosta St
65Colgate128.712.120.88-4Colgate
66Emporia St119.311.320.79-2Emporia St
67Augustana SD111.918.720.55-6Augustana SD
68Shippensburg1317.3320.311-2Shippensburg
69Ohio Dominican1115.24.619.88-3Ohio Dominican
70Colorado St-Pueblo1218.7119.712-0Colorado St-Pueblo
71Northern St SD114.215.219.46-5Northern St SD
72Hillsdale117.611.619.27-4Hillsdale
73Midwestern St1112.96.219.19-2Midwestern St
74Winston-Salem St1224.4-5.41912-0Winston-Salem St
75Indiana PA1319.7-0.71912-1Indiana PA
76Lehigh118.79.718.410-1Lehigh
77Saginaw Valley St116.511.918.48-3Saginaw Valley St
78Furman11-624.218.23-8Furman
79Lindenwood MO1199.118.18-3Lindenwood MO
80Trinity CT819.1-0.918.18-0Trinity CT
81Delaware110.417.6185-6Delaware
82Northern Colorado11-3.721.8185-6Northern Colorado
83Princeton106.511.117.65-5Princeton
84William & Mary11-3.120.217.12-9William & Mary
85Weber St11-10.327.417.12-9Weber St
86South Dakota11-12.429.4171-10South Dakota
87Ferris St114.511.916.47-4Ferris St
88Wagner125.810.616.49-3Wagner
89Southern Arkansas1014.81.316.18-2Southern Arkansas
90Liberty113.711.615.36-5Liberty
91Brown105.8914.87-3Brown
92Fordham112.811.714.56-5Fordham
93Chadron St129.4514.49-3Chadron St
94SE Louisiana St11-10.925.314.45-6SE Louisiana St
95Elon11-6.620.914.33-8Elon
96New Haven1120.2-614.210-1New Haven
97Indianapolis1314.8-0.714.210-3Indianapolis
98West Alabama129.34.914.28-4West Alabama
99North Carolina A&T118.25.8147-4North Carolina A&T
100Mary Hardin-Baylor1227.2-13.313.912-0Mary Hardin-Baylor
101Dartmouth104.29.713.86-4Dartmouth
102Findlay105.5813.57-3Findlay
103Pennsylvania10-0.213.613.46-4Pennsylvania
104Northwestern St11-6.819.913.24-7Northwestern St
105Drake117.55.212.88-3Drake
106New Mexico Highlands1111.41.312.78-3New Mexico Highlands
107Middlebury814.6-212.67-1Middlebury
108SW Minnesota St11-6.819.412.64-7SW Minnesota St
109Washburn110.512.112.57-4Washburn
110Southern Oregon1216.8-4.212.59-3Southern Oregon
111Tennessee Tech11-719.612.53-8Tennessee Tech
112Lenoir-Rhyne1215.6-3.312.39-3Lenoir-Rhyne
113Delaware St111.211.112.36-5Delaware St
114SE Missouri St11-7.419.612.23-8SE Missouri St
115Shepherd1113-1128-3Shepherd
116Florida A&M11-1.913.511.74-7Florida A&M
117Abilene Christian1165.511.57-4Abilene Christian
118Western Carolina11-15.626.911.31-10Western Carolina
119Alabama St119.41.911.37-4Alabama St
120Mount Union1235.5-24.211.312-0Mount Union
121Northwood112.3911.25-6Northwood
122Concordia-St Paul11-8.319.511.22-9Concordia-St Paul
123West Chester11101.211.27-4West Chester
124California PA118.42.811.28-3California PA
125Monmouth NJ1029.111.15-5Monmouth NJ
126San Diego107.53.6117-3San Diego
127Carson-Newman1113-2.110.99-2Carson-Newman
128South Carolina St11-5.816.610.85-6South Carolina St
129Wayne St MI10-2.613.410.85-5Wayne St MI
130St Francis PA11-0.911.610.75-6St Francis PA
131Tuskegee1116.5-610.510-1Tuskegee
132Tarleton St104.65.810.46-4Tarleton St
133Missouri Southern11-0.410.810.46-5Missouri Southern
134Bloomsburg1291.410.410-2Bloomsburg
135Western Illinois11-16.426.4103-8Western Illinois
136North Carolina Central110.59.19.76-5North Carolina Central
137Morningside1227-17.59.512-0Morningside
138Kutztown119.6-0.19.57-4Kutztown
139Lamar12-7.216.69.44-8Lamar
140Duquesne111.18.19.25-6Duquesne
141Mary11-7.216.294-7Mary
142Ouachita Baptist106396-4Ouachita Baptist
143Jackson St113.55.38.77-4Jackson St
144Lafayette11-2.611.38.75-6Lafayette
145Arkansas-Pine Bluff118.40.18.59-2Arkansas-Pine Bluff
146Northeastern St OK10-7.315.78.44-6Northeastern St OK
147TAMU-Kingsville110.488.46-5TAMU-Kingsville
148North Alabama101.96.48.35-5North Alabama
149Linfield1120.3-12.47.911-0Linfield
150Holy Cross11-7.415.17.72-9Holy Cross
151Howard11-310.67.77-4Howard
152Central Washington119.3-1.97.47-4Central Washington
153Amherst88.7-1.47.36-2Amherst
154Dayton1125.37.36-5Dayton
155Cornell NY10-4.611.77.24-6Cornell NY
156Missouri S&T1119-11.97.210-1Missouri S&T
157UW-Oshkosh1222-15712-0UW-Oshkosh
158Mercyhurst119.9-2.979-2Mercyhurst
159Northern Michigan11-8.915.974-7Northern Michigan
160Jacksonville FL114.926.87-4Jacksonville FL
161Colorado Mines1110.6-3.96.76-5Colorado Mines
162Upper Iowa10-12.618.96.32-8Upper Iowa
163Alabama A&M112.93.56.37-4Alabama A&M
164UW-Platteville1018.4-12.16.38-2UW-Platteville
165Adams St1110.7-4.46.38-3Adams St
166Charleston WV1112.1-5.96.29-2Charleston WV
167St Xavier1219.1-12.96.211-1St Xavier
168Nicholls St10-14.120.26.11-9Nicholls St
169Slippery Rock113.32.86.16-5Slippery Rock
170East Central OK11-0.56.45.96-5East Central OK
171Minot St11-12.318.35.93-8Minot St
172Cumberlands KY1218.5-12.65.910-2Cumberlands KY
173Georgetown KY1123.8-17.95.910-1Georgetown KY
174Georgetown DC11-4.2105.85-6Georgetown DC
175Fort Hays St11-5.411.25.85-6Fort Hays St
176Robert Morris PA11-6.412.25.74-7Robert Morris PA
177Miles1112.9-7.35.68-3Miles
178Montana Tech118.5-3.15.48-3Montana Tech
179Nebraska-Kearney11-611.25.23-8Nebraska-Kearney
180Marian IN1117-12.24.710-1Marian IN
181Carroll MT119.2-4.54.77-4Carroll MT
182Butler115.2-0.64.78-3Butler
183Wesley1117.9-13.24.710-1Wesley
184Glenville St113.31.34.66-5Glenville St
185North Central1218-13.44.69-3North Central
186Central Oklahoma10-11.516.14.62-8Central Oklahoma
187Angelo St11-2.574.55-6Angelo St
188Marist105.5-1.24.34-6Marist
189Norfolk St11-4.58.74.34-7Norfolk St
190Morehead St1140.14.14-7Morehead St
191Concord113.50.547-4Concord
192Truman St11-4.78.53.94-7Truman St
193Bates85.3-1.43.95-3Bates
194Wesleyan85.4-23.45-3Wesleyan
195Bucknell11-912.23.23-8Bucknell
196Williams82.20.93.14-4Williams
197Walsh11-3633-8Walsh
198Humboldt St115.3-2.337-4Humboldt St
199Hampton10-7.310.12.93-7Hampton
200Sacred Heart11-7.710.52.82-9Sacred Heart
201Western Oregon112.70.12.86-5Western Oregon
202Gardner-Webb11-13.716.42.83-8Gardner-Webb
203SW Baptist11-6.99.42.53-8SW Baptist
204Columbia10-10.713.12.43-7Columbia
205Bryant11-7.59.82.34-7Bryant
206SE Oklahoma St10-24.22.24-6SE Oklahoma St
207Morgan St11-7.910.12.23-8Morgan St
208Edinboro10-0.932.14-6Edinboro
209Charleston Southern11-6.68.41.85-6Charleston Southern
210Mars Hill102.5-0.81.76-4Mars Hill
211Georgia St11-19.921.51.61-10Georgia St
212Austin Peay11-16.918.31.42-9Austin Peay
213UW-Whitewater1012.8-11.31.47-3UW-Whitewater
214Bentley109.6-8.41.18-2Bentley
215Missouri Valley1222.6-21.51.112-0Missouri Valley
216St Thomas1219.4-18.31.112-0St Thomas
217Minn St-Moorhead11-17.818.70.91-10Minn St-Moorhead
218Delta St10-5.96.70.93-7Delta St
219East Stroudsburg101.5-0.90.65-5East Stroudsburg
220St Francis IN1213.6-13.20.49-3St Francis IN
221Yale10-12.913.10.22-8Yale
222UNC-Pembroke103-2.80.26-4UNC-Pembroke
223Urbana1110.7-10.50.17-4Urbana
224Central Conn St10-14.113.9-0.12-8Central Conn St
225West Georgia10-4.44.2-0.23-7West Georgia
226Wingate113.4-3.8-0.46-5Wingate
227Hobart1221-21.4-0.412-0Hobart
228American Int'l103.4-4-0.77-3American Int'l
229Prairie View A&M11-5.54.7-0.83-8Prairie View A&M
230Fort Valley St123.8-4.7-0.98-4Fort Valley St
231Southern U.11-4.53.5-14-7Southern U.
232MidAmerica Nazarene1116-17.5-1.58-3MidAmerica Nazarene
233Mississippi Valley St11-1.5-0.1-1.65-6Mississippi Valley St
234SW Oklahoma St10-9.77.9-1.83-7SW Oklahoma St
235Pacific Lutheran1010.7-12.8-2.17-3Pacific Lutheran
236St Ambrose1111.8-14-2.19-2St Ambrose
237Idaho St11-25.623.5-2.11-10Idaho St
238Salisbury1213.3-15.4-2.29-3Salisbury
239Widener1125.2-27.4-2.211-0Widener
240Wheaton1018.8-21.1-2.38-2Wheaton
241VMI11-16.614.3-2.42-9VMI
242Minnesota-Crookston11-19.817.2-2.62-9Minnesota-Crookston
243Hardin-Simmons109.7-12.5-2.86-4Hardin-Simmons
244St Augustine's102.5-5.3-2.86-4St Augustine's
245Merrimack106.4-9.2-2.86-4Merrimack
246Louisiana College117.4-10.4-38-3Louisiana College
247Presbyterian11-16.313.1-3.22-9Presbyterian
248McMurry104.8-8-3.37-3McMurry
249Arkansas Tech11-7.94.5-3.35-6Arkansas Tech
250Simon Fraser11-1.1-2.5-3.65-6Simon Fraser
251Western New Mexico11-5.21.2-44-7Western New Mexico
252Newberry11-0.7-3.3-45-6Newberry
253Tiffin11-12.78.6-4.13-8Tiffin
254Gannon11-7.33-4.33-8Gannon
255Notre Dame OH11-149.7-4.33-8Notre Dame OH
256Johns Hopkins1216.9-21.3-4.410-2Johns Hopkins
257Willamette1012.3-16.7-4.58-2Willamette
258Rocky Mountain112.8-7.3-4.56-5Rocky Mountain
259Lake Erie11-12.98.1-4.73-8Lake Erie
260Belhaven1111.4-16.3-4.96-5Belhaven
261Rhode Island11-25.720.8-4.90-11Rhode Island
262West Liberty11-0.3-4.8-56-5West Liberty
263Colorado Mesa11-8.23.2-5.14-7Colorado Mesa
264C.W. Post10-5.50.3-5.23-7C.W. Post
265Elizabeth City St112-7.2-5.37-4Elizabeth City St
266Incarnate Word11-12.16.8-5.32-9Incarnate Word
267Coe1121.7-27.1-5.410-1Coe
268Stonehill101.2-6.6-5.45-5Stonehill
269Northwestern IA1216.5-22.4-5.89-3Northwestern IA
270Azusa Pacific11-7.61.7-5.94-7Azusa Pacific
271Shorter11-1-5-66-5Shorter
272Concordia-Moorhead1013.5-19.8-6.38-2Concordia-Moorhead
273Cal Lutheran1014.5-20.9-6.48-2Cal Lutheran
274Johnson C. Smith103.6-10.2-6.66-4Johnson C. Smith
275TAMU-Commerce10-169.3-6.71-9TAMU-Commerce
276Black Hills St11-5.7-1-6.84-7Black Hills St
277Eastern New Mexico10-13.96.9-73-7Eastern New Mexico
278Morehouse100.7-7.7-7.13-7Morehouse
279Chowan105.3-12.5-7.26-4Chowan
280Assumption10-0.4-6.8-7.23-7Assumption
281St John Fisher1110.2-17.5-7.38-3St John Fisher
282William Penn1212.8-20.3-7.59-3William Penn
283Catawba11-2.7-4.9-7.64-7Catawba
284Lincoln MO11-1810.3-7.71-10Lincoln MO
285Grand View116.9-14.6-7.77-4Grand View
286Virginia Union104.7-12.7-8.15-5Virginia Union
287Bethel MN128.7-16.8-8.19-3Bethel MN
288Birmingham-Southern1012.2-20.3-8.27-3Birmingham-Southern
289Montana St-Northern10-3.7-4.6-8.23-7Montana St-Northern
290Alcorn St11-14.76.4-8.24-7Alcorn St
291Elmhurst1210-18.3-8.310-2Elmhurst
292Rowan1012.7-21.1-8.47-3Rowan
293Shaw10-3.4-5.1-8.44-6Shaw
294Clarion11-10.52-8.44-7Clarion
295Montana-Western10-7.1-1.6-8.74-6Montana-Western
296Bethel TN134.7-13.4-8.79-4Bethel TN
297St Francis IL115.8-14.6-8.86-5St Francis IL
298Baker1110.2-19.2-98-3Baker
299Malone10-19.110.1-91-9Malone
300Savannah St11-23.514.4-9.11-10Savannah St
301Trinity TX108.5-17.6-9.27-3Trinity TX
302Heidelberg1116.3-25.5-9.29-2Heidelberg
303Faulkner116.5-15.7-9.26-5Faulkner
304WV Wesleyan11-5.4-3.8-9.23-8WV Wesleyan
305Augsburg1010-19.5-9.67-3Augsburg
306UW-Eau Claire10-4.2-5.4-9.64-6UW-Eau Claire
307Albany St GA100.7-10.4-9.76-4Albany St GA
308Bowie St10-1-8.7-9.75-5Bowie St
309Fairmont St10-5.2-4.6-9.84-6Fairmont St
310UW-La Crosse10-6.9-3-9.84-6UW-La Crosse
311Grambling St11-13.23.3-9.91-10Grambling St
312Alfred106.7-16.7-106-4Alfred
313McKendree10-6.2-3.9-10.13-7McKendree
314Utica105-15.1-10.16-4Utica
315Redlands913.4-23.7-10.26-3Redlands
316Bowdoin8-11.40.9-10.51-7Bowdoin
317Eastern Oregon10-9.3-1.2-10.54-6Eastern Oregon
318Cortland St118.8-19.3-10.59-2Cortland St
319Colby8-9.7-0.9-10.63-5Colby
320Sul Ross St100.6-11.5-10.95-5Sul Ross St
321Springfield1112.5-23.5-118-3Springfield
322Dixie St11-12.21.2-113-8Dixie St
323Huntingdon AL99.4-20.5-11.16-3Huntingdon AL
324Central St OH11-5.1-6-11.14-7Central St OH
325Arkansas-Monticello10-18.87.5-11.30-10Arkansas-Monticello
326Bacone107-18.6-11.66-4Bacone
327Endicott1117.5-29.2-11.79-2Endicott
328Hamilton8-15.13.4-11.71-7Hamilton
329Stillman11-3.2-8.5-11.86-5Stillman
330Ithaca104.3-16.1-11.86-4Ithaca
331Delaware Valley1115.1-26.9-11.88-3Delaware Valley
332Langston100.7-12.6-11.96-4Langston
333Union NY106.7-18.5-11.96-4Union NY
334Millikin109.1-21-11.95-5Millikin
335Davidson11-13.31.3-122-9Davidson
336Washington and Lee1110.2-22.3-12.18-3Washington and Lee
337North Greenville11-9-3.1-12.15-6North Greenville
338Virginia St10-2.3-10-12.34-6Virginia St
339Benedictine KS1110.1-22.6-12.57-4Benedictine KS
340Southern Nazarene10-10.8-1.8-12.61-9Southern Nazarene
341Buffalo St10-0.1-12.5-12.66-4Buffalo St
342Muhlenberg1112.1-24.7-12.68-3Muhlenberg
343Kentucky Christian111.6-14.4-12.77-4Kentucky Christian
