Tuesday, January 31, 2017

FSU Recruiting over the last 6-10 years

http://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/ncaaf/2017/01/31/top-10-recruiting-classes-since-2007-college-football/97257260/?hootPostID=bad3a5554df2852b6142f2afc807f707


Julio Jones was among the stars in Alabama's 2008 recruiting class.(Photo: Nelson Chenault, USA TODAY Sports)
Across college football, coaches are capping the frenzied and chaotic home stretch to this year’s recruiting cycle by tying up loose ends, securing last-minute verbal commitments and preparing the necessary paperwork for national signing day.
For nearly every program in the Football Bowl Subdivision, a proper grade for these recruiting classes can’t be provided for at least another three or four seasons — enough time for incoming recruits to develop and make an on-field impact.
There are outliers. The elite of college football sign prospects capable of making an immediate push for playing time; Alabama and Clemson, for example, will land first-day help from a number of freshmen and junior-college transfers.
But for the majority, it’s too early to tell. What we can do, however, is look back on the recent past to identify the top signing classes to come through the FBS.
In this week’s top-10 list, let’s look at the best recruiting classes since 2007. While grading recruits can be subjective, this list takes into account college success and number of future NFL draftees. Here’s the top 10, beginning with the class that started a dynasty:

1. 2008 Alabama

Notable signees: WR Julio Jones, DL Marcell Dareus, RB Mark Ingram, DT Terrence Cody and OL Barrett Jones
The signing class that kicked off one of the great runs in FBS history. That above list only gives a slight taste of how many difference-making recruits Nick Saban signed in his first full cycle as Alabama’s head coach.

Notable signees: LB Darron Lee, DE Joey Bosa, QB J.T. Barrett, RB Ezekiel Elliott and DB Eli Apple
A small slice of this class remains on campus, including Barrett, a fifth-year senior in 2017. But the majority has come and gone, with many already excelling in the NFL: Elliott’s already a star, Bosa was unstoppable in duty for the San Diego Chargers and Apple was fantastic as a rookie for the New York Giants, to name three.

3. 2009 Alabama

Notable signees: DB Dre Fitzpatrick, RB Eddie Lacy, RB Trent Richardson, QB AJ McCarron and OT D.J. Fluker
Coming on the heels of the 2008 class, this group solidified the Crimson Tide’s rise under Saban and provided the backbone of a roster that would capture back-to-back titles in 2011 and 2012.

4. 2012 Florida State

Notable signees: QB Jameis Winston, DB Ronald Darby, DL Mario Edwards, DT Eddie Goldman and K Roberto Aguayo
Though small in number — Florida State signed just 19 players — this class was long on talent. Winston won a Heisman Trophy, Edwards and Goldman were all-conference contributors and future NFL draftees, Darby was a shutdown cornerback and Aguayo one of the most effective kickers in NCAA history.

5. 2009 LSU

Notable signees: LB Barkevious Mingo, CB Morris Claiborne, LB Kevin Minter, WR Rueben Randle and DT Michael Brockers
By 2011, this class provided the muscle behind one of the most impressive regular seasons in FBS history — even if the year ended with a disappointing loss in the rematch against Alabama. Mingo, Claiborne, Minter, Randle, Brockers, defensive end Sam Montgomery and defensive tackle Bennie Logan ended up being selected in the first three rounds of the NFL draft.

6. 2008 Oregon

Notable signees: RB LaMichael James, RB LeGarrette Blount, DE Dion Jordan, QB Darron Thomas and LB Kiko Alonso
Oregon’s stranglehold on the Pac-12 during Chip Kelly’s tenure was built on this class. James is the most productive rusher in program history. Thomas was a multiple-year starter, if overshadowed by Marcus Mariota’s ensuing run under center. Jordan, originally signed as a tight end, developed into a first-round pick at defensive end.

7. 2007 Florida

Notable signees: OL Michael and Maurkice Pouncey, DB Joe Haden, DE Carlos Dunlap, DB Major Wright and TE Aaron Hernandez
This group would help Urban Meyer win his second national title at Florida, though the final tally — including disappointing 2010 and 2011 seasons — is a bit of a mixed bag. But there’s no overlooking the future NFL talent the coaching staff reeled on board. The Gators’ class also gets bonus points for including five-star quarterback Cam Newton, even if he’d be dismissed from the program before making an impact.

