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"How to understand college football analytics – the ultimate guide". The Power Rank. Mather, Victor (October 23, 2012). "College Football Rankers by the Dozen Ask the No. 1 Question". New York Times. Wayne Winston is a professor of decision sciences at Indiana University and was a classmate of Jeff Sagarin at MIT. [19]
12–1: 0–0: Vacated 12 regular season wins and 2013 BCS National Championship Game loss 2013: 9–4: 0–4: Vacated 8 regular season wins and 2013 Pinstripe Bowl win Ohio State: Jim Tressel: 2010: 12–1: 0–1: Vacated 11 regular season wins and 2011 Sugar Bowl win. See Ohio State University football scandal. Ole Miss: Houston Nutt: 2010: 4 ...
Div III: 7 + 1 ⁄ 2 – Kevin McNamara, St. John's (MN) vs. Monmouth (IL), Nov. 19, 2005 [12] * Shay Muirbrook (BYU) recorded 6 sacks in the 1997 Cotton Bowl, but the NCAA did not start collecting official defensive statistics until 2000 and does not recognize bowl game statistics for any category prior to 2002. [113]
The most points scored by a single team, and the most lopsided final score in college football history, occurred on October 7, 1916 when Georgia Tech beat Cumberland 222–0. [3] Only two other programs have scored at least 200 points in a single game: King (TN) defeated Lenoir 206–0 in 1922 and St. Viator beat Lane (IL) 205–0 in 1916.
Game theory has come to play an increasingly important role in logic and in computer science. Several logical theories have a basis in game semantics. In addition, computer scientists have used games to model interactive computations. Also, game theory provides a theoretical basis to the field of multi-agent systems. [123]
The most predictable byproduct of tripling the College Football Playoff from four to 12 teams was that whining would become a varsity sport on its own.. First up was the ACC’s commissioner, Jim ...
It was daunting. In the end, none made the four-team field. Back then, the way to college football dominance was to stack a series of top-five, or maybe top-10 recruiting classes on top of each other.
College Football Data Warehouse was an American college football statistics website that was established in 2000. The site compiled the yearly team records, game-by-game results, championships, and statistics of college football teams, conferences, and head coaches at the NCAA Division I FBS and Division I FCS levels, as well as those of some NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III, NAIA, NJCAA ...