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The TidesofWar Top 25 College Football Programs (2 Viewers)

Hi ToW.

I was really a big fan of your rankings right up until #3. However, now that USC is only ranked third these rankings have no merit.

[insert hyperbole here]

Good day to you sir.

 
Not a whole lot of change when you add the AFCA Awards. This is just the top 30 since the whole data sheet is at home. I think that Arizona State and Michigan State would probably replace Boise State and Ole Miss at 29 and 30 if I had everything in front of me.

1. Southern Cal

2. Michigan

3. Ohio State

4. Oklahoma

5. Texas

6. Notre Dame

7. Nebraska

8. Alabama

9. Penn State

10. Tennessee

11. Georgia

12. Florida

13. Miami FL

14. Auburn

15. Florida State

16. LSU

17. Georgia Tech

18. Texas A&M

19. Army

20. Pittsburgh

21. UCLA

22. Colorado

23. Syracuse

24. Arkansas

25. Minnesota

26. Washington

27. Clemson

28. West Virginia

29. Boise State

30. Mississippi

 
Not a whole lot of change when you add the AFCA Awards. This is just the top 30 since the whole data sheet is at home. I think that Arizona State and Michigan State would probably replace Boise State and Ole Miss at 29 and 30 if I had everything in front of me.1. Southern Cal2. Michigan3. Ohio State4. Oklahoma5. Texas6. Notre Dame7. Nebraska8. Alabama9. Penn State10. Tennessee11. Georgia12. Florida13. Miami FL14. Auburn15. Florida State16. LSU17. Georgia Tech18. Texas A&M19. Army20. Pittsburgh21. UCLA22. Colorado23. Syracuse24. Arkansas25. Minnesota26. Washington27. Clemson28. West Virginia29. Boise State30. Mississippi
Yeah, Boise St.'s numbers will look good in comparison due in large part I'd guess to their schedule, but did you factor in the fact that they've only been in D-1 since 1996? They were a JC until 1967. Still, their ascent to an excellent program has been astonishing.Thanks for all the number crunching. This actually looks pretty good to me (both versions).
 
Not a whole lot of change when you add the AFCA Awards. This is just the top 30 since the whole data sheet is at home. I think that Arizona State and Michigan State would probably replace Boise State and Ole Miss at 29 and 30 if I had everything in front of me.1. Southern Cal2. Michigan3. Ohio State4. Oklahoma5. Texas6. Notre Dame7. Nebraska8. Alabama9. Penn State10. Tennessee11. Georgia12. Florida13. Miami FL14. Auburn15. Florida State16. LSU17. Georgia Tech18. Texas A&M19. Army20. Pittsburgh21. UCLA22. Colorado23. Syracuse24. Arkansas25. Minnesota26. Washington27. Clemson28. West Virginia29. Boise State30. Mississippi
We're ahead of Tennessee!!!! Yes, this is the secret formula!!!
 
Why would programs get credit for Heismans and All-Americans, yet get nothing for Head Coaches who also win awards?
Examples?
I think you can see where I'm going. Miami gets 'individual' credit for Gino Toretta, but Alabama gets none for Bear Bryant.
What awards did he win that you feel are worthy of consideration? Why is it so hard for people to answer questions around here?
AFCA, Paul Bryant award, etc...I see no difference between that and a Heisman. Not to mention the logic behind giving a program credit for Andre Ware and none for Joe Paterno.
Ok....Bentley added your criteria...see post #516. Now what?
 
Ok....Bentley added your criteria...see post #516. Now what?
It was a general statement, about not only Bentley's ranking (thanks for updating btw) but all rankings I've ever seen for the most part. I agree with TOW that individual accomplishments should not be as important as team accomplishments. And to give a coach award no credit, when that probably says more about the program's performance than how the heisman winner did, doesn't make sense.
 
I found the SnS "Greatest College Football Programs of All Time" mag..here is their ranking and criteria:

MNC, Undefeated seasons, Bowl Appearances, Bowl wins, Conference Champs, Win %, Wins, Graduation Rate, All-Americans, Heisman Winners, No 1 Draft Picks, NCAA Infractions, School Mascot

1. ND

2. USC

3. Oklahoma

4. Alabama

5. Nebraska

6. Michigan

7. BYU

8. OSU

9. Texas

10. Princeton

11. Miami

12. Penn State

 
Ok....Bentley added your criteria...see post #516. Now what?
It was a general statement, about not only Bentley's ranking (thanks for updating btw) but all rankings I've ever seen for the most part. I agree with TOW that individual accomplishments should not be as important as team accomplishments. And to give a coach award no credit, when that probably says more about the program's performance than how the heisman winner did, doesn't make sense.
Ok, he added it. Feel better? I really don't know what you are getting at here...sorry :goodposting: "Accomplishments" is such a vague term, it's hard to understand the point you are trying to make.
 