8. 2011 Florida State

Notable signees: DT Timmy Jernigan, TE Nick O’Leary, WR Kelvin Benjamin, WR Rashad Greene and RB Devonta Freeman
One year before Winston and others arrived on campus, this 2011 signing class helped Jimbo Fisher and the Seminoles lay the foundation for the 2013 national championship.

9. 2009 Stanford

Notable signees: LB Shayne Skov, TE Zach Ertz, RB Stepfan Taylor, LB Trent Murphy and RB Tyler Gaffney
Unlike most classes on this list, Stanford’s group in 2009 wasn’t loaded with top-100 talent — many were four-star recruits, to be fair, but the majority went largely overlooked in the final rankings. Time told the story: Ertz and Murphy were three-star signees who developed into All-America contributors, and Taylor and Gaffney headlined the Cardinal’s powerful running game.

10. 2009 Notre Dame

Notable signees: LB Manti Te’o, OL Zack Martin, TE Tyler Eifert and RB Theo Riddick.
While Te’o was the star of this class, the Irish signed another two eventual first-round picks in Martin and Eifert. Four years after joining the program, this class would lead Notre Dame to a 12-0 regular season and a spot in the national championship game against Alabama.
PROJECTING THE 2017 PRESEASON TOP 25 

Monday, January 30, 2017

ESPN ratings update



Sports TV Ratings@SportsTVRatings 1 hour ago
ESPN coverage per Nielsen: December:
88.401M (-555,000 vs Nov) January:
88.185M (-216K vs Dec) February:
87.859M (-326K vs Jan)

Saturday, January 28, 2017

ACC Schedule and bye weeks

Great info, mainly from Hokie Mark (who always does great research), on ACC bye weeks.  Ga Tech has complained they are getting the short stick.  Numbers might bare this out.  My guess is, schools get request and more of them ask for an off week before Ga Tech because their offense is so unique.  Most likely due to that.

That said, I always share their concern about ACC HQ playing favorites.  Not sure I see that here though, but who knows.


http://csnbbs.com/thread-806493-page-5.html

"Checking my records since 2011, there were 65 occasions when an ACC team had to face a league opponent who was coming off a bye week, not counting those games where both teams were coming off a bye. Interestingly, the team coming off the bye won only 31 times and lost 34. So it doesn't seem to be much of an advantage.

Virginia Tech played the most such games, with a record of 6-3. Wake Forest was next, with 8 games played, but they didn't fare so well (2-6). Florida State (6-1) and Georgia Tech (3-4) were next, followed by Duke (3-3).

Adding in the 2017 season, now that we have the schedule, following are the total appearances by school in these games. If you are one of the five schools at the top of the list, complain to the league office. If you are Louisville, keep hiding in the tall grass and say nothing.

Georgia Tech.......9
Virginia Tech.......9
Duke.................8
Florida State.......8
Wake Forest.......8
Clemson............4
North Carolina....4
NC State............4
Pitt...................4 *
Syracuse............4 *
Virginia..............4
Miami................3
Boston College... 2
Louisville............0 *

* not in conference the entire period "


"From 2013 ACC Schedule Analysis, Part 1:
...analysis of the 2013 football schedule. In this post, we'll look at which teams face opponents who have open dates prior to playing them.

Atlantic Division
Boston College: 0
Clemson: 4 (Florida St, NC State, Syracuse, Ga Tech)
Florida St: 3 (Boston College, Maryland, NC State)
Maryland: 1 (Wake Forest)
NC State: 2 (Clemson, Duke)
Syracuse: 1 (Maryland)
Wake Forest: 1 (Syracuse)
Total: 12

Coastal Division
Duke: 3 (Wake Forest, Ga Tech, Va Tech)
Ga Tech: 2 (Clemson, N Carolina)
Miami: 2 (N Carolina, Virginia)
N Carolina: 2 (Boston College, Miami)
Pittsburgh: 0
Virginia: 1 (Va Tech)
Va Tech: 1 (Pittsburgh)
Total: 11
...
The breakdown by team doesn't look so evenly distributed, however.
4 - Clemson
3 - Duke, Florida State
2 - Ga Tech, Miami, N Carolina, NC State
1 - Maryland, Syracuse, Virginia, Va Tech, Wake Forest
0 - Boston College, Pittsburgh
...
[side note: Pittsburgh may not get a bye before Ga Tech, but it does get Navy - essentially the same offensive system, but with less athletic players. That may be an even bigger advantage than an open date.] "