344Cumberland TN116.1-19.2-13.18-3Cumberland TN
345St Joseph's IN11-5.2-7.9-13.16-5St Joseph's IN
346Tusculum11-11.7-1.5-13.22-9Tusculum
347St John's MN104.5-17.7-13.25-5St John's MN
348Quincy11-11.7-1.9-13.63-8Quincy
349Doane109-22.5-13.67-3Doane
350Gettysburg1013.9-27.6-13.77-3Gettysburg
351Texas Southern11-20.97.2-13.72-9Texas Southern
352Framingham St1216.9-30.8-13.910-2Framingham St
353Wittenberg1217-30.9-13.910-2Wittenberg
354Thomas More1013.8-27.7-13.97-3Thomas More
355Western St CO11-18.74.7-13.91-10Western St CO
356Salve Regina1115.9-29.9-149-2Salve Regina
357Fayetteville St10-10.6-3.6-14.22-8Fayetteville St
358Millsaps108.3-22.6-14.37-3Millsaps
359Franklin1214.8-29.1-14.39-3Franklin
360Illinois Wesleyan106.8-21.3-14.56-4Illinois Wesleyan
361Brockport St108.7-23.3-14.66-4Brockport St
362Southern Conn St11-10.9-3.8-14.63-8Southern Conn St
363Lycoming1014-28.7-14.78-2Lycoming
364Robert Morris IL1116.8-31.5-14.88-3Robert Morris IL
365Menlo9-0.1-14.9-153-6Menlo
366Millersville11-19.74.6-152-9Millersville
367Concordia AL8-0.5-14.7-15.24-4Concordia AL
368UW-Stevens Point10-9.4-5.9-15.22-8UW-Stevens Point
369Hampden-Sydney1010.8-26-15.26-4Hampden-Sydney
370Wabash1015.5-31-15.58-2Wabash
371Tufts8-18.93.4-15.50-8Tufts
372Lock Haven11-19.64-15.51-10Lock Haven
373Whitworth104.8-20.4-15.67-3Whitworth
374St Olaf104.8-20.6-15.87-3St Olaf
375Lane10-2.7-13.3-165-5Lane
376Otterbein108.1-24.1-168-2Otterbein
377NW Oklahoma St10-17.81.6-16.23-7NW Oklahoma St
378Tabor1019.4-35.6-16.28-2Tabor
379Texas Lutheran100.4-16.7-16.34-6Texas Lutheran
380UW-Stout10-7.9-8.6-16.53-7UW-Stout
381John Carroll107.9-24.7-16.86-4John Carroll
382RPI93.6-20.5-16.95-4RPI
383Baldwin-Wallace108.6-25.6-177-3Baldwin-Wallace
384Brevard11-12.3-4.9-17.22-9Brevard
385Dubuque103.1-20.6-17.55-5Dubuque
386Nebraska Wesleyan103.2-20.7-17.56-4Nebraska Wesleyan
387Ottawa1111.3-28.9-17.78-3Ottawa
388Evangel111-18.7-17.87-4Evangel
389Bridgewater St MA1110.2-28-17.89-2Bridgewater St MA
390Franklin & Marshall114.2-22.1-17.87-4Franklin & Marshall
391Wartburg109.4-27.2-17.96-4Wartburg
392Kean93.9-22.1-18.25-4Kean
393Albright119.4-27.7-18.38-3Albright
394Valparaiso11-21.73.3-18.41-10Valparaiso
395Siena Heights10-2.4-16.3-18.75-5Siena Heights
396Augustana IL10-0.1-18.7-18.75-5Augustana IL
397Trinity Int'l112.1-21.1-194-7Trinity Int'l
398St Anselm11-13.7-5.5-19.22-9St Anselm
399East Texas Baptist10-7.3-12-19.33-7East Texas Baptist
400Waynesburg118.5-27.9-19.310-1Waynesburg
401Ursinus104.5-23.8-19.36-4Ursinus
402Concordia NE111.5-21.1-19.55-6Concordia NE
403Pacific OR9-4.4-15.2-19.63-6Pacific OR
404Taylor10-0.7-19.2-19.94-6Taylor
405Lindsey Wilson11-5.9-13.9-19.93-8Lindsey Wilson
406Seton Hill11-17.1-2.8-19.90-11Seton Hill
407Virginia U-Lynchburg9-14.6-5.5-201-8Virginia U-Lynchburg
408Valley City St106.2-26.2-207-3Valley City St
409Chapman99.3-29.4-20.16-3Chapman
410Centre102.8-23-20.26-4Centre
411William Jewell11-16.8-3.5-20.32-9William Jewell
412Wash & Jeff113.7-24-20.38-3Wash & Jeff
413Clark Atlanta10-15.2-5.2-20.42-8Clark Atlanta
414West Virginia St11-20.90.4-20.52-9West Virginia St
415Edward Waters11-4-16.4-20.55-6Edward Waters
416Gustavus Adolphus10-3.5-17-20.53-7Gustavus Adolphus
417Campbell11-21.40.7-20.61-10Campbell
418Randolph-Macon104.1-24.8-20.77-3Randolph-Macon
419Bridgewater VA109-30-217-3Bridgewater VA
420Fort Lewis10-26.95.7-21.20-10Fort Lewis
421Rochester9-1.4-19.9-21.24-5Rochester
422Adrian118.9-30.7-21.89-2Adrian
423OK Panhandle St9-2.9-18.9-21.83-6OK Panhandle St
424Western New England109.9-31.7-21.86-4Western New England
425UW-River Falls10-14.4-7.5-21.82-8UW-River Falls
426Benedict10-13-9-221-9Benedict
427Concordia IL1113.7-36-22.310-1Concordia IL
428Dickinson St11-18.3-4-22.42-9Dickinson St
429Susquehanna101.3-23.7-22.56-4Susquehanna
430Central IA10-1.6-20.9-22.55-5Central IA
431Trine106.9-29.6-22.77-3Trine
432Simpson103.3-26.4-23.16-4Simpson
433Rhodes90.1-23.3-23.36-3Rhodes
434Sewanee10-3.9-19.5-23.43-7Sewanee
435Hastings10-2-21.5-23.56-4Hastings
436Cheyney11-24.50.9-23.51-10Cheyney
437Norwich1010.5-34-23.57-3Norwich
438Campbellsville11-10.1-13.6-23.73-8Campbellsville
439Dakota Wesleyan10-2.4-21.5-23.96-4Dakota Wesleyan
440Lebanon Valley105-28.9-23.96-4Lebanon Valley
441Olivet Nazarene11-11.4-12.6-243-8Olivet Nazarene
442Ferrum108.7-33-24.37-3Ferrum
443Gallaudet1012-36.5-24.57-3Gallaudet
444South Dakota Tech11-18.2-6.7-24.92-9South Dakota Tech
445Emory & Henry100.2-25.1-24.96-4Emory & Henry
446Albion105.8-30.8-256-4Albion
447Pikeville11-9.9-15.1-25.13-8Pikeville
448Kentucky St10-15.2-9.9-25.12-8Kentucky St
449Midland U.10-3.9-21.5-25.34-6Midland U.
450Maryville104.4-29.8-25.46-4Maryville
451Ohio Wesleyan109.8-35.3-25.59-1Ohio Wesleyan
452Montclair St10-2.3-23.3-25.65-5Montclair St
453Grove City104.8-30.4-25.66-4Grove City
454Texas College11-13.8-11.8-25.63-8Texas College
455Carroll WI1016.5-42.2-25.88-2Carroll WI
456Washington U.10-1.3-24.6-25.85-5Washington U.
457Webber Int'l10-3.1-22.7-25.84-6Webber Int'l
458Ohio Northern10-1.3-24.6-25.94-6Ohio Northern
459Union KY11-9.1-17-26.14-7Union KY
460St Mary KS113.6-29.7-26.16-5St Mary KS
461Carnegie Mellon113.2-29.3-26.16-5Carnegie Mellon
462Livingstone10-17.9-8.8-26.62-8Livingstone
463Kentucky Wesleyan11-17.4-9.3-26.72-9Kentucky Wesleyan
464Muskingum10-4.3-22.5-26.83-7Muskingum
465New Jersey10-1.3-25.8-27.14-6New Jersey
466Friends113-30.1-27.16-5Friends
467Jamestown10-3.4-23.8-27.24-6Jamestown
468Mount Ida115.7-33-27.38-3Mount Ida
469Virginia-Wise11-14-13.7-27.63-8Virginia-Wise
470McPherson93.8-31.5-27.65-4McPherson
471Illinois College1013.1-40.9-27.88-2Illinois College
472Mass Maritime96.9-34.8-27.95-4Mass Maritime
473Mississippi College10-17.6-10.3-27.92-8Mississippi College
474Wisconsin Lutheran1011.8-39.7-287-3Wisconsin Lutheran
475Bethany WV10-2.5-25.5-283-7Bethany WV
476Concordia WI106.7-34.8-28.17-3Concordia WI
477Central Methodist10-7.3-20.9-28.22-8Central Methodist
478Christopher Newport11-3-25.2-28.26-5Christopher Newport
479Case Western Reserve105.2-33.5-28.36-4Case Western Reserve
480Geneva10-4-24.5-28.53-7Geneva
481Whittier9-0.4-28.4-28.84-5Whittier
482Hartwick10-6-22.9-28.93-7Hartwick
483Macalester1010.8-39.8-296-4Macalester
484Hope10-0.6-28.7-29.35-5Hope
485Buena Vista10-11.9-17.4-29.34-6Buena Vista
486Peru St11-4-25.4-29.45-6Peru St
487Lewis & Clark9-8.1-21.3-29.44-5Lewis & Clark
488Merchant Marine10-7.6-22.1-29.75-5Merchant Marine
489Lake Forest107.3-37-29.78-2Lake Forest
490Coast Guard92.6-32.6-305-4Coast Guard
491Carthage10-12.6-17.7-30.33-7Carthage
492Southern Virginia10-6.6-23.7-30.34-6Southern Virginia
493Kansas Wesleyan11-1-29.4-30.46-5Kansas Wesleyan
494Castleton St111-31.5-30.47-4Castleton St
495Methodist100.5-31.2-30.75-5Methodist
496Juniata10-7.6-23.1-30.73-7Juniata
497Frostburg St10-15.2-15.9-31.13-7Frostburg St
498Curry102-33.1-31.16-4Curry
499St Scholastica119.5-40.7-31.28-3St Scholastica
500St Norbert114.5-35.7-31.38-3St Norbert
501William Paterson10-1.3-30.1-31.45-5William Paterson
502Thiel10-5.1-26.3-31.43-7Thiel
503Westminster PA9-1.7-29.8-31.53-6Westminster PA
504Lincoln PA10-22.1-9.5-31.61-9Lincoln PA
505Hanover106.6-38.3-31.76-4Hanover
506Dickinson10-12-19.9-31.84-6Dickinson
507Graceland11-12.5-19.6-32.15-6Graceland
508Iowa Wesleyan11-12.5-19.7-32.23-8Iowa Wesleyan
509Pace9-31.6-0.8-32.30-9Pace
510Avila11-10-22.5-32.52-9Avila
511Point U.10-14.5-18.2-32.62-8Point U.
512Point U.10-14.5-18.2-32.62-8Point U.
513Carleton10-13.8-19-32.73-7Carleton
514La Verne9-7.9-24.8-32.84-5La Verne
515Northwestern MN1111.6-44.4-32.88-3Northwestern MN
516Worcester St100.8-33.6-32.86-4Worcester St
517Benedictine IL102-34.9-32.95-5Benedictine IL
518Guilford10-5.7-27.4-33.15-5Guilford
519Catholic10-8.3-25.4-33.63-7Catholic
520Waldorf11-8-25.8-33.74-7Waldorf
521Lindenwood-Belleville10-6.3-27.7-344-6Lindenwood-Belleville
522Manchester105.7-39.7-346-4Manchester
523Aurora100.9-35.1-34.25-5Aurora
524Austin10-13.7-20.9-34.62-8Austin
525Oberlin100.4-35-34.64-6Oberlin
526St Lawrence10-17.7-17-34.70-10St Lawrence
527Monmouth IL103.4-38.1-34.75-5Monmouth IL
528SW Assem of God10-4.5-30.4-34.93-7SW Assem of God
529Shenandoah10-10-25-351-9Shenandoah
530Westfield St10-2.9-32.2-353-7Westfield St
531Luther10-16.5-18.6-35.10-10Luther
532Denison10-3.6-31.6-35.24-6Denison
533WPI10-14.1-21.3-35.42-8WPI
534LaGrange10-9.4-26.2-35.63-7LaGrange
535Wilkes10-6.5-29.5-365-5Wilkes
536Chicago10-4.5-31.5-364-6Chicago
537MIT9-4-32.1-36.15-4MIT
538Ave Maria8-17.5-18.7-36.21-7Ave Maria
539Moravian10-15.7-20.6-36.32-8Moravian
540Stevenson10-8.1-28.5-36.62-8Stevenson
541Capital10-15.8-21-36.72-8Capital
542Kalamazoo10-3.7-33.2-36.95-5Kalamazoo
543SUNY-Maritime9-1.1-36.1-37.23-6SUNY-Maritime
544Greenville104.4-42-37.78-2Greenville
545Briar Cliff11-16.5-21.2-37.71-10Briar Cliff
546Kenyon101.4-39.7-38.36-4Kenyon
547Sterling10-8.4-30.2-38.62-8Sterling
548Allegheny10-6.2-32.6-38.85-5Allegheny
549Howard Payne10-23.9-15-38.91-9Howard Payne
550DePauw10-11.6-27.4-392-8DePauw
551Ripon10-0.6-38.6-39.25-5Ripon
552Cornell IA10-2.9-36.3-39.24-6Cornell IA
553North Park10-20-19.3-39.31-9North Park
554North Carolina Wesleyan10-11.1-28.3-39.43-7North Carolina Wesleyan
555Wooster10-6-33.6-39.52-8Wooster
556King's PA10-11.7-27.9-39.62-8King's PA
557Greensboro10-7.7-32.1-39.85-5Greensboro
558Rose-Hulman9-3.4-36.4-39.84-5Rose-Hulman
559Southwestern KS11-7.7-32.2-39.94-7Southwestern KS
560Wayland Baptist9-20.6-19.6-40.12-7Wayland Baptist
561Pomona-Pitzer9-14.6-25.6-40.21-8Pomona-Pitzer
562Dakota St11-14.5-25.8-40.32-9Dakota St
563Bluffton10-2-38.6-40.66-4Bluffton
564Averett10-11.5-29.2-40.71-9Averett
565Culver-Stockton11-23.3-17.7-411-10Culver-Stockton
566McDaniel10-18.8-22.3-41.10-10McDaniel
567Dordt11-20.1-21-41.21-10Dordt
568Mt St Joseph10-1.9-39.4-41.34-6Mt St Joseph
569Western Conn St9-21.3-20.2-41.41-8Western Conn St
570Mayville St9-7-34.6-41.63-6Mayville St
571Bluefield11-26.6-15-41.60-11Bluefield
572Bluefield11-26.6-15-41.60-11Bluefield
573Concordia MI9-30.6-11.3-41.90-9Concordia MI
574Occidental9-17.8-24.3-422-7Occidental
575Hamline10-24.2-18.1-42.31-9Hamline
576Apprentice8-19.8-22.8-42.60-8Apprentice
577Bethany KS11-10.8-32.1-42.93-8Bethany KS
578UMass-Dartmouth10-16.8-26.3-43.11-9UMass-Dartmouth
579Alma10-19.6-23.6-43.21-9Alma
580Puget Sound9-28.3-15.1-43.30-9Puget Sound
581Morrisville St10-19.3-24.2-43.51-9Morrisville St
582St Vincent10-17.6-25.9-43.50-10St Vincent
583Plymouth St10-12-31.8-43.72-8Plymouth St
584Fitchburg St9-15.4-28.8-44.22-7Fitchburg St
585Loras10-21.1-23.5-44.52-8Loras
586Marietta10-23.4-21.6-44.90-10Marietta
587FDU-Florham10-15.2-29.8-452-8FDU-Florham
588Claremont-Mudd-Scripps9-19.3-25.9-45.20-9Claremont-Mudd-Scripps
589Nichols10-18.2-27.8-461-9Nichols
590Grinnell10-9-37.2-46.22-8Grinnell
591Lakeland10-10.4-36.2-46.62-8Lakeland
592Minnesota-Morris10-0.4-46.6-46.96-4Minnesota-Morris
593Defiance10-10.1-37.1-47.12-8Defiance
594Becker9-12.6-34.9-47.62-7Becker
595Westminster MO10-1.5-47.7-49.24-6Westminster MO
596Olivet10-17.6-31.8-49.40-10Olivet
597Eureka10-6.2-43.7-49.94-6Eureka
598Martin Luther10-1.8-48.6-50.44-6Martin Luther
599Wilmington10-28.1-22.3-50.41-9Wilmington
600Knox10-11.6-39-50.52-8Knox
601Lawrence10-14.6-38.3-52.92-8Lawrence
602Husson10-19.2-33.8-52.92-8Husson
603Anna Maria10-15.1-38.5-53.62-8Anna Maria
604Maine Maritime9-23-33.2-56.20-9Maine Maritime
605MacMurray10-14.2-42.4-56.52-8MacMurray
606Rockford10-16.6-40.1-56.72-8Rockford
607Presentation10-12.3-44.6-56.92-8Presentation
608Hiram10-25.5-32.2-57.60-10Hiram
609Crown10-14.8-44-58.82-8Crown
610Misericordia10-34.8-24.2-590-10Misericordia
611Beloit10-20.7-38.4-59.10-10Beloit
612Haskell9-28.4-32-60.41-8Haskell
613Earlham9-22.6-38.2-60.81-8Earlham
614Bethel KS10-34.2-27.4-61.60-10Bethel KS
615Anderson10-26.1-35.5-61.60-10Anderson
616Trinity Bible8-23.4-42-65.41-7Trinity Bible
617Maranatha Baptist10-27-39.4-66.40-10Maranatha Baptist