I found the SnS "Greatest College Football Programs of All Time" mag..here is their ranking and criteria:

MNC, Undefeated seasons, Bowl Appearances, Bowl wins, Conference Champs, Win %, Wins, Graduation Rate, All-Americans, Heisman Winners, No 1 Draft Picks, NCAA Infractions, School Mascot

1. ND

2. USC

3. Oklahoma

4. Alabama

5. Nebraska

6. Michigan

7. BYU

8. OSU

9. Texas

10. Princeton

11. Miami

12. Penn State
I guess NCAA infractions weren't given much weight...or were possibly considered a good thing.
 
I found the SnS "Greatest College Football Programs of All Time" mag..here is their ranking and criteria:

MNC, Undefeated seasons, Bowl Appearances, Bowl wins, Conference Champs, Win %, Wins, Graduation Rate, All-Americans, Heisman Winners, No 1 Draft Picks, NCAA Infractions, School Mascot

1. ND

2. USC

3. Oklahoma

4. Alabama

5. Nebraska

6. Michigan

7. BYU

8. OSU

9. Texas

10. Princeton

11. Miami

12. Penn State
I guess NCAA infractions weren't given much weight...or were possibly considered a good thing.
:goodposting: that's what I was thinking! First list with infractions listed and Miami jumps to 11 and Penn State drops to 12?
 
Ok....Bentley added your criteria...see post #516. Now what?
It was a general statement, about not only Bentley's ranking (thanks for updating btw) but all rankings I've ever seen for the most part. I agree with TOW that individual accomplishments should not be as important as team accomplishments. And to give a coach award no credit, when that probably says more about the program's performance than how the heisman winner did, doesn't make sense.
Ok, he added it. Feel better? I really don't know what you are getting at here...sorry :thumbup: "Accomplishments" is such a vague term, it's hard to understand the point you are trying to make.
Pardon my public stupidity. But my point is that "Individual" accomplishments should include players and coaches, since both reflect success of a program. I would include neither or both, and would give each the same weight.
 
Ok....Bentley added your criteria...see post #516. Now what?
It was a general statement, about not only Bentley's ranking (thanks for updating btw) but all rankings I've ever seen for the most part. I agree with TOW that individual accomplishments should not be as important as team accomplishments. And to give a coach award no credit, when that probably says more about the program's performance than how the heisman winner did, doesn't make sense.
Ok, he added it. Feel better? I really don't know what you are getting at here...sorry :lmao: "Accomplishments" is such a vague term, it's hard to understand the point you are trying to make.
Pardon my public stupidity. But my point is that "Individual" accomplishments should include players and coaches, since both reflect success of a program. I would include neither or both, and would give each the same weight.
It's a decent points. Team accomplishments still have a great % of the overall score in my "system" even if we include the coaching award.The Heisman is an interesting one though. For the first part of its existence it was an individual award. For the last 25 years, it's pretty much been a team award.
 
Ok....Bentley added your criteria...see post #516. Now what?
It was a general statement, about not only Bentley's ranking (thanks for updating btw) but all rankings I've ever seen for the most part. I agree with TOW that individual accomplishments should not be as important as team accomplishments. And to give a coach award no credit, when that probably says more about the program's performance than how the heisman winner did, doesn't make sense.
Ok, he added it. Feel better? I really don't know what you are getting at here...sorry :lmao: "Accomplishments" is such a vague term, it's hard to understand the point you are trying to make.
Pardon my public stupidity. But my point is that "Individual" accomplishments should include players and coaches, since both reflect success of a program. I would include neither or both, and would give each the same weight.
Bentley did that. We good now?? See post 516 for the updated rankings.
 
Ok....Bentley added your criteria...see post #516. Now what?
It was a general statement, about not only Bentley's ranking (thanks for updating btw) but all rankings I've ever seen for the most part. I agree with TOW that individual accomplishments should not be as important as team accomplishments. And to give a coach award no credit, when that probably says more about the program's performance than how the heisman winner did, doesn't make sense.
Ok, he added it. Feel better? I really don't know what you are getting at here...sorry :bow: "Accomplishments" is such a vague term, it's hard to understand the point you are trying to make.
Pardon my public stupidity. But my point is that "Individual" accomplishments should include players and coaches, since both reflect success of a program. I would include neither or both, and would give each the same weight.
Bentley did that. We good now?? See post 516 for the updated rankings.
i think he was good a while ago and he already thanked bentley. no need to be an ###.
 