5 Year Totals:

PHP Code:
ACC Team '13 | '14 '15 | '16 '17 | Total
BC       | 0   | 0   | 0   | 0   | 0   | 0
Clemson  | 4   | 2   | 0   | 2   | 0   | 8
Duke     | 3   | 2   | 0   | 2   | 2   | 9
FSU      | 3   | 3   | 1   | 1   | 1   | 9
Ga. Tech | 2   | 1   | 1   | 3   | 3   | 10
L'
ville  |  -  | -   | 0   0   0   0
Maryland 
1   1   | -   | -   | -   | 2
Miami    
2   1   0   0   1   4
UNC      
2   1   0   1   2   6
NC State 
2   1   0   0   1   4
Pitt
.    | 0   4   1   1   1   7
Syracuse 
1   2   0   1   0   4
Va
Tech 1   1   3   1   0   6
Virginia 
1   0   0   0   1   2
Wake 
For | 1   1   3   1   0   6
Notre Dm 
0   1   3   0   1   

Friday, January 27, 2017

New FSU Dirac Dittmer Plaza



Presenting the new #FSU Dirac Dittmer Plaza, freshly updated by #architectslw to provide a plaza with comfortable seating and shaded patio area for #Starbucks between the Dirac Science Library and Dittmer Chemistry building. With new landscaping and improved drainage and lighting, the space provides a great area for students, faculty and staff to study and mingle. #floridastateuniversity #plazadesign


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FSU must focus on preparing students for jobs, boost research




http://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/2017/01/26/bog-chairman-says-universities-must-focus-preparing-students-jobs-boost-research/97094948/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter

"Kuntz said the board’s use of performance funding has been critical in keeping universities focused on what is important. The funding formula also has played a major role in improving the number of students graduating with STEM skills.
“Last session, the Legislature allocated $500 million for performance funding,” Kuntz said. “Performance funding works because it changes behavior at the institutional level."
Kuntz pointed to a 31 percent increase in STEM undergraduate degrees and a 17 percent jump in STEM graduate degrees, he said.
"So that’s a major step in the right direction. “
Kuntz said universities are making changes to better align degrees to jobs in Florida. He cited Florida State University as an example, with its expansion of programs in public health and aerospace engineering."

“To be a premier system, our faculty must engage in meaningful research that leads to solving real-world challenges on a much larger scale than we are currently doing,” Kuntz said.
Kuntz said there are several examples of universities achieving this goal, including:
FAMU receiving a $15.4-million award from National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration to establish the Center for Coastal and Marine Ecosystems as the lead institution in conjunction with five partner universities.
Florida State University receiving $10 million from the U.S. Department of Energy to create a new Energy Frontier Research Center.
Equally important is increasing the number of students graduating in four years, he said. To that extent, the governors are endorsing the efforts of Gov. Rick Scott and legislators to expand summer funding for Bright Futures scholarships.
“Getting a degree in four years is a win – for our students, for businesses who employ our students, and for our state,” Kuntz said."


"Approved adding a request of $14.5 million in funding for FSU’s Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science building on the SUS’s list of highest priority PECO projects for the upcoming legislative session.
Approved FSU’s request that $41 million for an Interdisciplinary Research Commercialization building and $10 million for its College of Business building be in included in the governors’ supplemental PECO request.
Approved two separate loan resolutions proposed by Florida State University for the Seminole Boosters College Town project. The debt will consist of two bank loans; one, short-term loan not to exceed $15 million and a second long-range loan not to exceed $31 million. The money will go toward building student housing as part of the College Town III development just south of campus and buying out investors in College Town 1."

