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I did not realize that UCF had a top 10 defense. There is no game this year that can be overlooked.
UCF is definitely not a bad team. They are one of many teams that can beat us if we don't play well.
Having said that, I wouldn't read too much into these statistics, for a variety of reasons.
First, look at the FEI offensive rating (out of 128 teams) of some of UCF's opponents:
SC State: Unranked
UConn: #124
FIU: #118
Tulane: #112
Cincinnati: #109
Arkansas State: #87 (LOST)
Maryland: #65 (LOST)
East Carolina: #64
Houston: #52 (LOST)
Temple: #46 (LOST)
Tulsa: #16 (LOST)
Michigan: #11 (LOST)
Furthermore, the FEI efficiency ratings are (essentially) the value of each possession of their opponents adjusted for the strength of each offense faced. In other words, you could lose to everyone you play against all year, but as long as you hold the other team to lower points than they normally score per possession, your defense ends up looking like a rock star. When your offense (UCF) is ranked #107 out of #128, you're really wearing out your defense and putting pressure on them. There are other stats that make up defensive FEI as well, like what percentage of available yards you give up to your opponents on an average drive (ie if they start on their own 20, there are 80 yards available), what percentage of drives that end in a TD, that end in a TD or first down, that end in a turnover, etc.
I think generally, stats like this can be helpful, but you should always dig deeper. And look at that list - they essentially lost to anybody with a reasonable offense. I'm not sure FEI then offers much insight into UCF.
I'm uncertain about your last point. It could also be possible that when a team is facing a bad offense, they are influenced to play more conservatively, scoring more slowly, ball-control because there isn't as much of a need for your offense to "keep pace" or to get into a "shootout". But, as you say a bad offense can also put the defense into bad situations with turnovers, field position failures, not giving the defense much rest, etc. So, there may be a bit of a conflation of factors in that.I agree that stats have limits, but a couple of things to be noted.
Winning and losing result from offense and defense (and st) so this result is meaningless in assessing a ranking of just one unit.
You rightly note that a bad O puts pressure on a D. That UCFs DFEI was so good when their OFEI was so bad actually argues in their favor.
I'm uncertain about your last point. It could also be possible that when a team is facing a bad offense, they are influenced to play more conservatively, scoring more slowly, ball-control because there isn't as much of a need for your offense to "keep pace" or to get into a "shootout". But, as you say a bad offense can also put the defense into bad situations with turnovers, field position failures, not giving the defense much rest, etc. So, there may be a bit of a conflation of factors in that.
I'm uncertain about your last point. It could also be possible that when a team is facing a bad offense, they are influenced to play more conservatively, scoring more slowly, ball-control because there isn't as much of a need for your offense to "keep pace" or to get into a "shootout". But, as you say a bad offense can also put the defense into bad situations with turnovers, field position failures, not giving the defense much rest, etc. So, there may be a bit of a conflation of factors in that.
Yea, and there are other idiosyncracies too. Think about Michigan - they got up like 31-0 midway through the 2nd quarter. Michigan had tons of possessions for the rest of the game that didn't really matter. They probably had subs in, the game was long away out of the question, and so on. So you can only take these types of statistics but so far. In general, I think these FEI stats provide value. BUT, when you look at who UCF played and notice that they lost to every even halfway reasonable offense but 1, that's not good. In all those cases the stats seem to show that UCFs defense held those teams to fewer points per possession than they usually get, but to what end?
FEI doesn't count garbage drives, so it's possible that the UM beat down didn't hurt their D ranking as much as it could (should?) have.
They lost to teams not offenses. It's cool if you don't think looking at units independently matters, but don't dismiss it.
It could also be possible that when a team is facing a bad offense, they are influenced to play more conservatively, scoring more slowly, ball-control because there isn't as much of a need for your offense to "keep pace" or to get into a "shootout".
I'm not trying to dismiss it, but think about that now. How many drives did Michigan have which were counted as garbage? Probably 10 if we're being honest. So does someone sit there and discard all drives once a lead has grown to a certain amount? I mean at some point we're screwing the statistics over so much through manual tweaking that it doesn't even matter. To me, looking at the fact that they lost to all good offenses and nearly all mediocure offenses says it all. They beat one offense ranked around the 50th% (ECU, 64/128) and after that the only offenses they beat were in the bottom 20%.