Ok....Bentley added your criteria...see post #516. Now what?
It was a general statement, about not only Bentley's ranking (thanks for updating btw) but all rankings I've ever seen for the most part. I agree with TOW that individual accomplishments should not be as important as team accomplishments. And to give a coach award no credit, when that probably says more about the program's performance than how the heisman winner did, doesn't make sense.
Ok, he added it. Feel better? I really don't know what you are getting at here...sorry :blackdot: "Accomplishments" is such a vague term, it's hard to understand the point you are trying to make.
Pardon my public stupidity. But my point is that "Individual" accomplishments should include players and coaches, since both reflect success of a program. I would include neither or both, and would give each the same weight.
It's a decent points. Team accomplishments still have a great % of the overall score in my "system" even if we include the coaching award.The Heisman is an interesting one though. For the first part of its existence it was an individual award. For the last 25 years, it's pretty much been a team award.
I agree..there should be some weight on those ind. awards...as political as it is, the Heisman carries plenty of history and prestige with it. I guess I'm just a brainwashed UA fan...you scoff at an award until you have one ;) Give Julio another year and I'll be 100% with you.Bentley - What about another category that awards teams for very good years...not great? Awarding programs for being a top program even thru years they don't win a controversial MNC or Heisman? 10-win seasons, top-10 rankings at EOY, etc.
 
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The AP poll started back in 1936 and was Top 20 until 1999 when it became Top 25. I was going to go through each team and see how often they appeared in the final (and yes, sometimes that was before bowl games) poll. Just haven't had time yet.

 
The reason I did not incorporate All-American and Heisman selections is because the media bias skews it even more to the advantage of the Midwest and West Coast teams. Paul Hornung???

How can Alabama be rated even with Tennessee??? That alone shows the idea is flawed.

Alabama trumps UT in National Titles, Conference titles, wins, winning percentage, Bowls, and Bowl wins - yet they end up tied?? No way.

Quite clear the 60 and 20 year windows were agenda driven

All Time Is All Time - and ND, Bama, and USC have best shown an ability to win big throughout history. But ND is in danger of sliding down.

I stand by my list
But you are perfectly fine with putting so much weight on "championships" that are just as skewed if not moreso by the media?? Do you really need to see more evidence of the "polls" being nothing more than a popularity contest? :shrug:
When it has come to Alabama competing in a "Popularity Contest" - ala 1966 and 1977, we hav enot fared well
 
Why would programs get credit for Heismans and All-Americans, yet get nothing for Head Coaches who also win awards?
Examples?
I think you can see where I'm going. Miami gets 'individual' credit for Gino Toretta, but Alabama gets none for Bear Bryant.
This is an outstanding argument.In College Football and Basketball, successful Coaches, much moreso than Heisman winners or any player (except Tebow) become the face of the Program over time.
 
Why would programs get credit for Heismans and All-Americans, yet get nothing for Head Coaches who also win awards?
Examples?
I think you can see where I'm going. Miami gets 'individual' credit for Gino Toretta, but Alabama gets none for Bear Bryant.
This is an outstanding argument.In College Football and Basketball, successful Coaches, much moreso than Heisman winners or any player (except Tebow) become the face of the Program over time.
And that will change quickly after he leaves and Florida keeps winning.Carroll is USC

Stoops is OU

Paterno is PSU

Bowden is FSU

Tressel is OSU

Brown is UT

Saban is Bama

And Meyer will be UF quickly.

The hallmark of a powerful program is a HC with a strong personality.

The questions are will Rodriguez be Michigan? Will Weis be ND? Will Davis be NC? And my favorite question, will Neuheisel be UCLA? I've always liked him. And USC needs someone to step up in the PAC 10.

 
Couple of Heisman thoughts.............................

Going back to media influence and regional biases, I find it worth noting that while the SEC leads the nation with 6 teams in the top 17 in all time winning percentage (No other League is close) - It is the media darlings of USC, Michigan, and Ohio State who are tied at the top with seven winners.

I think the fact the closest vote ever was Bo Jackson over Iowa's Chuck Long, and the 1997 Charles Woodson theft of the trophy from Peyton Manning show that Southern teams have an uphill battle many times in this glamour contest.

Alabama has players who IMO have been good enough for the Heisman, but have not been showcased or featured, especially in the dominant wishbone years.

Guys like the RB I mentioned, Wilbur Jackson, who averaged 8+ yards a carry, but might only get 7-10 touches in any given game.

Historically, Alabama has taken many of the better athletes and placed them on the defensive side of the ball.

Maybe that is why Alabama has allowed fewer points than any team in this countdown.

 
Why would programs get credit for Heismans and All-Americans, yet get nothing for Head Coaches who also win awards?
Examples?
I think you can see where I'm going. Miami gets 'individual' credit for Gino Toretta, but Alabama gets none for Bear Bryant.
This is an outstanding argument.In College Football and Basketball, successful Coaches, much moreso than Heisman winners or any player (except Tebow) become the face of the Program over time.
And that will change quickly after he leaves and Florida keeps winning.Carroll is USC

Stoops is OU

Paterno is PSU

Bowden is FSU

Tressel is OSU

Brown is UT

Saban is Bama

And Meyer will be UF quickly.

