Sturt, your problem is you're a condescending p*ick who thinks you have all the correct answers.
banker, you were being so adult until now. What happened to make you blow a gasket? That I answered your replies?
If, every time someone gives you coherent responses to your objections, you decide to start the name-calling thing, it becomes easy for anyone you consider to be condescending to just think you're just that much smaller than you were before.
Out of all the people who reply in your threads about this subject over 90% see it as, at best, misguided, and, at worst, mildly retarded. Have you given consideration to the fact that it's just really not that good of an idea? I know you put in a lot of time, but it's a misguided concept.
banker, I'd think it's a misguided concept except that practically everyone who engages the topic, as it turns out, doesn't know enough about the concept to talk coherently about it. Like someone above said... he saw "MAC," and that was enough to tell him all he wanted to know. So... you think I'm supposed to use these first responses as a measure? Whaddayanuts?
It's an educational process, largely for the same reason... it takes time and picking up bits and pieces over time for people to get the whole of both the concept and the rationale... and those are each their own complex ordeals... once the concept is understood, if they still don't know the rationale, then they remain entrenched until they do... IF they stick around long enough to understand the rationale.
Good ideas are not proven or disproven by virtue of reaction on a sports message board... at least, not at first.
Good ideas can, though, become better ideas, to the degree that valid criticism is heard and recognized and separated from the silly stuff.
(That happened with this, incidentally. The initial concept was critiqued... took it back to the machine shop and re-worked it to a better fit... and who knows, maybe someone will find yet another way to make it better. We'll see.)
And it's just not a misguided concept because the man holding two tablets of stone says so. To speak of me as being condescending, when I'm the one who has sat and done the math while you pontificate a grandiose rejection of a basic premise of scientific method...? And I'm the one who's misguided?
Um. Yeah.
As for Sagarin and its usefulness in football, yes he is right 76% of the time. Guess what, Las Vegas is also right 76% of the time. Over the last 15 years there have been 10,441 FbS football games. If you picked the favored team to win straight up you would have been correct 76% of the time. Underdogs win 48% when the spread is 3 or less, 35% when it's 3.5-7, 26% when it's 7.5-10, 21% when it's 10.5-14, 13% when it's 14.5-17, 7% when it's 17.5-24, 4% when it's 24.5-31 and 1% when it's 31+.
I play in a league every year where you just pick winners for 25 games each week across all FBS conferences. If you can't hit over 76% you aren't winning jack.
Interesting. Would love to get your source on that... not because I don't believe you... I do... I'd just like to have it.
Diving in deeper, that your stats end up being the same as Sagarin is also interesting because if you don't think much of Sagarin's conclusions, by inference, you must not think much of Vegas' conclusions either... or... if you give Vegas' conclusions some regard, why is it so difficult to give Sagarin's conclusions some regard?
Really, I don't care a whole lot which ratings you want to employ. I just pulled Sagarin off the shelf because they're easy to get at, and we've all seen them for years, and a big plus is that he includes FCS teams--making it particularly helpful as we look at these future, current and recent FCS teams preparing to join our conference.
The larger point is, I don't want to rely on banker or anyone else for a list of best to worst teams and conferences. I want something that is fairly well-regarded--at least well enough regarded that it was used in the BCS formula--and that is based completely on some quantitative data and algorithm... something that doesn't bring pro-or-anti-CUSA bias into it, doesn't bring pro-or-anti-WAC bias into it, doesn't bring pro-or-anti-MAC bias into it, etc.
Doing so allows us to look at things and see them at a less-tainted and birds eye level... and allows us to make some determinations of what has happened, what those implications are for the future, and how we might restructure our circumstances to make ourselves better positioned for success than we would otherwise if we just kept status quo.
Again... in 2013 and beyond, given the history that has accumulated since, we can be confident that even to achieve a single year of success, the vast majority of the evidence suggests you need to hit on 3 of 3.
1. Play in a strong conference.
2. Do not lose 2 games.
3. Play at least one top 25 team.
Those 3 things are the essential ingredients to PERENNIAL success.