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Things are getting ugly in Pittsburgh. Really ugly.

Ben Roethlisberger started the first nine games of the season, but things are getting ugly quickly in Pittsburgh. After suffering a right shoulder injury and bruising his ribs against the Chiefs, Byron Leftwich started last weekend against the Ravens. Leftwich injured his ribs against Baltimore, leaving Pittsburgh to now turn to Charlie Batch against the Browns tomorrow.

When was the last time a team started three different quarterbacks in consecutive games? Three teams last year pulled off that feat. After Jason Campbell started the first six games of the season, Kyle Boller started the next week before the team permanently switched to Carson Palmer.

Matt Schaub was the Texans starting quarterback for ten games, but a foot injury ended his season. Matt Leinart took over, but a broken collarbone ended his season, leaving the reins in the hands of rookie T.J. Yates. In St. Louis, an ankle injury caused Sam Bradford to miss a December game against the 49ers, leaving A.J. Feeley to start. Feely injured his right thumb, but Bradford was back the next week. He would miss the rest of the year due to his ankle, though, and Kellen Clemens started the last three games.

So it’s actually not all that rare for a team to go with three different quarterbacks in three weeks; at some point this season, it’s possible the Cardinals will, as well, with John Skelton, Ryan Lindley, and Kevin Kolb. From 2000 to 2011, teams started three different quarterbacks in consecutive games on 36 different occasions:

TmYearGM#QBQBQB
HOU201110-12Matt SchaubMatt LeinartT.J. Yates
OAK20116-8Jason CampbellKyle BollerCarson Palmer
STL201112-14A.J. FeeleySam BradfordKellen Clemens
CAR20108-10Matt MooreJimmy ClausenBrian St. Pierre
MIA20108-10Chad HenneChad PenningtonTyler Thigpen
MIA20109-11Chad PenningtonTyler ThigpenChad Henne
MIN201013-15Tarvaris JacksonBrett FavreJoe Webb
TEN20109-11Kerry CollinsVince YoungRusty Smith
TEN201010-12Vince YoungRusty SmithKerry Collins
CLE200811-13Brady QuinnDerek AndersonKen Dorsey
KAN20081-3Brodie CroyleDamon HuardTyler Thigpen
KAN20085-7Damon HuardBrodie CroyleTyler Thigpen
SEA20084-6Matt HasselbeckCharlie FryeSeneca Wallace
MIN20077-9Kelly HolcombTarvaris JacksonBrooks Bollinger
STL200711-13Marc BulgerGus FrerotteBrock Berlin
STL200712-14Gus FrerotteBrock BerlinMarc Bulger
NYJ20053-5Chad PenningtonBrooks BollingerVinny Testaverde
PIT20059-11Charlie BatchTommy MaddoxBen Roethlisberger
STL200510-12Marc BulgerJamie MartinRyan Fitzpatrick
SFO20056-8Alex SmithKen DorseyCody Pickett
ARI200411-13Shaun KingJohn NavarreJosh McCown
TAM20044-6Brad JohnsonChris SimmsBrian Griese
TEN200314-16Billy VolekSteve McNairNeil O'Donnell
OAK20037-9Rich GannonMarques TuiasosopoRick Mirer
CAR20026-8Rodney PeeteChris WeinkeRandy Fasani
CAR20027-9Chris WeinkeRandy FasaniRodney Peete
CIN20023-5Gus FrerotteAkili SmithJon Kitna
PHI200210-12Donovan McNabbKoy DetmerA.J. Feeley
STL20024-6Kurt WarnerJamie MartinMarc Bulger
STL200212-14Kurt WarnerJamie MartinMarc Bulger
TAM200214-16Brad JohnsonShaun KingRob Johnson
TAM200215-17Shaun KingRob JohnsonBrad Johnson
WAS20023-5Shane MatthewsDanny WuerffelPatrick Ramsey
DAL20014-6Quincy CarterAnthony WrightClint Stoerner
SDG20003-5Moses MorenoRyan LeafJim Harbaugh
SDG20009-11Jim HarbaughMoses MorenoRyan Leaf

Excluding the 1987 season, the 1974 49ers were the only team since the merger to start four different quarterbacks in four weeks. As you can imagine, their story is interesting. Joe Reed entered the season as the starter, after splitting time with a 38-year-old John Brodie (who retired after the season) and Steve Spurrier (who suffered a severely dislocated shoulder in the final pre-season game in ’74) in 1973. He started the first three games of the year, and played miserably, so the team moved on to Dennis Morrison, who had been a 14th-round draft selection in 1973.

Morrison started the 4th and 5th games of the season for the 49ers, which is when the streak began. Morris started game five in Detroit, but threw three interceptions, so in week 6, the 49ers went back to Reed. Reed went 2/8 for 1 interception and was promptly traded later that week. So in week 7, 13th-round rookie Tom Owen started the game and performed reasonably well, but he was just the interim quarterback. That’s because in connection with the Reed trade, San Francisco acquired Norm Snead from the Giants, who sent Snead to San Francisco after acquiring Craig Morton from Dallas. Injuries and ineffectiveness limited Snead to just that one start for the 49ers in ’74, however, and Owen would go on to play (somewhat competently) for the remainder of the year.

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Florida-Florida State.

Georgia-Georgia Tech.

South Carolina-Clemson.

And, as a technical matter, Vanderbilt-Wake Forest.

I’m not exactly breaking any news when I tell you this, but the ACC is not having a very good year. In the abstract, it might seem like any other elite conference. It has two 10-1 teams and each team has at least four wins other than Boston College. The problem is that the ACC, like all conferences not named the SEC, is measured by how it does in non-conference play. And it has had a miserable year in that regard.

Each team in the conference plays four non-conference games; with four games remaining, that means 44 have been played, although 13 of those games — including three by the two powerhouses of the conference, Florida State and Clemson — were against FCS schools. How has the ACC fared in its first 31 games against other FBS foes? The table below lists each non-conference game, sorted first by quality of the ACC team (that’s the SRS grade on the left) and second by the SRS grade of the opponent:

DateSRSTmPFOppPAH/RW/LDiffMOVConf_OppSOSSRS
09-29-201255.3Florida St30South Florida17RoadWin1316BgE34.650.6
09-08-201253.4Clemson52Ball St27HomeWin2522MAC38.860.8
09-01-201253.4Clemson26Auburn19NeutWin77SEC35.242.2
09-15-201244.5North Carolina34Louisville39RoadLoss-5-7BgE42.235.2
09-22-201244.5North Carolina27East Carolina6HomeWin2118CUS32.950.9
09-29-201244.5North Carolina66Idaho0HomeWin6643.5WAC15.959.4
09-08-201242.6Miami FL13Kansas St52RoadLoss-39-30B1259.929.9
10-06-201242.6Miami FL3Notre Dame41NeutLoss-38-31IND57.926.9
11-17-201242.6Miami FL40South Florida9HomeWin3126BgE34.660.6
10-27-201242Georgia Tech17Brigham Young41HomeLoss-24-25.5IND48.823.3
09-29-201242Georgia Tech28Middle Tennessee St49HomeLoss-21-24Sun36.212.2
09-29-201239.3Virginia Tech24Cincinnati27NeutLoss-3-7BgE4437
09-15-201239.3Virginia Tech17Pittsburgh35RoadLoss-18-15BgE37.722.7
09-22-201239.3Virginia Tech37Bowling Green0HomeWin3729MAC33.862.8
08-31-201238.9North Carolina St21Tennessee35NeutLoss-14-14SEC40.326.3
09-08-201238.9North Carolina St10Connecticut7RoadWin37BgE30.837.8
09-15-201238.9North Carolina St31South Alabama7HomeWin2421Sun21.942.9
09-08-201235.2Duke13Stanford50RoadLoss-37-29P1255.526.5
09-01-201235.2Duke46Florida Int'l26HomeWin2017Sun27.744.7
09-22-201235.2Duke38Memphis14HomeWin2421CUS24.445.4
09-08-201232.1Virginia17Penn State16HomeWin10B1047.447.4
09-22-201232.1Virginia7TCU27RoadLoss-20-17B1245.528.5
09-29-201232.1Virginia38Louisiana Tech44HomeLoss-6-9WAC44.735.7
11-10-201231Boston College6Notre Dame21HomeLoss-15-18IND57.939.9
09-15-201231Boston College13Northwestern22RoadLoss-9-7B1045.738.7
10-06-201231Boston College31Army34RoadLoss-30IND22.722.7
09-22-201230.4Maryland21West Virginia31RoadLoss-10-7B1243.736.7
09-08-201230.4Maryland36Temple27RoadWin912BgE3143
09-15-201230.4Maryland21Connecticut24HomeLoss-3-7BgE30.823.8
11-17-201228.1Wake Forest0Notre Dame38RoadLoss-38-29.5IND57.928.4
09-22-201228.1Wake Forest49Army37HomeWin129IND22.731.7

Both FSU and Clemson at least gave it the old college try: the Seminoles scheduled West Virginia and one FCS opponent, but when the Mountaineers joined the Big 12 they backed out of the game, leaving FSU to place a second FCS school on its schedule. Clemson scheduled Auburn – two years removed from a national championship – in Atlanta on opening weekend. But at the end of the day, neither FSU nor Clemson played any team out of conference – or in conference, excluding each other – that remotely impressed anybody. Of course, these two teams face huge tests this weekend against their in-state, SEC rivals.

UNC scheduled Louisville, a terrible team just two years ago that now may win the Big East. But that game did not go according to ACC script.