The hallmark of a powerful program is a HC with a strong personality.

The questions are will Rodriguez be Michigan? Will Weis be ND? Will Davis be NC? And my favorite question, will Neuheisel be UCLA? I've always liked him. And USC needs someone to step up in the PAC 10.
It all come down to recruiting. Neuheisel's done better so far than Dorrell, but we are still being out recruited by not only USC (to be expected, of course) but by Cal and even by Stanford.
 
Couple of Heisman thoughts.............................Going back to media influence and regional biases, I find it worth noting that while the SEC leads the nation with 6 teams in the top 17 in all time winning percentage (No other League is close) - It is the media darlings of USC, Michigan, and Ohio State who are tied at the top with seven winners.I think the fact the closest vote ever was Bo Jackson over Iowa's Chuck Long, and the 1997 Charles Woodson theft of the trophy from Peyton Manning show that Southern teams have an uphill battle many times in this glamour contest.Alabama has players who IMO have been good enough for the Heisman, but have not been showcased or featured, especially in the dominant wishbone years.Guys like the RB I mentioned, Wilbur Jackson, who averaged 8+ yards a carry, but might only get 7-10 touches in any given game.Historically, Alabama has taken many of the better athletes and placed them on the defensive side of the ball.Maybe that is why Alabama has allowed fewer points than any team in this countdown.
What about during the 60's, when you had the great QBs? (Stabler, Broadway Joe). I don't know what their numbers were, but weren't they considered? 'Also, Oklahoma ran a wishbone yet had a number of running backs that were considered for the Heisman, didn't they?
 
Couple of Heisman thoughts.............................Going back to media influence and regional biases, I find it worth noting that while the SEC leads the nation with 6 teams in the top 17 in all time winning percentage (No other League is close) - It is the media darlings of USC, Michigan, and Ohio State who are tied at the top with seven winners.I think the fact the closest vote ever was Bo Jackson over Iowa's Chuck Long, and the 1997 Charles Woodson theft of the trophy from Peyton Manning show that Southern teams have an uphill battle many times in this glamour contest.Alabama has players who IMO have been good enough for the Heisman, but have not been showcased or featured, especially in the dominant wishbone years.Guys like the RB I mentioned, Wilbur Jackson, who averaged 8+ yards a carry, but might only get 7-10 touches in any given game.Historically, Alabama has taken many of the better athletes and placed them on the defensive side of the ball.Maybe that is why Alabama has allowed fewer points than any team in this countdown.
What about during the 60's, when you had the great QBs? (Stabler, Broadway Joe). I don't know what their numbers were, but weren't they considered? 'Also, Oklahoma ran a wishbone yet had a number of running backs that were considered for the Heisman, didn't they?
Billy Sims won the Heisman in 78 and was runner up in 79. Greg Pruitt was runner up in 72 and third in 71. Joe Washington was third in 74 & 75.
 
Billy Sims won the Heisman in 78 and was runner up in 79. Greg Pruitt was runner up in 72 and third in 71. Joe Washington was third in 74 & 75.
Thank you. Sims and Pruitt were the ones I was thinking of. Didn't Pruitt have the best yards per carry ever?
 
Why would programs get credit for Heismans and All-Americans, yet get nothing for Head Coaches who also win awards?
Examples?
I think you can see where I'm going. Miami gets 'individual' credit for Gino Toretta, but Alabama gets none for Bear Bryant.
This is an outstanding argument.In College Football and Basketball, successful Coaches, much moreso than Heisman winners or any player (except Tebow) become the face of the Program over time.
I saw the merit in that and adjusted. Moved you guys ahead of Tennessee (despite my obvious pro-Volunteer agenda) but stayed at #8 all time.
 
Why would programs get credit for Heismans and All-Americans, yet get nothing for Head Coaches who also win awards?
Examples?
I think you can see where I'm going. Miami gets 'individual' credit for Gino Toretta, but Alabama gets none for Bear Bryant.
This is an outstanding argument.In College Football and Basketball, successful Coaches, much moreso than Heisman winners or any player (except Tebow) become the face of the Program over time.
And that will change quickly after he leaves and Florida keeps winning.Carroll is USC

Stoops is OU

Paterno is PSU

Bowden is FSU

Tressel is OSU

Brown is UT

Saban is Bama

And Meyer will be UF quickly.

The hallmark of a powerful program is a HC with a strong personality.

The questions are will Rodriguez be Michigan? Will Weis be ND? Will Davis be NC? And my favorite question, will Neuheisel be UCLA? I've always liked him. And USC needs someone to step up in the PAC 10.
I understand it's still early in RR tenure at UM, but my gut is leaning "no" here. I will always think of Bo as the face of UM football, no matter who the coach is.
 
