Thursday, June 1, 2017

ACC Titles since 2004 expansion (Update)



http://csnbbs.com/thread-819043.html

All time ACC championships
#1-Carolina (265)
#2-Maryland (196)
#3 thru #6-Clemson, Duke, State, UVa (between 120-130)

Since the first Director's Cup was awarded for the 1993-94 season, Carolina has more top ten finishes than the rest of the ACC combined (including Notre Dame).


David TeelVerified account @DavidTeelatDP 14 hours ago
, lead in post-expansion league titles. have more than double Miami and BC combined.
 
 
This marks the 26th consecutive year that the Cavaliers and Seminoles have claimed at least one title, the conference’s longest current streaks, and as the following numbers show, those two programs have been especially dominant during the 13 years since expansion.
ACC team championships from 2004-05 through 2016-17:
Virginia 64, Florida State 55, North Carolina 37, Duke 36, Maryland 26, Virginia Tech 24, Clemson and Georgia Tech 20, N.C. State 14, Notre Dame 12, Miami and Syracuse nine, Wake Forest eight, Boston College and Louisville one. FSU is the only school to win at least one ACC title in football and men’s basketball during that span.
The Cavaliers’ success has translated nationally, with 11 of their 25 all-time NCAA team titles occurring in the last 13 years, most recently men’s tennis this month. North Carolina leads ACC schools with 13 national championships since expansion. Duke has 10, Florida State four, Boston College three, Wake Forest and Syracuse two, Clemson, Georgia Tech and Notre Dame one. Maryland won 10 during the post-expansion era before joining the Big Ten.
Virginia faithful delight in hazing Virginia Tech about its national-championship void, just as Hokies fans revel in 13 consecutive football victories over the Cavaliers. But ACC competition and revenue combined with administrative support and quality coaching have elevated Tech to heights few projected.
The Hokies joined the ACC along with Miami and one year before Boston College, but their 24 conference team championships are more than double the Hurricanes’ (nine) and Eagles’ (one) combined. Those titles also outdistance charter members Clemson, N.C. State and Wake Forest, plus Georgia Tech.
Now would Clemson swap its lone ACC championship this year in football, and subsequent national title, for league trophies in three or four other sports? Howard’s Rock would crumble before that happened.
And no offense to director of track and field Dave Cianelli, but legions of Virginia Tech fans would sacrifice several (all?) of his 13 ACC team championships for a football national title, or even a men’s basketball Final Four.
Here’s another telling stat: Prior to joining the ACC, Virginia Tech’s average finish in the Directors’ Cup national all-sports standings was 91st. As ACC members, the Hokies’ average is 42nd, and at 33rd in the most recent standings (through May 25), they’re headed for a similar finish this year.
Virginia is 27th, and the men’s tennis NCAA championship likely will secure the school’s 11th consecutive top-20 finish.
Regardless of the Directors’ Cup, 2016-17 already ranks among Virginia Tech’s signature years since joining the ACC. Indeed, this marks the first time the Hokies have won the Coastal Division in football and made the NCAA men’s basketball tournament. The only other year in which they reached the ACC football championship game and won four conference titles was 2007-08.
Virginia’s benchmark year was 2014-15, with six league championships, national titles in baseball, men’s soccer and men’s tennis, and an outright regular-season championship in men’s basketball.
And while ACC competition is complete, postseason awaits for Virginia Tech in track, for Virginia in track and baseball, opportunities for both to enhance an already choice year.



Warchant.com @Warchant 53 minutes ago

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