Miami certainly couldn’t have expected that they’d face two teams who would be ranked 1st in the country at some point this year when they scheduled Kansas State and Notre Dame. The results were, in hindsight, predictably bloody, with Miami losing by the combined score of 93-16.

Georgia Tech saved its worst games of the year for nonconference play. While Georgia Tech embarrassed UNC (68 points scored), Virginia (36 point win) and Maryland (33-13 on the road), the Yellow Jackets’ worst two games of the season were inexplicable 21- and 24-point losses to BYU and Middle Tennessee State. BYU scored 6 points against Boise State, 6 points against Utah State, and 14 points against San Jose State, but exploded for 41 points in Atlanta. MTSU lost by 42 to Mississippi State and lost to McNeese State – an FCS school – but somehow won on the road against the Yellow Jackets 49-28. And Georgia Tech is going to be your Coastal Division champs.

The sixth and seventh best schools – Virginia Tech and NC State – didn’t fare any better. Virginia Tech shockingly lost to both Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, while North Carolina State lost by 14 points to a Tennessee team that may set a school record for losses.

This is why Florida State gets no love from the BCS computers. Out of conference this season, the ACC has been a joke. Consider:

  • Overall, the ACC is currently 14-17 in non-conference games against other FBS schools. This is the most impressive stat you will read about the ACC today.
  • Against Conference USA, the MAC, the Sun Belt, and the WAC, the ACC is 7-2. Against miserable Army — the 114th team in the SRS — the conference is 1-1. That means against the other BCS schools (the SEC, B10, B12, P12, Big East, Notre Dame, and BYU), the conference went a pitiful 6-14.
  • This is not a joke: Ball State is the second best team an ACC school has beaten this year. Virginia’s upset over Penn State — a one-point home win when the Nittany Lions missed an extra point and four field goals — is the conference’s best win of the year. After PSU and Ball State, at least according to the SRS, the best teams defeated by ACC schools were Auburn, South Florida (twice), Bowling Green, East Carolina, Temple, and Connecticut.
  • To put a bow on it, the ACC lost to the best six teams it faced out of conference, and according to the SRS, to 13 of the 14 schools they faced that have SRS ratings over 40.
  • I don’t know if much is going to change tomorrow, but for a conference that has zero signature wins this year, tomorrow is the only chance the conference gets. Clemson is a 4-point home favorite to a Marcus Lattimore-less South Carolina team; the SRS would make Clemson 2.2-point favorites, so that line seems appropriate. Florida State is a 6-point home favorite against Florida, while the SRS would make UF just a one-point dog. Florida State has beaten up on creampuffs while Florida struggles with everyone (but still defeated Texas A&M, LSU, and South Carolina). Because Florida State’s offense is very good and Florida’s offense is offensive, most expect the Seminoles to win. I think the safe bet is to expect a very ugly game.

    Georgia is 15 points better in the SRS than Georgia Tech, and with the game in Athens, should be 18-point favorites. In fact, the Bulldogs are favored by only 13 points, perhaps a sign that Vegas doesn’t want to penalize the Yellow Jackets as harshly as the SRS for losing to MTSU. Vanderbilt is an 11.5-point favorite on the road against an awful Wake Forest team; the SRS would project the line to be 14.6 points.

    The ACC is not in a particularly enviable situation. No one expects Wake Forest or Georgia Tech to win, because odds are they will get creamed. And while the Clemson and Florida State games favor the ACC squad, both should be very close. That’s a lot of downside for a conference that with a few bad bounces, could go 0-4 on the day. That would be a fitting finish to a dreadful season. For the conference to save any face, it will need victories by both of its heavy hitters and a respectable performance by Georgia Tech.

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Checkdowns: Best Thanksgiving Performances

Stump your family with some Football Perspective trivia today. The tables below show the leaders in various categories in all games played on Thanksgiving since 1960.

Most passing yards

RkYearTmOppPFPAQBCMPATTPYDTDINT
11998dalmin3646Troy Aikman345745510
21995detmin4438Scott Mitchell304541041
31995mindet3844Warren Moon304738432
42007gnbdet3726Brett Favre314138130
51998mindal4636Randall Cunningham173535941
61997daloti1427Troy Aikman274235623
72010nordal3027Drew Brees233935211
81994detbuf3521Dave Krieg202535130
92009gnbdet3412Aaron Rodgers283934830
102010nwedet4524Tom Brady212734140

Most passing touchdowns

RkYearTmOppPFPAQBCMPATTPYDTDINT
12004cltdet419Peyton Manning232823660
11977miacrd5514Bob Griese152320761
32006daltam3810Tony Romo222930650
31962nyjden4645Johnny Green224629253
51995detmin4438Scott Mitchell304541041
51998mindal4636Randall Cunningham173535941
52010nwedet4524Tom Brady212734140
51987dalmin3844Danny White254134143
51985detnyj3120Eric Hipple192926941
52008phicrd4820Donovan McNabb273926040
51994gnbdal3142Brett Favre274025740
51985dalcrd3517Danny White142623541

[continue reading…]

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An exact replica of Tim Tebow's throwing motion.

The majority of power rankings out there have the Broncos, Texans, Patriots, Falcons, Packers, and 49ers in their top six. Each conference appears to have three elite teams, and one can justifiably rank them in just about any order.

Brian Burke has Denver first, San Francisco second, and Houston third (although his algorithm leaves the Patriots batting in the nine hole). Football Outsiders puts the 49ers first, followed by the Patriots and Broncos (and his algorithm has Atlanta down at #12). I don’t see much room separating any of those teams, although I’d probably rank them Houston, Denver, San Francisco, Green Bay, New England, Atlanta, if forced to choose. But power rankings at this stage of the game (like every other week!) are meaningless; all six teams will make the playoffs, where their true legacies will be formed.

[As always, the number of wins I’m projecting each team to finish the season with is in column 3. The fourth column – PWIN – shows how many wins I projected last week, and the difference column represents how many wins I added or subtracted this week. The “RSOS” column stands for the remaining SOS for the team, based on the number of projected wins I’m giving to each of their opponents. The “RHG” column stands for remaining home games.]

Happy Thanksgiving to all the readers out there. Check back at noon EST for some Turkey Day trivia.

TeamRecWinsPrvWinDiffRemSOSRemHGComment
Houston Texans9-1131300.5212Sure, it was against Jacksonville, but still good to see Houston win when the game doesn't go according to script.
Atlanta Falcons9-1131300.5003Well I'm certainly not going to bump Atlanta after that game.
Denver Broncos7-3131300.3543I can't project more than 13 wins for Denver, right?
San Francisco 49ers7-2-111.510.510.4842Considering the opponent, I'm not sure I've seen a better offensive performance all year. Alex Smith may have been Wally Pipped
New England Patriots7-3111100.4843Patriots look fantastic, but a difficult remaining schedule makes it hard to project a 5-1 finish.
Green Bay Packers7-3111100.5003I'm now projecting the Packers to win the NFC North without the need for a tiebreaker. Nate Silver, watch out.
Baltimore Ravens8-2111100.5423According to Football Outsiders, Baltimore has the best special teams since 1991 through 10 weeks. Schatz tweeted that Baltimore's the 16th best team based on just offense and defense.
Chicago Bears7-31011-10.5003In what has become a November ritual, Jay Cutler's agent is getting very excited, because we are seeing just how much the Bears need him. Although no quarterback could have succeeded against San Francisco.
Pittsburgh Steelers6-4910-10.4383An easy schedule should be the saving grace, but hard to ignore that the glaring quarterback issues here.
New York Giants6-49900.5833The lead in the NFC East is getting smaller; the Giants' margin for error is razor thin right now.
Seattle Seahawks6-49900.4793If the passing game can click, Seahawks should cruise to a playoff berth.
Indianapolis Colts6-49900.5003Rude awakening, but the Colts don't need to be all that good to make the playoffs.
Dallas Cowboys5-59900.4694Survive and advance against Cleveland. Matchup against Robert Griffin III should be fantastic.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers6-49900.6093I really like the direction Tampa Bay is going. Unfortunately, they have a difficult schedule and will lose a tiebreaker to both the Giants and Cowboys.
New Orleans Saints5-59810.5993Saints fans may want to start calculating tiebreaker scenarios with the Giants, Cowboys and Seahawks.
Cincinnati Bengals5-58800.4793Everything about this team screams 8-8. Although with A.J. Green and Geno Atkins, they have a couple of potential All-Pros.
Minnesota Vikings6-48710.6302They had a very good bye week, which consisted of watching the Bears -- their opponent in two of the next three weeks -- look like the Chiefs.
Miami Dolphins4-668-20.5474A few weeks ago, this was the 4th best team in the conference. Now they're the 4th best team in a terrible division. What happened?
Tennessee Titans4-67700.4793On again, off again, Chris Johnson did zilch last week.
Washington Redskins4-67610.4903Robert Griffin III looked outstanding off of a bye week. Washington just needs to keep him healthy.
New York Jets4-67610.4173Jets looked good against the Rams; do they blow all that goodwill tonight?
Buffalo Bills4-67610.4114If Buffalo can upset Indianapolis, realistic to think the #6 seed is in play for them with three straight workable home games on deck.
San Diego Chargers4-66600.4904Norv Turner and Philip Rivers should thank the Jets and the Eagles for taking attention away from how far they've fallen.
Detroit Lions4-66600.6464Lions' season effectively over, as it is most years by Thanksgiving.
Carolina Panthers2-86600.4272As bad as they've looked, three games against the bottom of the AFC West and Philadelphia should help. Burke still says they're better than we think.
Arizona Cardinals4-66600.5103At this point, even I feel bad making fun of the Cardinals.
Oakland Raiders3-76600.4063Underachieving and injured, this Raiders team looks like just about every other Oakland team over the last decade. An easy schedule will help.
St. Louis Rams3-6-15.56.5-10.5262When you get blown out, at home, by a team that spent the whole week forgetting they have a game, you move down in the rankings.
Philadelphia Eagles3-75500.5003Eagles are reminding me of the 2011 Bucs -- they appear to be in full-fledged quit mode.
Cleveland Browns2-84400.4793Browns will play hard, but still lack the talent to do much. Interesting rivalry game this week against a banged up Steelers team.
Jacksonville Jaguars1-93300.4693I don't think Chad Henne is the answer, but his performance is a sign that Blaine Gabbert isn't, either.
Kansas City Chiefs1-923-10.5313Matt Barkley was hurt last weekend, but Chiefs fans weren't happy about that injury to a USC quarterback.
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An interesting story today on Antonio Cromartie, courtesy of Bob Glauber of Newsday. Cromartie says that after Revis was injured, the All-Pro cornerback told Cromartie that he needed to start taking his job more seriously and that it was time for him to reach his potential. Cromartie stated: “Hearing it from your peers, you take more out of that than hearing it from your coach…. Your peers expect so much out of you and expect you to play at a higher level, especially when he’s one of the best corners in the league.”

I’ve been very impressed with Cromartie this season, and Pro Football Focus’ numbers back in up. PFF’s subscriber content ranks Cromartie fourth in pass coverage among cornerbacks this season, behind only Charles Tillman, Casey Hayward, and Richard Sherman. He’s playing as well as I’ve seen him since he’s been a Jet, and he’s changed his demeanor off the field, too.

Your reaction to Cromartie’s comments is essentially a Rorschach test of your views on life. Whether you find it disappointing that this is what it took for the light to go on (and who knows when the bulb will need to be replaced) or inspiring that he was able to elevate his play is left to the reader.

Cromartie realized he had to take on more of a leadership role, and admitted that his level of play leading up to this season wasn’t as proficient as it should have been. It was a startling admission from a player who rarely suffers from a lack of self assurance, yet it was a moment that signaled a major turnaround. Cromartie is indeed playing his best football, and now laments that he didn’t take his craft more seriously before.

“It shouldn’t have taken for Revis to go down for me to be playing at a very high level,” he said. “There’s something I think I took for granted having Revis on the other side and not being able to play at a high level when he was here.”

“I think the biggest thing that’s changed for me is the leadership role,” Cromartie said. “Just making sure everyone was on top of everything, helping guys study film and knowing how to study film. I think I just took on a role that once [Revis] left, and I wanted to make sure I played at a higher level every single week.”

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NYT Fifth Down: Post-week 11

This week at the Fifth Down, I look at the remarkable turnaround in Tampa Bay.  I argue that the success Tampa Bay is having this year dates back to the end of last year, when the organization decided to rebuild the offense with a clear image in mind.

Ten months ago, Tampa Bay Buccaneers General Manager Mark Dominik had a disaster on his hands.

The Bucs lost their final 10 games of the 2011 season and fired Coach Raheem Morris. The team ranked 27th in points scored, and quarterback Josh Freeman had regressed considerably in his third season.

In 2011, Freeman ranked 26th in Adjusted Net Yards per Attempt and led the N.F.C. in interceptions. Freeman had seemingly lost his way; he averaged a meek 10.4 yards per completion, placing him 33rd in the league and just barely ahead of weak-armed Colt McCoy (10.3).

If Freeman’s career had continued on this downward trajectory, Dominik would have become collateral damage. So in the off-season, Dominik rebuilt the team with a clear vision: he wanted an offense built around a strong running game complemented by a deep passing attack.

Dominik’s first move to was hire Greg Schiano, then the coach at Rutgers. The decision seemed odd at the time, especially in light of Tampa Bay’s flirtation with Oregon’s Chip Kelly. Kelly is considered an offensive mastermind, and Schiano is a defensive coach by trade. That meant the man Schiano would hire to coach his offense would be the most critical hire in Josh Freeman’s — and potentially Dominik’s — career.

Schiano didn’t have to venture far from Piscataway, N.J., to find his coordinator, Mike Sullivan, who was working as the Giants’ quarterbacks coach. The decision was considered risky because Sullivan had never called plays for the Giants, but he had a reputation for wanting to stretch the field with long passes in connection with a strong running game. In 2011, among the 25 quarterbacks that started at least 10 games and threw at least 300 passes, Eli Manning led the league in yards per completion.

In March, Tampa Bay signed wide receiver Vincent Jackson, who had starred for the Chargers. From 2008 to 2011, Jackson averaged 18.0 yards per catch, the highest average in the league over that span among players with at least 200 catches. During Jackson’s best season, in 2009, San Diego quarterback Philip Rivers led the league in yards per completion, signaling the effects an elite deep threat can have on a quarterback’s statistics.

Tampa Bay also signed the All-Pro guard Carl Nicks from division rival New Orleans, although he is now out for the year with a left foot injury. Finally, in the 2012 draft, the Buccaneers selected running back Doug Martin with the 31st pick in the first round. Martin has 1,000 rushing yards in 10 games and is leading the N.F.L. in yards from scrimmage.