I understand it's still early in RR tenure at UM, but my gut is leaning "no" here. I will always think of Bo as the face of UM football, no matter who the coach is.
He's pretty imposing. But then again, so were Bud Wilkinson and Barry Switzer. Similar thing with Woody Hayes and Bear Bryant. If not Rodriguez, someone else may come along to at least merit being mentioned alongside Bo.
 
I understand it's still early in RR tenure at UM, but my gut is leaning "no" here. I will always think of Bo as the face of UM football, no matter who the coach is.
He's pretty imposing. But then again, so were Bud Wilkinson and Barry Switzer. Similar thing with Woody Hayes and Bear Bryant. If not Rodriguez, someone else may come along to at least merit being mentioned alongside Bo.
Agreed....and I also think part of it is generational as well. The folks in a program when I wasn't even born don't have much of an impact on me as those who were around while I am a fan. That's not to say I don't appreciate them or dismiss their cotributions to the organization. Not sure why, but I have always found it kind of weird when people druel all over historic figures of a program when they weren't even around to appreciate it in person. If I am being honest, most of my admiration for Bo comes from his off the field days after he was done coaching. I am a bit young to appreciate Bo as a coach. I can watch video and remember games from late in his career, but the memories are incomplete.
 
I understand it's still early in RR tenure at UM, but my gut is leaning "no" here. I will always think of Bo as the face of UM football, no matter who the coach is.
He's pretty imposing. But then again, so were Bud Wilkinson and Barry Switzer. Similar thing with Woody Hayes and Bear Bryant. If not Rodriguez, someone else may come along to at least merit being mentioned alongside Bo.
Agreed....and I also think part of it is generational as well. The folks in a program when I wasn't even born don't have much of an impact on me as those who were around while I am a fan. That's not to say I don't appreciate them or dismiss their cotributions to the organization. Not sure why, but I have always found it kind of weird when people druel all over historic figures of a program when they weren't even around to appreciate it in person. If I am being honest, most of my admiration for Bo comes from his off the field days after he was done coaching. I am a bit young to appreciate Bo as a coach. I can watch video and remember games from late in his career, but the memories are incomplete.
:yes: I know nothing of Wilkinson except what I've read. But I was on campus when Switzer was there (Billy Tubbs as well, that was quite a duo). Unfortunately, missed the 85 NC by one year.
 
The reason I did not incorporate All-American and Heisman selections is because the media bias skews it even more to the advantage of the Midwest and West Coast teams. Paul Hornung???

How can Alabama be rated even with Tennessee??? That alone shows the idea is flawed.

Alabama trumps UT in National Titles, Conference titles, wins, winning percentage, Bowls, and Bowl wins - yet they end up tied?? No way.

Quite clear the 60 and 20 year windows were agenda driven

All Time Is All Time - and ND, Bama, and USC have best shown an ability to win big throughout history. But ND is in danger of sliding down.

I stand by my list
But you are perfectly fine with putting so much weight on "championships" that are just as skewed if not moreso by the media?? Do you really need to see more evidence of the "polls" being nothing more than a popularity contest? :sadbanana:
When it has come to Alabama competing in a "Popularity Contest" - ala 1966 and 1977, we hav enot fared well
A) Oh, so does Alabama have 5 seasons in which they were undefeated and did not even share a MNC?B) Woodson deserved the Heisman. You Southern boys need to get over that.

 
B) Woodson deserved the Heisman. You Southern boys need to get over that.
This could be a whole other thread, but no one will ever convince me of that. Here's why:1) Wuerffel won the year prior by a landslide. Manning had better numbers across the board, other than rating I believe.2) Champ Bailey had as good or better offensive and defensive numbers than Woodson, and didn't even sniff it.3) Woodson had the big TD vs OSU, but also was burned for a 50+ yard TD right? There have been quite a few great college corners who where never burned deep...let alone in the the big game vs the arch rival.I hated Manning...but haven't given any credence to the Heisman since then. IMO 'they' decided it was time to vote a defensive player in and had had enough of the Mannings.
 
A) Oh, so does Alabama have 5 seasons in which they were undefeated and did not even share a MNC?
PSU has been shafted...the funny thing is, in '94 both undefeated PSU and Alabama would have been shafted had Alabama beaten UF in the SECC.
 
