Issue is that almost every poll has the same top 4 and top 9. It's the rest of the rankings where controversy comes in across the board as it comes all grey. Whole hearted disagree about SOS evening out. gT had the second easiest P5 schedule for their offense heading into Miami and was middlrmof the road for their Defense SOS. Your implication is that all conferences are equal and I find it impossible to believe you'll find any logical ranking that doesn't go SEC-Big12-big10-ACC-PAC12 based off this year. I get filtering out G5 teams helps eliminate issues with SOS but teams like Fresno, UCF and Cincy can reasonably put up a fight against most P5 teams
Thanks for the response.
OK, let's start with the basics: we agree that there is no perfect ranking. Of course there's going to be controversy about ranking, and that's part of the fun. In a game, you can crown the winner. In a tournament, you can crown a champion. However, when you look to rank which teams are better or worse than other teams, then it's not so cut and dried.
So, my posts about using my points/drive stat were not to argue that it's perfect. No ranking is perfect. They were not to argue that better approaches couldn't be made with more sophisticated approaches to strength of schedule etc. I was simply arguing that this was a fairly straight forward way of ranking teams which proves not to be "garbage" by its correlation with the polls.
With that being said, you raise an interesting point with respect to strength of schedule. My response is yes and no. Obviously, I'm using a raw stat and not a sophisticated calculation of individual strength of schedule. I don't see any easy way to use it to calculate conference strength. That's the fun of debating rankings.
Let's use an example. This week, the CFP committee ranked 2-loss LSU ahead of 1-loss WashSt, WVU, and tOSU. Neither the AP nor the Coaches did that. Both of LSU's two losses were to SEC teams: one was Bama but the other was to 3-loss Florida. Now, if you just kind of wave the SEC is the best conference flag as a way of blessing this, that's one way, but does that make it better or worse?
Now, what am I claiming with my stat? As I've said, I'm not claiming its perfect, and I agree that the strength of schedule argument works against it as much as it works against any other approach to ranking. I mean, we could scream at the TV, "YOU LIE!!!," every time they speak about the #4 offense or we can just allow that they are using an imperfect measure. I think points/drive is more accurate than total points to rank offenses, but it doesn't eliminate the problem arising from strength of schedule. How much of the scoring in the Big 12 arises from them having great offenses and how much from bad defenses? Again, that's the fun of debating.
Still, I AM NOT SAYING exactly that all conferences are equal. I AM SAYING that the Power5 conferences are comparable enough for the stat to still be meaningful. Here is a table of results after last week's games:
So, take it for what it's worth.