By adding one of the game’s best deep threats, an excellent offensive lineman and a talented, all-purpose running back, along with finding the right offensive coordinator and  coach, Dominik put the pieces in place around his franchise quarterback. This year, Freeman is having a breakout season. Playing in Sullivan’s offense, alongside Jackson and Martin, has transformed Freeman into one of the game’s most valuable players. Consider that through 10 games in 2011, Manning’s Giants were 6-4 and he was averaging 8.2 Adjusted Yards per Attempt; through 10 games in 2012,  Freeman’steam is 6-4 and he is averaging 8.2 AY/A.
After ranking 26th in ANY/A last season, Freeman  ranks second in ANY/A and Net Yards per Attempt, my preferred predictive statistic of quarterback play, trailing only Peyton Manning in both categories. After ranking second to last in yards per completion last year, Freeman ranks second in that metric this season, just barely behind Cam Newton.

You can read the rest of the post here, which also includes a look at the crazy records set in the Houston-Jacksonville game and some other interesting week 11 stats.

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Pete Gogolak, not Brian Burke.

You know the name Pete Gogolak, don’t you? The former Buffalo Bill placekicker is a famous figure in football history for two reasons. First, he played a key role in the merger between the AFL and NFL in the 1960s. [1]Gogolak was the first AFL player stolen by an NFL team. In 1965, Bob Timberlake succeeded on just one of his fifteen field goal attempts for the Giants. That prompted a desperate Wellington Mara to … Continue reading He’s also remembered for what he did on the field: Gogolak is widely credited with being the first soccer-style kicker in pro football history.

But Gogolak’s impact wasn’t limited to identifying the optimal technique for kicking a football: he also helped usher in an era of specialists. In the early days of the NFL, there was no room for a specialist as rosters were tiny and players played on offense, defense and special teams. Unlimited free substitution wasn’t permanently instituted until 1950, and as recently as 1963, teams were limited to just 37-man rosters.

Once teams were allowed to roster more players, and a certain unique brand of kicking was proven to be superior, a more specialized NFL emerged. In 1949, nobody would have signed a soccer-style kicker, or any person who could only kick a football. We joke now that kickers aren’t real football players, because back in 1949, a kicker would also need to play tight end or free safety. The idea that 5’11, 182-pound, 42-year-old Jason Hanson could be a contributing member of an NFL team is as noncontroversial in 2012 as it would have been laughable in 1952. It’s not going to take 60 years before an advanced statistical analyst — perhaps the front office version of a kicker — becomes a contributing member of an NFL organization.

This weekend, I sat down with Brian Burke, the founder of Advanced NFL Stats, a fantastic website on football, statistics and game theory. Burke’s win probability calculator has been one of the most exciting innovations in our industry. In Part II of this series, I’ll be interviewing Football Outsiders’ Aaron Schatz. Neither person is a threat to Ron Rivera’s job security anymore than Jason Hanson is a threat to steal Calvin Johnson’s job. Specialization is the way of the world, and hiring someone trained in the art of decision-making isn’t any different than choosing to hire a lawyer or doctor. We can’t expert anyone to be an expert in everything.
[continue reading…]

References

References
1 Gogolak was the first AFL player stolen by an NFL team. In 1965, Bob Timberlake succeeded on just one of his fifteen field goal attempts for the Giants. That prompted a desperate Wellington Mara to sign Gogolak after the season, which violated the gentlemen’s agreement between the two leagues not to sign each other’s players (which would drive up salaries). In response, Al Davis went nuclear, and the AFL signed Roman Gabriel, Fran Tarkenton, Sonny Jurgensen and Mike Ditka to contracts. Shortly thereafter, the two leagues hammered out the details on a merger. Baltimore’s Carroll Rosenbloom reportedly told Mara afterwards, “If I’d known you wanted a kicker, I’d have given you a kicker.”
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Mike Mularkey went for it on 4th and 10 in overtime

With 2:36 remaining in overtime, the Jacksonville Jaguars were at the Houston 47-yard line. It was 4th-and-10, following two short incomplete passes that were sandwiched around a run for no gain. Surprisingly, Mike Mularkey kept his offense on the field. The only similar example I can find of such an aggressive move in this situation came in 2009, when Carson Palmer and the Bengals convinced Marvin Lewis to go for it with 1:04 left in overtime, facing 4th and 11 at the Cleveland 41. Suffice it to say, this was something you don’t see everyday.

Despite being an unorthodox decision, most fans approved of the move. I do as well. Against arguably the best team in the league and your division rival, on the road, why not take the gamble? Is 1-8-1 that much better than 1-9, because punting in that situation is clearly playing for the tie. However, I think it’s important to make a clear distinction here, because stats guys are always recommending teams to go for it more frequently on fourth down.

This was *not* one of those cases. The numbers say this was a bad move. That’s exactly why this decision should be characterized as a a gamble. It’s okay to be risky for riskiness’ sake, but it’s important to recognize that that’s the reason. You’re playing for the variance here, not for the expected value. According to Brian Burke, Jacksonville would have needed a 55% chance of converting to make going for it the smart play. Over time, 4th and 10 plays are converted at roughly a 35% rate, and I don’t think that’s going to be higher when it’s Chad Henne against one of the best defenses in the league, regardless of how the rest of the game unfolded.

An incomplete pass, and your win probably decreases to 30% (never mind what happens on a sack or potential interception return). Give Houston the ball at say, their 14 following a punt, and you have a 60% chance of winning (this counts a tie as half a win). If you convert, you have a 76% chance of winning. Assuming a 35% rate, your win probably if you go for it is just 46% compared to 60% if you punt.

So the numbers don’t say going for it was the smart play. This was a gamble in every sense of the word. When statistical analysts argue that teams should go for it more often on 4th and 1, we’re not advocating risky moves; we’re advocating smart ones. This was risk for risk’s sake — which, given the situation, was probably appropriate.

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On November 15, 2010, Michael Vick humiliated the Washington Redskins before a national television audience on Monday Night Football. The big news right before kickoff was that the ‘Skins had signed former Eagle QB Donovan McNabb to a five-year, $78 million contract extension, an ironic note that wouldn’t be lost on observers as McNabb’s replacement, Vick, put together one of the greatest all-around quarterbacking performances in NFL history:

DateTmOppResultCmpAttCmp%YdsTDIntRateSkSkYdANYPARushR_YdsR_TD
11/15/2010PHI@WASW 59-28202871.4%33340150.71114.28802

McNabb, on the other hand, was mediocre, going 17-31 with 295 yards and 2 TDs, but also 3 picks. More damning, Washington’s offense produced zero points until the Redskins were in a 35-0 hole and the game was essentially over.

Fast-forward 735 days, though, and the Redskins got their payback. An injured Vick was on the shelf, the Eagles entered the game on a 5-game losing streak, and electrifying rookie Robert Griffin III extended it to six with a brilliant performance of his own:

DateTmOppResultCmpAttCmp%YdsTDIntRateSkSkYdANYPARushR_YdsR_TD
11/18/2012WASPHIW 31-6141593.3%20040158.32816.012840

So, which performance was better, Vick’s original or RGIII’s remix? Vick threw for 133 more yards, rushed for practically the same amount as Griffin (on 4 fewer carries), and produced more total TDs. Then again, Griffin completed 93% of his passes and put together the vaunted 158.3 “perfect” QB rating. It’s a tough call.

Sound off with your opinion below!


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Creating a Draft Value Chart, Part II

Last week, I took another stab at creating a draft value chart. The biggest modification I made was looking at just the value provided by a player in his first five years to a team. As a result, the graph flattened, compressing the difference between the value provided by the top and bottom picks.

I’m not sure if there’s a right answer, or even what the “market” is. Almost no one thinks the high values assigned by the Jimmy Johnson draft chart are “correct.” Still, I think advanced analysts can sometimes get carried away with the idea of trading down. You may not need a dozen superstars to win, but you probably need a few, especially on offense.

Last time, I stated that we needed to take the marginal value of a player compared to that of an undrafted pick. That’s true, but after thinking it over some more, we need to do this on a yearly basis. A player providing 1 or 2 points of AV in a season obviously isn’t doing much. Therefore, I reconstructed the draft value chart by giving a player credit only for the AV he produced after 2 points of AV in each season. So if a player had an AV of 10 in each of his first 5 seasons, he gets credit for 40 points of value. Using these values produces the following chart, along with a logarithmic trendline:

After again removing the marginal value for the draft slots on the “career” level — even undrafted players, on average, will have some seasons with AV over two in their first five years — we can finalize this draft value chart. You can view all the values here. We can also compare this (in blue) to the Jimmy Johnson draft chart (in red):
[continue reading…]

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Week 12 College Football SRS Ratings

Your assumptions are no longer valid.

Kansas State entered the weekend as the most balanced team in college football. Through 11 weeks, Baylor ranked 120th in yards allowed and 118th in points allowed. But last night in Waco, the Wildcats were unable to do much of anything on offense. Collin Klein had never thrown more than one interception in a game in his career; he threw 3 against the Bears. Kansas State was averaging 213 rushing yards per game, but Baylor limited them to just 76 rushing yards. The Wildcats hadn’t allowed more than 30 points in a game this year; Baylor scored 52 points in the first three quarters and ended the game with 580 yards of offense. The most balanced and consistent team in the country was demolished by one of the most one-dimensional teams in college football.

Who needs Andrew Luck?

At the same time, another surprise was happening in Eugene. If there was one thing we knew in 2012, it was that the Oregon offense was unstoppable. This has been the case for years — since Chip Kelly arrived in 2007, the Ducks had scored at least 24 points in every home game. Against Stanford, the Ducks were held to just 14 points in an overtime loss.

In their first years in the post-Andrew Luck and post-Robert Griffin III, the Stanford and Baylor programs dominated the college football headlines on the most important weekend of the season. For the first time in five years, the #1 and #2 teams in the BCS fell on the same day, rendering all of our national championship game assumptions moot.

This much is clear: if Notre Dame defeats USC at the Coliseum on Saturday, the Fighting Irish are going to the BCS National Championship Game. The winner of the SEC Championship Game is going there as well, barring an upset by Georgia Tech in Athens this weekend. [1]No, we’re not getting into hypotheticals that involve Auburn beating Alabama. I maintain that Georgia is far less deserving of its spot in Atlanta than Florida, who has the most impressive trio of wins this year by defeating LSU, Texas A&M, and South Carolina. Georgia lost to South Carolina but beat Florida, which gave them the tiebreaker and the division crown. But the real key for Bulldogs was that they faced Mississippi and Auburn in the West, not LSU and A&M; as a result, they are the SEC East Champions.

But now is the time for more relevant debates. Assuming an upset — either by USC, or by Georgia Tech coupled with a Georgia upset against Alabama — who is next in line? At that point, four teams will have legitimate claims for the other golden ticket: Florida, Florida State, Oregon, and Kansas State. Fortunately, the Gators and Seminoles play each other on Saturday, which would leaves us with just three promising candidates.

If they defeat Florida State, Florida is the clear “next team up” following a slip-up by Notre Dame or in the event of a two-loss SEC Champ. The computers would love them due to their strength of schedule, and the voters should love them for the same reason and the bump they would get for defeating Florida State.

If FSU wins, their case is much weaker. The computers hate them, and for good reason: they haven’t beaten any good teams. Defeating the Gators would give them a big bump, and they’ll get a chance to beat mediocre team in the ACC Championship Game, but consider: Outside of 10-1 Clemson, each of FSU’s other 9 victories have come against ACC, Big East, or FCS schools that have at least 5 losses. And how good is Clemson? Yes, they have a nice record, but their 10 wins have come against Ball State (#64 in the SRS), and ACC, SEC, or FCS teams with at least five losses.

According to the SRS, North Carolina is the 3rd best team in the conference and they rank 45th. FSU lost to a bad N.C. State team, while while Oregon (in particular) and Kansas State have much more palatable losses. FSU’s argument would be two parts “we lost earliest” and one part “we beat Florida and Clemson, even if Clemson hasn’t beaten anybody.” Florida State’s overall strength of schedule is far inferior to that both Oregon’s and Kansas State’s. In my opinion, even with a win over Florida, the Seminoles likely do not jump both Oregon and Kansas State in the BCS, nor should they.

And consider: if Stanford defeats UCLA this weekend, the Cardinal — and not Oregon — would win the Pac-12 North, which would deal a significant blow to Nike University. Kansas State still needs to get by Texas, but tonight might not end up being a season killer. At this point, they need to root for USC and Florida State, which is historically not a bad position to be in. My guess is Kansas State is next in line after an undefeated Notre Dame, a one-loss SEC Champ, and a one-loss Florida team. It’s possible only one of those three exist by the end of the season.

Let’s take a look at the SRS ratings after 11 weeks. As always, thanks to Dr. Peter R. Wolfe. [continue reading…]

References

References
1 No, we’re not getting into hypotheticals that involve Auburn beating Alabama.
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Checkdowns: QB Playoff Wins by College

Watching Matt Barkley today against UCLA, I tweeted that Mark Sanchez is responsible for 4 of the 9 playoff wins by USC quarterbacks. Since twitter is not a very good medium for showing large datasets, here’s a quick look at which colleges have produced the quarterbacks with the most playoff victories.

Two pieces of fine print. One, I am using the player’s last college as his college, so Oklahoma does not get credit for Troy Aikman in this scenario. Second, I am giving only the quarterback who threw for the most passing yards for his team in that game as the “quarterback” to avoid giving credit to players who came in and took a couple of snaps at the end of blowouts (or who started games but were benched or injured early). So the number of playoff wins for each quarterback — listed in parentheses in the table below — could slightly differ from official figures.

Enjoy.
[continue reading…]

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Checkdowns: College Team Efficiency Ratings

Note: There are many things theoretical issues with this post. That said, if I had to write down and explain all the drawbacks of the data I’m about to present, I wouldn’t have the time to make quick posts like this. So….

I thought it would be cool to take a slightly (emphasis on slightly) more nuanced look at team rushing and passing stats so far in 2012.

The first table shows how many “rushing yards over average” each team has this year. First, I calculated each team’s “Adjusted Yards per Carry” which is simply Yards per Carry with a 20-yard bonus for each touchdown. On average, teams are averaging 5.31 AYPC in 2012; to calculate rushing yards over average, I multiplied the number of carries for each team by the difference between their AYPC average and 5.31. As expected, Oregon ranks first.
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Scott Kacsmar posted an interesting article yesterday, noting that teams are punting or kicking on 4th down in 2012 more frequently than at any other time in the last 20 years. So far in 2012, just 1.27% of all plays are 4th down attempts.

Scott also noted that teams have been less aggressive on 4th and 1. I wanted to tweak some of Scott’s cutoffs and see if the results changed. I look at all 4th-and-1s since 2000, but limited the data to just weeks 1-10 and the first three quarters of the game. This year, teams have gone for it 56 times in these situations, gaining a first down 75% of the time.

The table below shows how often teams punted, kicked a field goal, or went for it on 4th and 1. The fifth column shows the conversion rate when teams did choose to try to get the first down, and the next two columns display the run to pass ratio (scrambles are included as runs). The final two columns show the success rates by run and by pass.