B) Woodson deserved the Heisman. You Southern boys need to get over that.
This could be a whole other thread, but no one will ever convince me of that. Here's why:1) Wuerffel won the year prior by a landslide. Manning had better numbers across the board, other than rating I believe.2) Champ Bailey had as good or better offensive and defensive numbers than Woodson, and didn't even sniff it.3) Woodson had the big TD vs OSU, but also was burned for a 50+ yard TD right? There have been quite a few great college corners who where never burned deep...let alone in the the big game vs the arch rival.I hated Manning...but haven't given any credence to the Heisman since then. IMO 'they' decided it was time to vote a defensive player in and had had enough of the Mannings.
Eh, I don't want to derail a great thread. But it's not a career award, or shouldn't be. I agree he deserved it more than Wuerffel. I don't remember Baily making as many game changing plays as Woodson did that year. And finally, yes he did get burned. But it wasn't just the OSU game. That was just the cherry on top. He made great plays all season and really led the team to victories from a position (or positions) that you don't really see that. I'm sure that some voters saw a chance to give it to a defensive player, but the overriding fact is that Manning just did NOT have that great of a year. And it's not like UT went undefeated or something. He lost to his biggest rival for the 4th straight year while Woodson helped beat his biggest rival. Anyway, thanks for your opinion.
 
B) Woodson deserved the Heisman. You Southern boys need to get over that.
This could be a whole other thread, but no one will ever convince me of that. Here's why:1) Wuerffel won the year prior by a landslide. Manning had better numbers across the board, other than rating I believe.2) Champ Bailey had as good or better offensive and defensive numbers than Woodson, and didn't even sniff it.3) Woodson had the big TD vs OSU, but also was burned for a 50+ yard TD right? There have been quite a few great college corners who where never burned deep...let alone in the the big game vs the arch rival.I hated Manning...but haven't given any credence to the Heisman since then. IMO 'they' decided it was time to vote a defensive player in and had had enough of the Mannings.
Isn't UT supposedly your "arch nemesis"? Why would you feel the need to defend one of them? FWIW...it was about 2-3 years before this that I began to believe the Heisman was just another popularity contest unfortunately. The event has gone down hill since this point in history IMO. With that said, you justifying Manning's position by one play where Woodson got burned?? He had an entire career at UM that was pretty good. I'd be interested in how you compare the "numbers" of each player given that they played two completely different positions on opposite sides of the ball. What numbers intersected between the two that you can say Manning's were "better"?
 
But it's not a career award...overriding fact is that Manning just did NOT have that great of a year. And it's not like UT went undefeated or something. He lost to his biggest rival for the 4th straight year while Woodson helped beat his biggest rival.
UT did have a chance to win the MNC though...but lost to NU in the Orange (and Manning had the bursa sac injury).His senior season, he won the MVP in the SECC (4 TDs and 2 TD comeback), Maxwell, O'Brien, and Unitas awards..and the "Best Player" award at the ESPYs (whatever that is).Tough to find stats, but this is a basic comparison between Manning and Weurffel:Manning '07 = 3,819 yards, 36 TDs, 9 INTWeurffel '96 = 3,625 yards, 39 TDs, 13 INTI just find it hard to pick someone more valuable than a QB in general. :thumbup:
 
B) Woodson deserved the Heisman. You Southern boys need to get over that.
This could be a whole other thread, but no one will ever convince me of that. Here's why:1) Wuerffel won the year prior by a landslide. Manning had better numbers across the board, other than rating I believe.2) Champ Bailey had as good or better offensive and defensive numbers than Woodson, and didn't even sniff it.3) Woodson had the big TD vs OSU, but also was burned for a 50+ yard TD right? There have been quite a few great college corners who where never burned deep...let alone in the the big game vs the arch rival.I hated Manning...but haven't given any credence to the Heisman since then. IMO 'they' decided it was time to vote a defensive player in and had had enough of the Mannings.
Isn't UT supposedly your "arch nemesis"? Why would you feel the need to defend one of them? FWIW...it was about 2-3 years before this that I began to believe the Heisman was just another popularity contest unfortunately. The event has gone down hill since this point in history IMO. With that said, you justifying Manning's position by one play where Woodson got burned?? He had an entire career at UM that was pretty good. I'd be interested in how you compare the "numbers" of each player given that they played two completely different positions on opposite sides of the ball. What numbers intersected between the two that you can say Manning's were "better"?
:confused: Apparently you and I don't speak the same language. I compared Manning to Weurffel and Woodson to Bailey.
 
B) Woodson deserved the Heisman. You Southern boys need to get over that.
This could be a whole other thread, but no one will ever convince me of that. Here's why:1) Wuerffel won the year prior by a landslide. Manning had better numbers across the board, other than rating I believe.2) Champ Bailey had as good or better offensive and defensive numbers than Woodson, and didn't even sniff it.3) Woodson had the big TD vs OSU, but also was burned for a 50+ yard TD right? There have been quite a few great college corners who where never burned deep...let alone in the the big game vs the arch rival.I hated Manning...but haven't given any credence to the Heisman since then. IMO 'they' decided it was time to vote a defensive player in and had had enough of the Mannings.
Isn't UT supposedly your "arch nemesis"? Why would you feel the need to defend one of them? FWIW...it was about 2-3 years before this that I began to believe the Heisman was just another popularity contest unfortunately. The event has gone down hill since this point in history IMO. With that said, you justifying Manning's position by one play where Woodson got burned?? He had an entire career at UM that was pretty good. I'd be interested in how you compare the "numbers" of each player given that they played two completely different positions on opposite sides of the ball. What numbers intersected between the two that you can say Manning's were "better"?
:confused: Apparently you and I don't speak the same language. I compared Manning to Weurffel and Woodson to Bailey.
Misread...apologies :bag:
 