Thursday, January 26, 2017

CRA moves forward with Downtown redevelopment


http://www.wctv.tv/content/news/CRA-moves-forward-with-Downtown-Cascades--411924995.html


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (WCTV) --The joint Leon County-City of Tallahassee Community Redevelopment Agency voted to move forward with plans for redevelopment of Cascades Park and the Downtown area.
Staff will now begin negotiating the purchase and sale of the Bloxham Annex and Firestone properties with North American Properties (NAP). NAP was the only firm to propose plans for the land, offering the CRA more than $4 million to redevelop the properties as an urban mixed-use development.
Plans include apartments with views of Cascades Park, a hotel, restaurant, retail space, a Civil Rights Memorial, public parking, a cultural space and more. NAP expects to invest about $158 million in the project.
Once complete, NAP hopes to create an “18-hour downtown,” which captures the spirit, pride and culture of Tallahassee.
"That'll happen by putting residences down there, it'll happen by putting businesses down there, public spaces, retail and restaurants. So we're looking to create a destination downtown, not just an apartment complex on the park,” said Shawn McIntyre, Managing Partner with Florida North American Properties.
NAP also redeveloped the College Town area. However, McIntyre said to expect a different look for the downtown area. He described it as potentially having a more industrial and civic architecture.
Plans for the redevelopment can be found at www.Cascadesproject.com.

http://news.wfsu.org/post/city-negotiating-sale-firestone-bloxham-buildings

The City of Tallahassee is beginning to negotiate the sale of the Firestone Building and Bloxham Annex to the North American Properties company. The properties are located at the corner of Gaines and Gadsden Streets, just east of Cascades Park. NAP hopes to replace the abandoned state offices with a mixed-use community, complete with residential housing, and space for retail, dining and entertainment venues.

A conceptual design for a mixed-use development in Cascades Park. The City is beginning to negotiate the sale of the land to developer North American Properties.
Credit http://cascadesproject.com/
The City hopes the redevelopment will encourage pedestrian traffic between Cascades Park and downtown, and entice more residents and visitors to the area.
"This project will breathe new life into the downtown district,” said Leon County Commissioner Nick Maddox in a written statement.
The Firestone Building once served as the city jail, and played a significant role during the Civil Rights Movement. In 1960, students from Florida A & M and Florida State University staged lunch counter sit-ins and marches. Many were arrested and subsequently jailed in the building. Developers plan to work with the community to design a memorial commemorating the events that took place there. The city is also encouraging the developer to retain the building's historically significant details. NAP previously developed student housing units along Gaines Street.

Investors, NIH excited about FSU biomedical research targeting rare eye disease




http://news.fsu.edu/news/health-medicine/2017/01/26/investors-nih-excited-fsu-biomedical-research-targeting-rare-eye-disease/

Florida State University College of Medicine Professor Michael Blaber has spent years perfecting an artificial human protein for stimulating cell growth while also learning about the equally complex world of venture capitalists. 
Now, with the significant help of the National Institutes of Health and $5.2 million from five investment firms, he is closer to providing relief for an incurable eye condition called Fuchs’ dystrophy. This disorder causes swelling in the cornea that can lead to cloudy vision and general discomfort.
“Four to 6 percent of people over the age of 40 or 50 will get this,” said Blaber, co-founder of the biopharmaceutical company Trefoil Therapeutics. “It will progress in many cases to requiring corneal transplant. This would provide a new treatment for them.” 
But in the world of commercialization, a good idea in a good lab can progress only so far without outside financial support. Blaber’s technology, licensed to Trefoil Therapeutics, has reached a milestone by attracting Series A (or Series 1) financing, said Brent Edington, FSU’s director of technology commercialization. This is the first round of financing given to a new business after seed capital has been provided. 
“The funding is a significant step for the technology developed by Dr. Blaber,” Edington said, “and for commercialization of FSU College of Medicine technologies in general.”
The official name for what Trefoil Therapeutics is developing is TTHX1114.
Blaber had been working on fibroblast growth factors (FGF-1) that cause more types of cells in the body to divide and grow than any other known growth factor. Scientists have been widely interested in it as a tool for regenerative medicine. 
At first, Blaber, using an FGF-1 mutant, thought that this technology could be used to grow new blood vessels for the heart. But because of the expense and risk involved, investors pulled out. Next, he attempted to apply his growth factor mutant to wound healing. It also was unsuccessful in attracting investor funding.
So Blaber shifted his focus to the eye and Fuchs’ dystrophy. Investors were instantly attracted. 
“There’s no drug you can give to slow Fuchs’ dystrophy down,” Blaber said. “There is nothing other than transplant, and the transplant is not foolproof either. So anything that you develop for that is new, not available. There is nothing to compete with.” 
Trefoil Therapeutics also will receive assistance from the NIH National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) Therapeutics for Rare and Neglected Diseases collaborative research agreement. Applicants to this program are selected through a competitive process from an evaluation of the most promising proposals for these prestigious public-private partnerships. 
NCATS researchers will move TTHX1114 forward through the preclinical phase, including development of plans for clinical trials and submission of other Food and Drug Administration requirements.
“The funding from the NIH is huge,” Blaber said. “They’re going to be doing all this testing to submit to the Food and Drug Administration. Fuchs’ dystrophy is a rare disease, and they have special funding for that. It’s considered an ‘orphan drug,’ and it has a protected corner of the market.” 
Blaber said he is proud the work has gotten so far. It is the first therapeutic derived from research in the FSU College of Medicine to make it through to venture-based Series A financing. 
He’s pleased for another, more important reason: “I’m proud of producing a compound that will potentially help people on a large scale.”