YearPuntField GoalGo For ItConv RtRun %Pass %Run ConRtPass ConRt
201254.3%16%29.8%75%76.8%23.2%76.7%69.2%
201148.7%23.3%28%61.9%83.3%16.7%60%71.4%
201050%11.1%38.9%68.3%76.2%23.8%72.9%53.3%
200946.8%10.5%42.6%61.7%76.5%23.5%64.5%52.6%
200847.3%12.1%40.6%70.1%80.6%19.4%74.1%53.8%
200745.3%14.1%40.6%69.6%84.1%15.9%72.4%54.5%
200647.2%18.1%34.7%70.1%74.6%25.4%76%52.9%
200549.1%10.9%40%66.7%84.8%15.2%66.1%70%
200452%12.1%35.8%69.4%83.9%16.1%69.2%70%
200347.7%15.5%36.8%73.7%87.7%12.3%74%71.4%
200248.5%16.8%34.7%69%82.8%17.2%75%40%
200152.1%14.1%33.7%69.1%83.6%16.4%73.9%44.4%
200045.5%21.3%33.1%72.9%81.4%18.6%75%63.6%
Avg48.8%15.1%36.1%69%81%19%71.5%57.9%

It is a bit odd to see that teams seem less willing to try to convert on 4th-and-1 in 2012 than they were a decade ago. Why do you think that is?

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Should Notre Dame be ranked in the Top 2?

Before I get to the question of the day, below is a quick roundup of some good college football articles I read this week:

  • Bill Connelly, of Football Outsiders and SB Nation, argues that Texas A&M’s victory proves head coach Kevin Sumlin was the right man for the job and that the spread works — even in the SEC.
  • You may recall that Alabama’s last chance to win the game was ruined when they fell for a hard count on a 4th down play with Texas A&M lined up to punt. Chris Brown highlighted how Sumlin has a history of success with the hard count — the day before the game.
  • Dan Wetzel, writing for Yahoo!, argues that the BCS is screwing over Notre Dame because of the Irish’s preseason ranking.
  • Stewart Mandel over at Sports Illustrated discusses the far-reaching impact of the Aggies’ upset victory
  • Matt Hinton at SB Nation provides us with the latest and greatest on the BCS race, including a terrifying-but-not-unrealistic theory on how we might get another All-SEC BCS title game.

As we move towards the final few weeks of the regular season, the picture is almost in place. We know that Oregon and Kansas State are atop the BCS standings, and if both remain undefeated, will end up facing off in the BCS National Championship Game. That would leave Notre Dame, as a potential 12-0, left out in the cold. Is this fair?

Of course not. Any system that is designed around a two-team playoff format is not going to be equitable when you have three teams finish a season undefeated. That’s basic math. Unfortunately, we’re stuck with the BCS for another 14 months. So the real question isn’t whether an undefeated Notre Dame would be getting screwed — they would be, just like countless other teams before them. No, the more interesting question is, assuming we are absurdly limited to the ridiculousness of choosing two out of three undefeated teams, should Notre Dame be one of those two teams?

The cast of characters in this case can easily be plotted a continuum, with “margin of victory” champs on one side and “strength of schedule” warriors on the other. On the left, a dominant offense; on the right, a dominant defense. It’s a case of “beauty contest winners” vs. “resume champs.” Or, if you prefer, the best predictive teams vs. the best retrodictive teams. In any event, you’ve got Oregon on one side, Notre Dame on the other, and Kansas State square in the middle. We’re left trying to magnify miniscule differences to figure out which two teams belong.

The case for Oregon

The Ducks lead the country in points per game and rushing yards per carry, giving them the most explosive offensive attack in college football. The Ducks are so prolific that they’ve managed to achieve these milestones despite largely shutting things down for large stretches of the game nearly every week: Oregon has had a lead of at least 32 points in nine of ten games, and in 8 of those games, they scored at least 4 straight touchdowns at one point (of the exceptions, in one they had two runs of three straight touchdowns and in the other, they broke USC’s school records for yards and points allowed).
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I’m a big fan of Mike Tanier, an excellent writer formerly of Football Outsiders and now with Sports on Earth. Yesterday, Tanier threw cold water on the idea that Chip Kelly is going to be the next great NFL coach. Tanier labeled him him this generation’s Steve Spurrier, and argued that it is lazy and unsophisticated to simply assume that “great NCAA coach = great NFL coach.” Unfortunately, his analysis only required the expenditure of one extra ounce of effort and intelligence:

Kelly is an offensive mastermind. He is guru of the modern college spread option. Marcus Mariota, his current quarterback, fakes a shotgun handoff, stands in the pocket while a file downloads, then floats passes to receivers who are open by five yards. Or, Mariota hands off to Kenjon Barner, who busts off 300-yard games against overtaxed defenses. Or, Mariota keeps the football himself. There are trick plays, wildcat packages, fake field goals, bells, whistles, onion rings and shakes. It’s fun, and the quarterback is always in the gun. Is your SpurriDar beeping yet?

Kelly runs an explosive college offense, but like Spurrier’s fun ‘n’ gun, it is distinctly and uniquely a college offense. It is built on the principle of littering the field with speedy young men who can outrun the opponent’s speedy young men in the wide-open spaces that only exist at a level of play where everyone is a step slower, an inch shorter and 15 pounds lighter.

Kelly’s offense is often mischaracterized as gimmicky, but Chris Brown did an excellent job explaining how traditional football principles are the key to Kelly’s offense at Grantland yesterday. Brown has also written a bit about Kelly’s zone-read running game, the way the Ducks teach reading the defensive tackle, and how Oregon’s attack compares to Nebraska’s old rushing offense over at his website, Smart Football; alternatively, you can read about Kelly’s offense straight from the horse’s mouth.

Can Kelly simply pack his playbook, spend a training camp with an NFL team, and turn them into the pro version of the Ducks? Of course not; even if his running game works perfectly, his runs will mostly go for 8-yard gains, not 40-yard sprints (unless he’s playing the Raiders). But reducing Kelly to an X’s and O’s guru incapable of adaption is unfairly harsh. Tanier credits the great Nike machine with providing Oregon with superior talent, but that’s not a fair criticism. Oregon has never had a top-ten recruiting class under Kelly, and Rivals generally ranks Oregon’s classes in the teens or early twenties. Spurrier, coaching in talent-rich Florida, not remote Oregon, was playing with a decked more favorably stacked than Kelly ever has. But more importantly, Kelly’s offenses were unstoppable when he coached at New Hampshire without any recruiting edge, and his success at Oregon happened immediately, even before Oregon truly became the nouveau riche of college football.
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Week 10 Power Rankings

Houston, we may have a rematch.

Jason Lisk put the Texans on top of his power rankings. Both Aaron Schatz and Brian Burke loves the Broncos. The Patriots offense looks historically great. I know what you’re thinking: wasn’t it only five weeks ago that I read somewhere that the NFC was by far the superior conference in the NFL?

That still may be true. Football Outsiders has the Jaguars, Chiefs, Raiders, Titans, Browns and… Colts as their bottom six teams in the league. Advanced NFL Stats largely agrees, putting the Jaguars, Chiefs, Titans, Bills, Cardinals, Colts, Browns and Raiders — that’s 7 AFC teams — in the bottom quarter of the NFL. There is a large gap between the ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ in the AFC, and the three teams straddling the border — Baltimore, Pittsburgh, and Indianapolis — are tremendously flawed. That says nothing of the middle tier of the AFC, populated by the schizophrenic Dolphins, Bengals, and Chargers. The AFC may not be any good this year, but that doesn’t mean it the Super Bowl winner won’t come from there.

[As always, the number of wins I’m projecting each team to finish the season with is in column 3. The fourth column – PWIN – shows how many wins I projected last week, and the difference column represents how many wins I added or subtracted this week. The “RSOS” column stands for the remaining SOS for the team, based on the number of projected wins I’m giving to each of their opponents. The “RHG” column stands for remaining home games.]

TeamRecWinsPrvWinDiffRemSOSRemHGComments
Atlanta Falcons8-1131300.4734Their first loss doesn't change their outlook -- this is a 13-win team that should get the #1 seed in the NFC.
Houston Texans8-1131300.4643Until someone mentioned it Monday Night, I forgot the Texans play in a dome. There's no team built for the outdoors like Houston.
Denver Broncos6-3131210.3754They still have, by far, the easiest remaining schedule. Their win total keeps rising.
Chicago Bears7-21112-10.5043The loss to Houston isn't as significant as Jay Cutler's concussion.
New England Patriots6-3111100.5134Suddenly, the remaining schedule looks a little challenging, with Ind, @NYJ, @MIA, Hou, and SF the next five weeks.
Green Bay Packers6-3111100.4733If Green Bay can manage to win road games against the Lions and Giants the next two weeks, the hype machine will be rolling.
Baltimore Ravens7-2111010.5543Not a fan of this team at all, but they're getting a break facing Pittsburgh this week.
San Francisco 49ers6-2-110.512-1.50.5313There are no gimmes left on their schedule and the 49ers are starting to show some cracks.
Pittsburgh Steelers6-31011-10.4734Losing Ben Roethlisberger hurts, but an easy schedule means the Steelers are playing with a safety net.
New York Giants6-4910-10.5633Four weeks ago, I wrote: "I've projected the Giants at 9 wins every week so far, and I'm not going to change now. The Giants are plagued by inconsistency." Two weeks ago, I had them at 11 wins. I should know better.
Seattle Seahawks6-49900.5003Three home games remaining = three more wins.
Indianapolis Colts6-39900.5273No, a win over Jacksonville does not give you a bump in the projections.
Dallas Cowboys4-59810.4205Streaking and still have 5 games left in Jerry's World to go with a creampuff easy schedule.
Miami Dolphins4-589-10.5044Seriously, what was that? The loss to Tennessee wasn't just the most unexpected game of the year; it was also the worst one.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers5-49720.5763Josh Freeman is having a magnificent year. The schedule is difficult but a 9-win season is within their grasp.
New Orleans Saints4-58710.5583There's no margin for error for the Saints, who aren't good enough to operate with no margin of error.
Cincinnati Bengals4-58620.4463Can the Bengals win three straight games against the little sisters of the AFC West?
Minnesota Vikings6-47700.6612Not only does Minnesota have the most difficult remaining schedule but the Vikings are the only team with two home games left.
Tennessee Titans4-67610.4693I'm not about to buy into this team, but maybe they can use that win as a springboard.
St. Louis Rams3-5-16.560.50.4783A win over the Jets in the Schottenheimer Bowl may be the highpoint of the season. Anything would be better than kissing the 49ers.
San Diego Chargers4-567-10.5364Now that I think I've got them figured out, surely they're about to go on a winning streak.
Detroit Lions4-567-10.6615The loss to the Vikings effectively ended their season, as they are tied with the Vikings in having the hardest remaining schedule in the league.
Washington Redskins3-66600.4644Robert Griffin III off a bye week against the Eagles? Cover your eyes, Philly fans.
Arizona Cardinals4-56600.5543The St. Louis Cardinals won a game more recently than the football version. A regular season game.
Oakland Raiders3-66600.4294An easy remaining schedule means they probably won't be in contention for the top pick.
New York Jets3-66600.4063I hate this team.
Buffalo Bills3-66600.4425For the Bills, playing the Patriots close tends to be the highlight of their season.
Carolina Panthers2-76600.4463This team is much more talented than a 2-7 team, but I'm not sure what that gets them.
Philadelphia Eagles3-656-10.4733Yeah, the schedule is easy, but Philadelphia is on a 5-game losing streak that shows no sign of ending.
Cleveland Browns2-74400.5093The last 7 games will be very important for some members of the Cleveland franchise.
Jacksonville Jaguars1-834-10.5183Blaine Gabbert is ranked 33rd in NY/A out of 34 qualifying quarterbacks, sandwiched between the awfulness in Arizona.
Kansas City Chiefs1-83300.5274Hey, at least they didn't tie!

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When Miami was blown out by Tennessee this weekend, I was shocked. So I cooked up a quick little way to measure how shocked I should have been. First, here are the SRS standings for the NFL through 10 weeks:

RkTeamGMOVSOSSRS
1Houston Texans911.6-0.311.3
2Chicago Bears911.8-0.910.9
3Denver Broncos99.41.310.7
4New England Patriots911.2-0.910.4
5San Francisco 49ers99.20.49.7
6Green Bay Packers95.41.77.1
7Atlanta Falcons98.4-2.36.1
8Seattle Seahawks103.72.15.8
9New York Giants105.105.1
10Baltimore Ravens96.1-2.33.8
11Tampa Bay Buccaneers95.3-2.23.1
12Dallas Cowboys9-0.83.62.8
13Pittsburgh Steelers93.7-3.30.4
14Detroit Lions90.3-0.30.1
15Minnesota Vikings101.1-10.1
16New Orleans Saints9-1.10.5-0.6
17San Diego Chargers92.3-3.4-1.1
18Washington Redskins9-2.10.9-1.2
19Carolina Panthers9-6.24.8-1.5
20St. Louis Rams9-5.84.1-1.7
21Arizona Cardinals9-3.61.6-2
22Cincinnati Bengals9-1.6-1.2-2.8
23Miami Dolphins9-1.1-3.1-4.2
24New York Jets9-6.21.9-4.3
25Indianapolis Colts9-2-3.4-5.4
26Buffalo Bills9-7.21-6.2
27Cleveland Browns9-5-1.3-6.3
28Philadelphia Eagles9-7.61-6.5
29Tennessee Titans10-9.21.6-7.6
30Oakland Raiders9-10-0.7-10.7
31Kansas City Chiefs9-11.9-0.7-12.6
32Jacksonville Jaguars9-13.60.6-13

Now the SRS weighs each game equally. This means that we can come up with a projected game score for each week, and see how close the actual result came to meeting our projection. For this iteration of the SRS, I am not using any caps or floors, and am giving the home team three points.
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NYT Fifth Down: Post-week 10

This week at the New York Times I looked at several interesting statistical developments in both the 2012 season and in week 10.

Even in today’s pass-happy N.F.L., it pays to have one of the best running backs. In one of the bigger surprises of the season, the best of the best is Minnesota’s Adrian Peterson.

He’s a four-time Pro Bowler and a two-time first-team All-Pro selection, but few expected a big year out of Peterson. That’s because last year, on Christmas Eve, Peterson tore the anterior cruciate ligament and medial collateral ligament in his left knee against the Redskins. Such a brutal injury often permanently robs a player of his elite ability; the rule of thumb tells us that it’s not until the second full season after the injury that the player regains his old form, if he ever does.

An injury so late in the 2011 season had most people figuring his 2012 season would be a lost year. Instead, Peterson leads the league in rushing with 1,128 yards and is on pace for a remarkable 1,804. Peterson is the first player since 2009 to rush for 1,100 yards in his team’s first 10 games, and he’s showing no signs of slowing. He has rushed for 629 yards in his last four games, including an impressive 171 rushing yards in a victory over the Lions on Sunday.