B) Woodson deserved the Heisman. You Southern boys need to get over that.
This could be a whole other thread, but no one will ever convince me of that. Here's why:1) Wuerffel won the year prior by a landslide. Manning had better numbers across the board, other than rating I believe.2) Champ Bailey had as good or better offensive and defensive numbers than Woodson, and didn't even sniff it.3) Woodson had the big TD vs OSU, but also was burned for a 50+ yard TD right? There have been quite a few great college corners who where never burned deep...let alone in the the big game vs the arch rival.I hated Manning...but haven't given any credence to the Heisman since then. IMO 'they' decided it was time to vote a defensive player in and had had enough of the Mannings.
Isn't UT supposedly your "arch nemesis"? Why would you feel the need to defend one of them? FWIW...it was about 2-3 years before this that I began to believe the Heisman was just another popularity contest unfortunately. The event has gone down hill since this point in history IMO. With that said, you justifying Manning's position by one play where Woodson got burned?? He had an entire career at UM that was pretty good. I'd be interested in how you compare the "numbers" of each player given that they played two completely different positions on opposite sides of the ball. What numbers intersected between the two that you can say Manning's were "better"?
:lmao: Apparently you and I don't speak the same language. I compared Manning to Weurffel and Woodson to Bailey.
Misread...apologies :bag:
:thumbup: For a while I thought you were still holding the Dwayne Rudd 95-yd INT return of Griese against me.
 
But it's not a career award...overriding fact is that Manning just did NOT have that great of a year. And it's not like UT went undefeated or something. He lost to his biggest rival for the 4th straight year while Woodson helped beat his biggest rival.
UT did have a chance to win the MNC though...but lost to NU in the Orange (and Manning had the bursa sac injury).His senior season, he won the MVP in the SECC (4 TDs and 2 TD comeback), Maxwell, O'Brien, and Unitas awards..and the "Best Player" award at the ESPYs (whatever that is).Tough to find stats, but this is a basic comparison between Manning and Weurffel:Manning '07 = 3,819 yards, 36 TDs, 9 INTWeurffel '96 = 3,625 yards, 39 TDs, 13 INTI just find it hard to pick someone more valuable than a QB in general. :lmao:
But that's the whole problem! It shouldn't just be the best QB among the top 2 or 3 teams every year. That's stupid. Just make a QB Heisman award or something.
 
But it's not a career award...overriding fact is that Manning just did NOT have that great of a year. And it's not like UT went undefeated or something. He lost to his biggest rival for the 4th straight year while Woodson helped beat his biggest rival.
UT did have a chance to win the MNC though...but lost to NU in the Orange (and Manning had the bursa sac injury).His senior season, he won the MVP in the SECC (4 TDs and 2 TD comeback), Maxwell, O'Brien, and Unitas awards..and the "Best Player" award at the ESPYs (whatever that is).Tough to find stats, but this is a basic comparison between Manning and Weurffel:Manning '07 = 3,819 yards, 36 TDs, 9 INTWeurffel '96 = 3,625 yards, 39 TDs, 13 INTI just find it hard to pick someone more valuable than a QB in general. :shrug:
But that's the whole problem! It shouldn't just be the best QB among the top 2 or 3 teams every year. That's stupid. Just make a QB Heisman award or something.
Good point. But IMO Manning was the best college QB I'd seen in a long time. Weurffel was obviously a product of the system, as were guys like Ware and Toretta. If any of those 4 should have won...it was Manning.In fact, that Toretta over Faulk vote was actually what originally soured me on the Heisman.
 
But it's not a career award...overriding fact is that Manning just did NOT have that great of a year. And it's not like UT went undefeated or something. He lost to his biggest rival for the 4th straight year while Woodson helped beat his biggest rival.
UT did have a chance to win the MNC though...but lost to NU in the Orange (and Manning had the bursa sac injury).His senior season, he won the MVP in the SECC (4 TDs and 2 TD comeback), Maxwell, O'Brien, and Unitas awards..and the "Best Player" award at the ESPYs (whatever that is).Tough to find stats, but this is a basic comparison between Manning and Weurffel:Manning '07 = 3,819 yards, 36 TDs, 9 INTWeurffel '96 = 3,625 yards, 39 TDs, 13 INTI just find it hard to pick someone more valuable than a QB in general. :shrug:
But that's the whole problem! It shouldn't just be the best QB among the top 2 or 3 teams every year. That's stupid. Just make a QB Heisman award or something.
Good point. But IMO Manning was the best college QB I'd seen in a long time. Weurffel was obviously a product of the system, as were guys like Ware and Toretta. If any of those 4 should have won...it was Manning.In fact, that Toretta over Faulk vote was actually what originally soured me on the Heisman.
Agree on all counts. But the trophy would have been more of a joke, IMHO, if they tried to right the wrong of Wuerffel over Manning by giving it to Manning the next year when he didn't deserve it as much as Woodson did. Those are the breaks. They need to stop the Wuerffel mistakes, but not by making more mistakes.
 