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Florida lags behind big states in PHDs awarded, but FSU climbing



http://www.dailycommercial.com/news/20170124/florida-lags-behind-big-states-in-phds-awarded-but-uf-fsu-climbing


"As Florida looks to improve its higher-education system, a federal survey of doctorate degrees shows the state is competitive with the nation but should have a higher ranking based on its size.
The "survey of earned doctorates," which is compiled each year by six federal agencies, including the National Science Foundation, NASA and the National Institutes of Health, showed Florida, the nation's third-largest state, ranked seventh among the 50 states, with 2,364 research doctorates awarded in the 2014-15 academic year. It was the same ranking achieved in the prior year, although the doctorate total increased by 89 degrees.
Florida produces fewer than half of the more than 6,000 research degrees awarded in California, the top state, and about 60 percent of the more than 4,000 doctorates awarded each by New York and Texas in 2015.
In the longer term, Florida has not improved its position much over the past decade, ranking eighth in the 2005-06 state survey, with 1,815 research doctorates.
The survey assesses doctorates awarded in major science and engineering fields, but also includes non-science doctorates in areas like education, humanities, history and communication. It does not include professional degrees in law, medicine, pharmacy and other areas that are a large part of the graduate education system in Florida and across the nation.
The University of Florida and Florida State University were the only two state schools among the top-50 institutions granting research doctorates in 2015. Florida was ranked No. 6 with 747 degrees and FSU was No. 45 with 383 research doctorates. The top school was the University of Michigan with 852 degrees.
UF and FSU officials said they had slightly higher counts of research degrees in the 2014-15 academic year, with Florida at 753 and FSU at 424.
The difference may be attributed to the varying definitions of a "research" doctorate, with some counts including disciplines that other surveys do not use. In fact, the Board of Governors, which oversees Florida's university system, reported 2,136 research doctorates in 2014-15, which was about 228 degrees lower than the National Science Foundation's count for the state.
More Video: Florida Hospital Waterman fighting hi-tech war on cancer
Despite the variance, trends can be seen. Over the last decade, UF moved from No. 13 on the list of top-50 institutions to No. 6. FSU has remained about the same on top-50 list, although it is awarding about 100 more research doctorates per year now.
As part of its overall effort to become a top-25 public university, FSU is advancing an ambitious plan to attract and retain more faculty members, boost graduate assistantships and postdoctoral researchers, which all could lead to awarding more research doctorates in the future.
Research doctorates are on the rise at other Florida public universities, with the University of Central Florida increasing its research doctorates by 35 percent since 2006, with 241 degrees.
Florida International University has doubled its research doctorates to 173 in 2015. Florida Atlantic University has increased its research doctorates by a third over the last decade to 99 in 2015.
The national survey also includes private institutions that award research doctorates, with the University of Miami the top private school in Florida, with 206 degrees in 2015.
Research doctorates are only a part of the advanced-degree system in Florida. More graduate students earned professional degrees than research doctorates in 2014-15, according to the Board of Governors.
Florida awarded 2,711 professional degrees in 2015, including 864 law degrees, 585 pharmacy degrees and 581 medical degrees

Monday, January 23, 2017

FSU mens and womens basketball ranked #6, plus more info...