Peterson is also averaging 5.75 yards per rush the season, the most among players with at least 100 carries. He joins Jim Brown, Walter Payton, Barry Sanders and Chris Johnson as players with 1,100 or more rushing yards and such a high yards-per-carry average after his team’s first ten games.

Minnesota’s passing game ranks 26th in Adjusted Net Yards per Attempt and last in the league in yards per completion, a sign of an offense that doesn’t stretch the field through the air. But despite a passing attack that doesn’t scare any defense, thanks to Peterson, Minnesota is 6-4 and a potential playoff team.

The Return of Megatron

For most of the season, N.F.L. fans wondered what was wrong with Calvin Johnson. It wasn’t until the final minutes of Detroit’s loss to the Vikings on Sunday that Matthew Stafford and Johnson connected on a touchdown pass this season (Johnson did catch a touchdown pass from Shaun Hill earlier this year). Well, after a 207-yard game against Minnesota, Johnson is again leading the league in receiving yards. With 974 yards in nine games, Johnson is actually ahead of last year’s pace, when he gained a league-high 1,681 yards. The big difference: in 2011, he caught 16 touchdown passes, but he has only two in 2012.

Continued Dominance in New England

When it comes to the Patriots, mind-boggling offensive numbers are the norm. That means we occasionally ignore just how impressively the New England machine is operating. The Patriots lead the league in points scored, yards gained and first downs. Since 1990, only the 1993 49ers, the 1997 Broncos, the 2001 Rams and the 2007 Patriots have finished first in each metric.

The Patriots are averaging 33.2 points per game, 3.1 points more than the second-place Broncos. At 430.3 yards per game, the Patriots far outpace the rest of the league; Detroit (406.1) is the only other team averaging more than 400 yards per game.

But where New England really stands out is the 259 first downs it has gained. Last year, New Orleans set the N.F.L. record for first downs in a season with 416; the 2011 Patriots also broke the old record (held by the 2003 Kansas City Chiefs) with 399. This year’s team is on pace for an incredible 460 first downs. And the Patriots are on pace to crush the record in a surprising way: New England leads the N.F.L. in rushing first downs with 92, and Stevan Ridley leads all running backs with 54 rushing first downs.

You can read the full article here.

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Creating a NFL draft value chart, Part I

Nearly five years ago, I came out with my own draft value chart to replace the “Jimmy Johnson” draft chart commonly cited by draftniks. What I did then was assign the career approximate value grade to each slot for each player drafted over a 30-year period, smoothed the data, and came up with a chart that actually represented career production.

The chart was due for an update in any event, but I’m going to make a key change. Using each player’s career AV makes sense on some level, as the drafting team gets the chance to have a player for his entire career. But the real value in the draft –especially now thanks to the new collective bargaining agreement — is the ability to get a player for cheap on his rookie contract, which expires after (at most) five years. The Jets got a great deal with Darrelle Revis early in his career, but now that he’s the highest paid cornerback in the NFL, much of his value (even pre-injury) is gone.

There’s also another consideration. Of the 100 top-ten draft picks between 1998 and 2007, only 48 players [1]counting Eli Manning and Philip Rivers as staying with the teams that drafted them were still on the same team entering their sixth season. From the perspective of the head coach, things look even bleaker. In only eleven instances were the head coach and the top-ten pick still on the same team after five years (i.e., in year six): Chris McAlister and Jamal Lewis with Brian Bilick in Baltimore, Donovan McNabb with Andy Reid in Philadelphia, Richard Seymour with Bill Belichick in New England, Julius Peppers and Jordan Gross with John Fox in Carolina, Carson Palmer with Marvin Lewis in Cincinnati, Eli Manning with Tom Coughlin in New York, A.J. Hawk with Mike McCarty in Green Bay, Mario Williams with Gary Kubiak in Houston, and Levi Brown with Ken Whisenhunt in Arizona.

If you’re a head coach — or a general manager — I’m not sure it makes sense to project any more than five years down the line. Therefore, I’m going to construct my draft value chart based on the amount of Approximate Value provided by that player in his first five years after being drafted. [2]Note: I am giving the player credit for all of the AV he earned, regardless of whether or not it was accumulated with the team that selected him. Using PFR’s AV as my guide, I graded each player drafted from 1980 to 2007 and counted how much AV they accumulated in each of their first five years. Below is a chart plotting the data along with a smoothed line:


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References

References
1 counting Eli Manning and Philip Rivers as staying with the teams that drafted them
2 Note: I am giving the player credit for all of the AV he earned, regardless of whether or not it was accumulated with the team that selected him.
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Why trust this guy?

Falcons head coach Mike Smith made a couple of interesting decisions in the 4th quarter of Atlanta’s loss to the Saints on Sunday. And by interesting, I mean conservative. The first strategic blunder came when his team scored a touchdown with 13 minutes remaining, to cut the lead to 28-23 pending the point after. Smith’s absurd reasoning doesn’t merit discussion, and according to Bill Barnwell and the footballcommentary folks, Atlanta should have gone for it if they had just a 23% chance of converting.

Jason Lisk highlighted what was likely in Smith’s head: we don’t know who is going to kick the next field goal. Sure, if it’s the Falcons, then you want to go for two, but if it would be New Orleans (the team about to gain possession) then we’re in a 7-point game situation, so the extra point is the conservative right play.

But here’s the easy shorthand: if the downside to missing the two-point conversion is limited to you needing a two-point conversion later to even things up, then going for it is usually the correct call.

What is the advantage to being down 3 vs. being down 4? Well a field goal ties the game, and even if the opponent kicks a field goal, a touchdown will win it for you.

What is the disadvantage to being down 5 vs. being down 4? Well, a field goal is meaningless in either case (or, if it’s not meaningless, one field goal still leaves you one field goal away from taking the lead). The big disadvantage is that if New Orleans scores, the Falcons would have been down 8 as opposed to being down 7. But in coach-speak, being down 8 is one-possession game just like being down 7 is! That’s obviously not true, but in this case, the downside to going for 2 is essentially cut in half, because you get a second bite at the apple.

In other words, 50% of the time that you ‘go for two’ following a touchdown when trailing by 11, you will be down by 3 and glad you were aggressive; 25% of the time you go for 2 you will have some short-term discomfort, but this will be alleviated when you convert the next touchdown (which you need anyway if you don’t go for two). Only 25% of the time will this move blow up in your face. This is exactly the same logic that dictates that a team, down by 14, should go for two after scoring the first touchdown.

Considering Atlanta’s odds of converting the two-point attempt had to be greater than 50/50, considering that’s roughly the league average, Atlanta’s offense is great, and New Orleans’ defense is terrible, that makes going for two the obvious correct call.

Of course, Smith also made an ugly mistake when he kicked a field goal from the Saints’ two-yard-line when trailing by 4 points with nine minutes left. Had he gone for 2 earlier, I could at least understand the logic of kicking the field goal, even if I wouldn’t do it. But down by 4, he passed up a 50/50 chance to take a three-point lead to cut the lead to 1? Even if he missed, the Saints would have been backed up near the own goal, and a three-and-out would have likely put the Falcons a first down or two away from getting that precious field goal.

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Gary Kubiak.

Gary Kubiak doesn’t have a personality like a Ryan or a Harbaugh. He hasn’t been profiled to death like Andy Reid or Norv Turner. He doesn’t have the rings of Mike Tomlin or Bill Belichick. If not for the simple fact that he’s been in Houston forever, I’m not sure if most NFL fans could even name the head coach of the Texans. But his coaching career has been a fascinating one that leaves me with more questions than answers.

In January 2011, I wrote that Kubiak and Jack Del Rio were given incredibly long leashes in the AFC South. From 1970 to 2010, only four head coaches had (a) finished with a .500 or worse record in four out of five seasons with the same team, (b) finished with a .500 or worse record in the fifth season, and (c) were retained to coach for a sixth season. The four head coaches — Marvin Lewis, Dan Reeves, Bart Starr, and John McKay — all had extenuating circumstances for their failures, which differentiated them from Del Rio and Kubiak, who were about to become the fifth and sixth such coaches.

Things have changed dramatically in 22 months. The Jaguars have changed owners, head coaches, and quarterbacks, and likely will have a new general manager soon, too. Meanwhile, the Texans still have the same four men — Bob McNair, Rick Smith, Kubiak and Matt Schaub — in the four most prominent roles in the organization. Houston’s one big move, hiring Wade Phillips as defensive coordinator, has worked perfectly. Phillips has turned a dreadful Houston defense into one of the best units in the league.

The outlook is so promising in Houston that it’s easy to forget where things stood less than two years ago. Following a loss to the Tim Tebow-led Broncos — this was the year before Tebow-mania took the NFL by storm — most of the football world assumed the firing of Kubiak was a fait accompli. John McClain, a veteran writer in Houston for over 30 years, tweeted: “After the way the Texans blew Denver game leading 17-0 at halftime and 23-10 in the 4th quarter, I’ll be stunned if the staff isn’t fired.” McLain was so disgusted that he added, “I’ll say it again: The Texans have the worst pass defense in the history of football at any level since the beginning of time.”
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Week 11 College Football SRS Ratings

Johnny Football, with his shirt on (for now).

For the second straight season, the game of the year took place in Tuscaloosa. A week after Alabama eeked out a victory over LSU, and 53 weeks after Alabama loss to LSU in last year’s “Game of the Century”, Johnny Manziel produced one of the performances of the season in leading Texas A&M to an incredible upset victory. I have been a believer in the Aggies — they ranked 4th in my SRS ratings last week and remain there this week — but make no mistake, this was still an incredible upset. For a true freshman, on the road, against a Nick Saban defense, to go 24/31 for 253 yards and 2 TDs and to run 18 times for 92 yards is outstanding.

For now, the upset means we’re likely headed towards an SEC-free national championship game. This will anger some in the South, so I’ll take this time to remind you that the SEC’s record this year against the other BCS conferences is an incredibly dominant 4-5. Yes, the SEC has a losing record against the other top conferences in college football in 2011.

The bottom of the SEC has struggled considerably both in and out of conference — Auburn lost to Clemson, Vanderbilt to Northwestern, Kentucky to Louisville (and also to Western Kentucky), Ole Miss to Texas, and Arkansas to Rutgers (and also Louisiana-Lafayette). The positive side of the ledger isn’t all that impressive, unfortunately. Sure, Tennessee beat N.C. State, which would be impressive if not for the fact that the Wolfpack are 68th in the SRS. Yes, LSU beat Washington at home, but it’s LSU against the 8th best team in the Pac-12. Missouri over Arizona State and Alabama over Michigan are basically the two nonconference games the SEC can hang its hat on.

If Oregon wins out, they seem assured of getting one of the two golden tickets to Miami. Who will get the other? Obviously an undefeated Kansas State or Notre Dame would take one of the other spots. For now, K-State is ahead in the polls and the BCS standings, and gets the benefit of playing a streaking Texas team after the Fighting Irish have hung up their cleats for the year. According to the BCS Guru, Notre Dame is the clear third wheel.

But what if both Kansas State and Notre Dame lose? At that point, a one-loss SEC Champ — presumably Alabama — likely rises to number two. To that end, Alabama’s biggest friend right now is Lane Kiffin, who could knock off both Oregon and Notre Dame if USC wins out, setting up a Kansas State-Alabama title game.

And with that, a look college football’s SRS ratings after 11 weeks:
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A guide to Saturday’s games

The game of the day is in Tuscaloosa, as the #4 team in the SRS tries to ruin the perfect season of the best team in the country. Here’s a look at the weekly results for Alabama and Texas A&M, sorted from highest to lowest SRS score:

DateTeamPFOppPAH/RW/LDiffMOVSOSSRS
09-15-2012Alabama52Arkansas0RoadWin5239.542.782.2
09-01-2012Alabama41Michigan14Arlington TXWin2725.551.877.3
09-29-2012Texas A&M58Arkansas10HomeWin4834.542.777.2
10-13-2012Alabama42Missouri10RoadWin3229.547.376.8
09-15-2012Texas A&M48SMU3RoadWin453638.674.6
10-27-2012Alabama38Mississippi St7HomeWin312647.773.7
11-03-2012Texas A&M38Mississippi St13RoadWin252647.773.7
10-20-2012Alabama44Tennessee13RoadWin312944.773.7
10-27-2012Texas A&M63Auburn21RoadWin4234.537.672.1
09-08-2012Alabama35Western Kentucky0HomeWin352839.867.8
11-03-2012Alabama21LSU17RoadWin4757.164.1
09-29-2012Alabama33Mississippi14HomeWin191647.163.1
09-22-2012Alabama40Florida Atlantic7HomeWin332729.456.4
09-08-2012Texas A&M17Florida20HomeLoss-3-761.854.8
10-13-2012Texas A&M59Louisiana Tech57Shreveport LAWin2747.554.5
10-06-2012Texas A&M30Mississippi27RoadWin3747.154.1
09-22-2012Texas A&M70South Carolina St14HomeWin5638.514.553
10-20-2012Texas A&M19LSU24HomeLoss-5-857.149.1

Both teams blew out Arkansas in September and then embarrassed Mississippi State the last two weeks. Both Alabama and Texas A&M played their worst games of the year against LSU. The Aggies are a 13.5-point underdog, and it seems absurd to think that college football’s version of what it would look like if the Eagles and Chargers could have a baby could upend the mighty Crimson Tide, but it’s November. That generally means expect the unexpected.

Louisville @ Syracuse

The Cardinals look to keep their dream season alive in what looks to be an easy matchup on paper. Louisville is 9-0 and Syracuse is 4-5, so this should be a gimme, right? Except in Vegas, the line is just Syracuse -1.5. Many college football fans are calling this the oddest line of the week, but fans of the SRS would disagree. The SRS is predictive and doesn’t care about your record; it is intended to tell us how well teams will play in the future, and as a result, often mirrors the point spread in a game. Well, the SRS says Louisville should be favored by just 2.4 points despite the much more impressive record. You can view every college football game score here, which helps explain why Syracuse isn’t the pushover you might expect them to be. Syracuse has lost just one home game this season, a 42-41 game against Northwestern that ended in controversial fashion. Against the other cream of the conference, the Orange lost on the road by 8 against Rutgers and 11 against Cincinnati.

Meanwhile, Louisville beat Cincinnati at home by 3, and defeated North Carolina two months ago, but otherwise, doesn’t have any impressive wins on its resume. And it was only three weeks ago that Louisville was trailing in the final two minutes, at home, to South Florida. The Cardinals have played just three road games this season, against teams that are a combined 6-22. I think Vegas has this line appropriately placed; it’s close to a toss-up game, although I’d obviously favor the Cardinals.
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Ranking NFL quarterbacks by how much ‘it’ they have

Yep, that's it.