B) Woodson deserved the Heisman. You Southern boys need to get over that.
This could be a whole other thread, but no one will ever convince me of that. Here's why:1) Wuerffel won the year prior by a landslide. Manning had better numbers across the board, other than rating I believe.

2) Champ Bailey had as good or better offensive and defensive numbers than Woodson, and didn't even sniff it.

3) Woodson had the big TD vs OSU, but also was burned for a 50+ yard TD right? There have been quite a few great college corners who where never burned deep...let alone in the the big game vs the arch rival.

I hated Manning...but haven't given any credence to the Heisman since then. IMO 'they' decided it was time to vote a defensive player in and had had enough of the Mannings.
Eh, I don't want to derail a great thread. But it's not a career award, or shouldn't be. I agree he deserved it more than Wuerffel. I don't remember Baily making as many game changing plays as Woodson did that year. And finally, yes he did get burned. But it wasn't just the OSU game. That was just the cherry on top. He made great plays all season and really led the team to victories from a position (or positions) that you don't really see that. I'm sure that some voters saw a chance to give it to a defensive player, but the overriding fact is that Manning just did NOT have that great of a year. And it's not like UT went undefeated or something. He lost to his biggest rival for the 4th straight year while Woodson helped beat his biggest rival. Anyway, thanks for your opinion.
It was when Ron Dayne beat out Joe Hamilton his senior year
 
being a lifetime antagonist of the vol program...even i have to agree that manning was hosed in the 1997 heisman trophy voting....there was no doubt who was the best player in the country and the most important player on his team....that was manning........if manning played for a northern school he wins it with ease.....he's arguably the best qb in my lifetime and one of the best ever...he's also the sec's all-time leading passer ( the best conference in ncaa football history )

the biased northern media wanted to give it to woodson to make history....he's the only defensive player to ever get it if i am not mistaken :thumbup:

 
Updated to include AP Top 25 finishes & AFCA Coach of the Year awards

1. Michigan 311

2t. Oklahoma 309

2t. Ohio State 309

4. Southern Cal 308

5. Texas 296

6. Notre Dame 284

7. Nebraska 279

8. Alabama 262

9. Penn State 255

10. Tennessee 254

11. Georgia 214

12. LSU 200

13. Florida 197

14. Miami (FL) 191

15. Auburn 180

16. Florida State 172

17. Georgia Tech 138

18. Texas A&M 115

19. UCLA 107

20. Pittsburgh 107

21. Army 104

22. Colorado 93

23. Arkansas 91

24. Syracuse 88

25. Minnesota 85

26. Washington 77

27. Clemson 75

28. West Virginia 63

29. Mississippi 62

30. Michigan St 62

 
Interesting. :tfp:

It's probably getting labor intensive now...but, since your formula is out there for us to critique...I'd probably weight the top 25 ending rankings somehow...so a team gets more weight for a top 10 than a top 20-25.

 
And that will change quickly after he leaves and Florida keeps winning.

Carroll is USC

Stoops is OU

Paterno is PSU

Bowden is FSU

Tressel is OSU

Brown is UT

Saban is Bama

And Meyer will be UF quickly.

The hallmark of a powerful program is a HC with a strong personality.

The questions are will Rodriguez be Michigan? Will Weis be ND? Will Davis be NC? And my favorite question, will Neuheisel be UCLA? I've always liked him. And USC needs someone to step up in the PAC 10.
It all come down to recruiting. Neuheisel's done better so far than Dorrell, but we are still being out recruited by not only USC (to be expected, of course) but by Cal and even by Stanford.
Huh?Neuheisel's been more or less responsible for two classes now:

Scout Team Recruiting Rankings (2008):

9. USC

10. UCLA

32. Cal

43. Stanford

Scout Team Recruiting Rankings (2009):

5. UCLA (including SC de-commits Randall Carroll and Morrell Presley, and SC targets Xavier Su'a-Filo, Stan Hasiak, Keenan Graham)

9. USC

15. Stanford

34. Cal

Rivals Team Recruiting Rankings (2008):

8. USC

13. UCLA

34. Cal

50. Stanford

Rivals Team Recruiting Rankings (2009):

4. USC

14. UCLA

20. Stanford

42. Cal

Neuheisel and Co. have been great in recruiting. It's the on-the-field results that need to come around.

 
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