Note ESPN and SI FSU rankings below.  ESPN has FSU at 19.  SI has FSU outside the top 16.  What?


Jordan Culver@JordanCulver 45 minutes ago
women's hoops reaches No. 6 in the AP Poll. Seminoles have won six games in row over AP-ranked opponents.

The Daily Nole@TheDailyNole 2 hours ago
is up four spots to No. 6 in this week's Associated Press men's basketball poll.


Joe Reedy@joereedy 2 hours ago         
up to sixth in which is the highest ranking ever for a Leonard Hamilton coached team including Miami and Oklahoma State.

David Teel@DavidTeelatDP 2 hours ago
Blog: joins 1980 with 5-1 stretch versus ranked opponents.


Michael Rogner@TN_Hoops 1 hour ago
FSU began the 1972-73 season ranked No. 2, but lost the 4th game to Princeton. That's the only time FSU basketball has been higher than 6th
 
Andrew Miller@Andrew_Miller36 1 hour ago
No. 6 is the highest men's basketball has been ranked in the AP Poll since the 1992-1993 season.
 
FSU Basketball@fsuhoops 6 hours ago
We'll let this speak for itself. 👇🏿

ESPN Stats & Info@ESPNStatsInfo 2 hours ago
Villanova has moved to No. 1 in the latest BPI rankings while Duke has fallen to season-low No. 4. Read more here:

Sunday, January 22, 2017

South Endzone Scoreboard Doak





https://floridastate.forums.rivals.com/threads/south-endzone-scoreboard.172348/#post-2802322

This is not the final version. The new version will not be as long and will be dimensionally the same ratio as the North Endzone board. The south endzone board will be 2.5 to 3 times larger than what we had in that endzone in years past. Construction will begin on the scoreboard and renovations to the Osceola Grill below it in early March and will be completed by mid July. That area right in front of the club and below the scoreboard will be under construction for the spring game but we should have access to the terrace seating sections on either side of the Osceola Grill.

If anyone is interested in club seats for 2017 there's good reason to select before the March 17 priority deadline as you will have the best choice of available seats.
 

ESPN bball coverage, plus other thoughts

FSU was 17-2 at the time of this, not 16-3.  Dickie V spent most of the previous game shaming FSU fans for loving football, otherwise during that game, he only spoke of UNC.  For this game (against Louisville), Dickie focused on FSU had a poor strategy of playing too deep of a roster (FSU was leading the ACC during his criticism) and the rest of the time focusing on how Greyson Allen took too much criticism for his '1 mistake' (ignoring that he had 3 separate tripping incidents, plus others).

With ESPN, it will only love SEC in football, and in bball, it will only love the blue bloods in the ACC.  It just can't seem to lose these played out narratives.

Someday, the ACC really needs a TV network that pushes it's football product and goes beyond just seeing Duke/UNC in bball.  ACC needs to diversify and it never will with our own TV network holding us back.









http://www.tomahawknation.com/2017/1/23/14354596/fsu-basketball-shown-serious-disrespect-national-media-members

The Florida State men’s basketball program has rarely been a media darling. And usually, that’s been more than fine, as the Seminoles haven’t made the NCAA Tournament for approaching half a decade. Still, even when the ‘Noles were consistently showing up in the dance, they didn’t exactly receive much glowing coverage. And that was understandable too, as they played a slow, sloppy brand of basketball that was far from friendly on the eyes— even if it proved effective.
But most of that has changed. FSU is now deep, long, and talented, and plays an up-tempo game that has led to an 18-2 record and a top-10 ranking in the AP Poll. Along the way, the ‘Noles have posted a nation’s best 9-1 mark against RPI top-50 teams, en route to a top-5 RPI ranking. And, of course, Florida State recently finished a six-game stretch against ranked teams with a 5-1 record.
What hasn’t changed? The slight directed at Tallahassee hoops from some on the national stage who aren’t giving the Seminoles much credit. At all. SI.com’s Luke Winn recently ranked the 16 teams he feels are most likely to win this year’s national championship, and noticeably absent was FSU. Who did make the cut? Duke, Louisville, and Notre Dame, all of whom the ‘Noles have beaten this season and are ranked below Florida State in the AP Poll (full disclosure: Winn’s piece was published before FSU’s win over Louisville, but still after it beat Duke and ND).
The slights don’t stop there. CBS Sports’ Seth Davis shared his latest AP ballot on Sunday night, and even though the Seminoles went 2-0 over the last week against a pair of top-15 opponents in the Irish and the Cardinals, Davis has ND at No. 9 and FSU at No. 10. Translation: despite a great week for the ‘Noles, he doesn’t think they should move up a single spot in the AP rankings— and should be slotted behind a Notre Dame team they just vanquished.
Why? Per Davis, because Florida State won by just three, and at home. FSU basketball has had plenty of problems over the years, and now that it’s tied atop the ACC, it’s found another: beating elite opponents, which, evidently, is not enough for some. But congrats to the Irish, Cards, and Blue Devils on their quality losses in Tallahassee.