2) Tom Brady, New England Patriots. Until further notice, nobody has more ‘it’ than Tom Brady, who has been overflowing with ‘it’ since his first year as a starter. He’s the only active quarterback with three Super Bowl rings. However, since he has lost two Super Bowls to Eli Manning, I guess Manning has more “it.” So…

1) Eli Manning, New York Giants. If to be the man you have to beat the man, well, Eli Manning is now the man. Nobody has ‘it’ in the 4th quarter quite like Eli, which is when ‘it’ becomes really important.

3) Peyton Manning, Denver Broncos. If ‘it’ was Tapenade, Manning would be first on the list.

4) Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers. With two Super Bowl rings, Roethlisberger arguably has more ‘it’ than Manning, but to be fair, Peyton Manning does hold the record for the most 4th quarter comebacks.

5) Drew Brees, New Orleans Saints. Despite gaudy numbers, Brees kind of doesn’t have that much ‘it’, in my opinion. But I’m not sure who else could go ahead of him.

6) Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay Packers. The last of the quarterbacks with rings, as Rodgers has one of the worst records in history when it comes to 4th quarter comebacks.

7) Tim Tebow, New York Jets. Without question, in possession of more ‘it’ than any quarterback without a Super Bowl ring, and maybe even more than some of the ones who do.

8) Alex Smith, San Francisco 49ers. This dude is loaded with ‘it’ and grit and teammates that hit. He went about 20 games without throwing an interception and he nearly completed more than 100% of his passes a couple of weeks ago.

9) Joe Flacco, Baltimore Ravens. If ‘it’ is Ray Lewis, Haloti Ngata, Ray Rice, Lardarius Webb, and Ed Reed, then Joe Flacco has had ‘it’ in spades for years. Let’s not forget he outplayed Mr. It in the AFC Championship Game last year, a particularly notable feat since both quarterbacks were playing against identical defenses.

10) Robert Griffin III, Washington Redskins. It doesn’t matter that his team loses, he has ‘it’ until the first game he struggles in 2013.
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Week 9 Power Rankings

Things were happier in Jets world three months ago.

Maybe it was the election, the great weekend of college football, or the fact that I had no cable and barely watched the NFL this weekend, but power rankings this week don’t generate any buzz for me. I only was able to see the two night games this week, which worked out well, as I didn’t miss the rare opportunity to see the Cowboys or Eagles implode on a national stage.

I’ve already said my piece about the Falcons; with their remaining schedule, we should expect 5 or 6 more wins more than 50% of the time. Right now, the odds of them landing on “5” and “6” are almost identical, but that assumes independence; since they might bench players (or suffer injuries), 13 wins still feels like the best projection for them.

Advanced NFL Stats continues to love the Panthers; after their victory over the Redskins, perhaps they’re going to have a second-half surge? The most head-scratching result from Football Outsiders is probably their sixth-place ranking of the Seahawks, just in time for the Jets to visit. If that game doesn’t start the Tim Tebow era, I don’t know what will.

One thing Burke, Schatz, and the SRS Standings agree on is that the Chiefs are the 32nd best team. Sorry, Jason, but even he agrees.

[As always, the number of wins I’m projecting each team to finish the season with is in column 3. The fourth column – PWIN – shows how many wins I projected last week, and the difference column represents how many wins I added or subtracted this week. The “RSOS” column stands for the remaining SOS for the team, based on the number of projected wins I’m giving to each of their opponents. The “RHG” column stands for remaining home games.]

TeamRecWinsPrvWinDiffRemSOSRemHGComment
Atlanta Falcons8-0131300.4454There are nits to pick, but an 8-0 start positions them well to quiet the doubters.
Houston Texans7-1131210.5083Great matchup with the Bears this week, but Houston is going to get the #1 seed either way.
San Francisco 49ers6-2121200.5164At this point, San Francisco seems very likely to get the 2 seed. Will be interesting to see how Harbaugh treats the end of the season.
Chicago Bears7-1121110.5634Dominant defense but they have a brutal remaining schedule. If they lose to the Packers, they may drop from a bye to the 5 seed.
Denver Broncos5-3121110.3594As a matter of principle, projecting a team to finish 7-1 is never advised. But this seems to be a good place to make an exception.
New England Patriots5-3111100.5315Can Aqib Talib make a difference on this defense?
Green Bay Packers6-3111100.5003Streaking Packers head into the bye week on a four-game winning streak.
Pittsburgh Steelers5-3111010.4065I have been a big Ben Roethlisberger fan all season, and will continue to get burned by believing in this team.
New York Giants6-31011-10.5273Even with a difficult schedule, the typical Giants second-half collapse shouldn't cost them much in a watered down NFC East.
Baltimore Ravens6-2101000.5394Nobody wins uglier than the Ravens.
Seattle Seahawks5-49810.5094Russell Wilson on the road in a playoff game is not going to be pretty, especially when it's at Lambeau or Soldier Field.
Indianapolis Colts5-39810.4923They are looking at a first round game in Foxboro or Mile High. Think there will be some storylines there?
Miami Dolphins4-49900.5085The Dolphins have been burned with some ugly fourth quarter performances; they've lost two games in overtime and were tied late in the 4th quarter against the Colts.
Dallas Cowboys3-58800.4065Even with an easy schedule, the Cowboys have a lot of ground to make up to win the division or beat the Seahawks out for a playoff berth.
Minnesota Vikings5-478-10.6433Sell. Sell. SELL!
San Diego Chargers4-47700.5004Wins over the Chiefs should be treated like FCS victories.
Detroit Lions4-47700.6415The remaining schedule is brutal; the Lions are streaking, but they dug themselves an enormous hole.
Tampa Bay Buccaneers4-47700.5474Can they be the team to end the Falcons perfect season?
New Orleans Saints3-57610.5864They'll need a miracle to make the playoffs, but ruining the Falcons perfect season is a decent consolation prize.
Philadelphia Eagles3-567-10.4454They are the worst team in the NFC, previously unthinkable under Andy Reid.
Washington Redskins3-667-10.4644The breakout team of 2013.
Arizona Cardinals4-567-10.5803Did you know the Arizona Cardinals are 11-7 in their last 18 games?
Cincinnati Bengals3-567-10.4774Is Marvin Lewis ever going to be on a hot seat?
Oakland Raiders3-567-10.4304Nobody racks up meaningless numbers like Carson Palmer.
New York Jets3-56600.4303Will Tim Tebow play this week? If not, maybe the Jets can give Greg McElroy some playing time.
St. Louis Rams3-56600.5083The second half of the season may tell us a lot about the future of Sam Bradford.
Tennessee Titans3-66600.5003An embarrassing performance against the Bears.
Buffalo Bills3-56600.4925This has to be the last 8 games of the Chan Gailey era, right?
Carolina Panthers2-66510.4774With an easy schedule, they should build some momentum for next year.
Jacksonville Jaguars1-74400.5164Can Blaine Gabbert show over the next 8 weeks that he deserves to be the quarterback of the future?
Cleveland Browns2-74400.5093Gritty performances against Baltimore but two losses in the standings.
Kansas City Chiefs1-734-10.5164May be headed for the worst season in franchise history.
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Quarterback performance on third and fourth downs

So far this season, teams have converted on 37.2% of all pass plays on third or fourth downs. Looking at success rates on these downs helps to identify which quarterbacks are keeping drives alive for their teams and coming through in the most important situations. For example, Peyton Manning leads the league with an impressive 52.6% rate. How impressive is that?

The table below lists the conversion rates for quarterbacks on passing plays (excluding scrambles) on third and fourth downs; the table is sorted by the far right column, which shows how many third downs over average each quarterback converted. This is calculated by subtracting from the number of actual conversions the number of expected conversions (which is 37.2% multiplied by the number of third down plays):

RankQuarterbackPlaysConvRate3DCovOvAvg
1Peyton Manning784152.6%12
2Ben Roethlisberger974647.4%9.9
3Matt Ryan793949.4%9.6
4Drew Brees1044745.2%8.3
5Andrew Luck994444.4%7.1
6Matthew Stafford1024544.1%7
7Tom Brady863844.2%6
8Matt Schaub723244.4%5.2
9Matt Hasselbeck783443.6%5
10Matt Cassel713143.7%4.6
11Ryan Fitzpatrick803442.5%4.2
12Tony Romo913841.8%4.1
13Michael Vick953941.1%3.6
14Aaron Rodgers943739.4%2
15Jay Cutler843339.3%1.7
16Christian Ponder943537.2%0
17Philip Rivers843035.7%-1.3
18Ryan Tannehill782734.6%-2
19Eli Manning893134.8%-2.1
20Alex Smith612032.8%-2.7
21Josh Freeman802733.8%-2.8
22Kevin Kolb682232.4%-3.3
23Sam Bradford872933.3%-3.4
24Mark Sanchez963233.3%-3.7
25Russell Wilson832732.5%-3.9
26Brandon Weeden1113733.3%-4.3
27John Skelton591627.1%-6
28Robert Griffin III782329.5%-6
29Carson Palmer922830.4%-6.3
30Cam Newton681927.9%-6.3
31Joe Flacco782126.9%-8
32Blaine Gabbert842226.2%-9.3
33Andy Dalton771620.8%-12.7

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NYT Fifth Down: Post-week 9

Are the Bears the best team in the NFL? This week at the New York Times, I profiled the incredible season the Bears are having. If you feel like every few years the Bears come out of nowhere with an incredible defense and a questionable offense, you’re right.

The 2012 Bears stand as the next in a long line of Bears teams that wildly exceeded expectations thanks to a great defense. Chicago ranks second in points allowed and rushing yards allowed, and fifth in net yards per pass allowed. Chicago leads the league in turnovers forced and red zone defense. But this year’s defense is doing things no other Bears defense — or any other N.F.L. defense, for that matter — has ever done.

Chicago has returned seven interceptions for touchdowns in eight games. Before this season, no other team had more than five pick-sixes after eight games, and the Bears are only one interception return for a touchdown away from tying the single-season record, held by the ’98 Seahawks (in the A.F.L. in 1961, the San Diego Chargers returned nine interceptions for touchdowns). But Chicago’s defense hasn’t just been a big-play defense. The Bears have allowed only 10 touchdowns this year, and five of them came in garbage time. Matthew Stafford threw a touchdown with the Lions down by 13 with 36 seconds left, and four other touchdowns came in the second halves of Chicago victories with the Bears already leading by 20-plus points. That means the Bears’ defense has allowed only five meaningful touchdowns while scoring seven of their own. Incredible.

Against the Colts, Chicago forced Andrew Luck into three interceptions and allowed just 7 meaningful points. Against the Rams, Chicago scored 7 points and allowed 6. In Dallas, Charles Tillman and Lance Briggs scored on interceptions, while the defense limited the Cowboys to just 10 meaningful points and intercepted five Tony Romo passes. In Jacksonville, Tillman and Briggs became the first teammates to score on interception returns in consecutive weeks, and the Bears limited Jacksonville to 3 points.

Against Detroit, the Bears forced six fumbles (recovering three) and held the Lions’ high-flying passing attack to a last-second touchdown; half of Detroit’s 12 drives ended in three-and-outs. Against the Panthers, Chicago’s defense was forced to overcome a Bears offense that gained just 61 yards in the first three quarters and held the ball for only 23 minutes 22 seconds in the game; still, Tim Jennings’s defensive touchdown in the fourth quarter proved to be the play of the game.

Chicago’s performances in the first half of the season were apparently just a warm-up act for Week 9 against Tennessee. On Sunday, on the first play from scrimmage, Charles Tillman forced a fumble, giving the Bears the ball in Titans territory. The Bears forced Tennessee to go three-and-out on each of its next two possessions, with the second stalled drive leading to a punt that was blocked and returned for a touchdown. Later in the first quarter, Hester returned a punt to the Titans’ 8-yard-line, setting up a one-play scoring drive. On the Titans’ next drive, Urlacher intercepted Matt Hasselbeck and returned it for a touchdown. On Tennessee’s next play from scrimmage, Tillman stripped Chris Johnson of the ball, giving Chicago possession at the Titans’ 16. Three plays later, Cutler found Brandon Marshall for a 13-yard score. After the first quarter, the Titans had eight drives, and the four that ended in three-and-outs and punts were the good ones.

Tillman ended the day with four forced fumbles; while not an official statistic, Tillman continues to force fumbles at an unprecedented rate for a cornerback. Unofficially, he now holds the modern record for most forced fumbles in a game, and with seven this season, he could easily exceed the record of 10 forced fumbles by Osi Umenyiora (2010) and Dwayne Harper (1993). If not for the monster season J.J. Watt is having for Houston, Tillman would be a leading candidate for defensive player of the year.

Check out the full article for some historical comparisons and some insight from Aaron Schatz.

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Sunday morning, I noted that the Falcons had a 2.4% chance of going undefeated and that the team most likely give them their first loss was the Dallas Cowboys. After Atlanta’s victory on Sunday night, they halfway to perfection. This is the first time in franchise history the Falcons have started off 8-0, although star tight end Tony Gonzalez once played on a 9-0 team and Matt Ryan went 8-0 in 2007 at Boston College. After the victory over the Cowboys, what is the current probability that Atlanta goes 16-0?

First, we need to calculate SRS standings. Neil gave us his Weighted SRS Ratings earlier today, but the table below shows the vanilla SRS ratings:

RkTeamGMOVSOSSRS
1San Francisco 49ers810.81.111.8
2Chicago Bears814.5-2.811.7
3New England Patriots812.3-1.510.7
4Houston Texans811.8-2.19.6
5Denver Broncos87.51.69.1
6New York Giants97.318.4
7Atlanta Falcons89.6-2.37.4
8Green Bay Packers95.41.67
9Seattle Seahawks92.13.25.3
10Tampa Bay Buccaneers85.1-1.83.3
11Dallas Cowboys8-3.15.72.6
12Pittsburgh Steelers84.1-2.12.1
13Miami Dolphins83.4-2.31
14Detroit Lions81.3-0.50.7
15Baltimore Ravens82.9-2.20.7
16Carolina Panthers8-3.94.50.6
17Washington Redskins9-2.11.2-0.9
18Minnesota Vikings90.4-1.3-0.9
19Arizona Cardinals9-3.62.1-1.5
20New Orleans Saints8-1.4-0.3-1.7
21San Diego Chargers83.5-5.3-1.8
22New York Jets8-4.82.6-2.1
23St. Louis Rams8-6.94.3-2.6
24Philadelphia Eagles8-6.31.1-5.2
25Cincinnati Bengals8-3.6-1.9-5.5
26Indianapolis Colts8-4.8-1.9-6.6
27Cleveland Browns9-5-2.6-7.6
28Oakland Raiders8-7.3-0.7-7.9
29Buffalo Bills8-7.8-0.8-8.5
30Jacksonville Jaguars8-12.81-11.7
31Tennessee Titans9-14.31.9-12.4
32Kansas City Chiefs8-13.4-1.3-14.7

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