Saturday, January 21, 2017

FSU Basketball History Factoids

With FSU's amazing season so far, this is worth looking at.  Fun team.  I hope FSU can add a few big accomplishments for this season (Sweet 16 or better?).  They deserve it.

Michael Rogner @TN_Hoops 1 hour ago
FSU began the 1972-73 season ranked No. 2, but lost the 4th game to Princeton. That's the only time FSU basketball has been higher than 6th


http://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/tournament/history/_/team1/5993

Florida State Season By Season Results
SEASONW-LRESULTS
20121-1
20112-1Defeated Notre Dame in second round, 71-57
20100-1Lost to Gonzaga in first round, 67-60
20090-1Lost to Wisconsin in first round, 61-59
19981-1
19933-1Lost to Kentucky in regional final, 106-81
19922-1Lost to Indiana in regional semifinal, 85-74
19911-1Lost to Indiana in second round, 82-60
19890-1
19880-1Lost to Iowa in first round, 102-98
19801-1Lost to Kentucky in second round, 97-78
19780-1Lost to Kentucky in second round, 85-76
19724-1Defeated Kentucky in regional final, 73-54
Defeated North Carolina in National Semifinal, 79-75
Lost to UCLA in National Championship, 81-76
19680-1


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida_State_Seminoles_men's_basketball

Polls[edit]

Florida State has ended their basketball season ranked 10 times in either the AP or Coaches Poll. Top-10 finishes are colored ██
Florida State has been ranked in the AP Poll a total of 120 times with a second-place ranking being the best the team has ever received.[5]


NCAA Tournament results[edit]

The Seminoles have appeared in the NCAA Tournament 14 times. Their combined record is 15–14.
YearSeedRoundOpponentResult
1968First RoundEast Tennessee StateL 69–79
1972First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
Eastern Kentucky
Minnesota
Kentucky
North Carolina
UCLA
W 83–81
W 70–56
W 73–54
W 79–75
L 76–81
1978First RoundKentuckyL 76–85
1980#8First Round
Second Round
#9 Toledo
#1 Kentucky
W 94–91
L 78–97
1988#12First Round#5 IowaL 98–102
1989#4First Round#13 Middle TennesseeL 83–97
1991#7First Round
Second Round
#10 USC
#2 Indiana
W 75–72
L 69–82
1992#3First Round
Second Round
Second Round
#14 Montana
#6 Georgetown
#2 Indiana
W 78–68
W 78–68
L 74–85
1993#3First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#14 Evansville
#11 Tulane
#7 WKU
#1 Kentucky
W 82–70
W 94–63
W 81–78OT
L 81–106
1998#12First Round
Second Round
#5 TCU
#13 Valparaiso
W 96–87
L 77–83OT
2009#5First Round#12 WisconsinL 59–61OT
2010#9First Round#8 GonzagaL 60–67
2011#10Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
#7 Texas A&M
#2 Notre Dame
#11 VCU
W 57–50
W 71–57
L 71–72OT
2012#3Second Round
Third Round
#14 St. Bonaventure
#6 Cincinnati
W 66–63
L 56–62

NCAA Tournament seeding[edit]

The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition.
Years →'80'88'89'91'92'93'98'09'10'11'12
Seeds →81247331259103