RT if your team is one of the Top 50 greatest college football programs of All-Time pic.twitter.com/7YtsXOCAEE
— Kyle Umlang (@kyleumlang) January 23, 2024
RT if your team is one of the Top 50 greatest college football programs of All-Time pic.twitter.com/7YtsXOCAEE
— Kyle Umlang (@kyleumlang) January 23, 2024
Will be especially of note because next 2 years FSU stadium is under construction and greatly reduced in size:
2023 football attendance by school and by conference
Source: https://www.d1ticker.com/2023-fbs-attendance-trends/
2023 Attendance Numbers
# School 2023 attendance
1 Michigan 109,971
2 Penn State 108,409
3 Ohio State 103,792
4 Tennessee 101,915
5 Texas 101,625
6 LSU 100,742
7 Alabama 100,077
8 Texas A&M 99,234
9 Georgia 92,746
10 Florida 89,587
11 Auburn 88,043
12 Nebraska 86,802
13 Oklahoma 83,741
14 Clemson 81,334
15 Florida State 78,711
16 South Carolina 77,833
17 Notre Dame 77,622
18 Wisconsin 75,391
19 Michigan State 70,211
20 Iowa 69,250
21 Washington 68,814
22 USC 66,071
23 Arkansas 65,317
24 Virginia Tech 64,733
25 Ole Miss 63,721
26 BYU 61,944
27 Kentucky 60,939
28 Iowa State 60,384
29 Missouri 60,169
30 Purdue 58,248
31 NC State 56,919
32 Oregon 55,895
33 Texas Tech 54,491
34 Mississippi State 54,455
35 Oklahoma State 53,891
36 Colorado 53,180
37 Utah 52,499
38 Kansas State 51,957
39 Louisville 51,252
40 West Virginia 51,156
41 North Carolina 50,095
42 Miami (FL) 49,714
43 Illinois 49,698
44 Rutgers 49,251
45 Minnesota 48,453
46 Arizona State 48,301
47 Pittsburgh 48,122
48 UCLA 47,951
49 TCU 47,331
50 Arizona 47,320
51 Kansas 45,888
52 Indiana 44,589
53 UCF 44,015
54 Baylor 43,388
55 Virginia 43,293
56 Maryland 40,314
57 Fresno State 39,969
58 California 38,684
59 Cincinnati 38,193
60 South Florida 37,944
61 Oregon State 36,969
62 Boston College 36,376
63 Georgia Tech 36,290
64 Houston 36,020
65 Boise State 35,867
66 ECU 35,115
67 Appalachian State 34,734
68 Syracuse 34,045
69 Stanford 33,219
70 Navy 30,804
71 Wake Forest 30,609
72 Memphis 29,782
73 Air Force 29,616
74 Army West Point 29,016
75 UTSA 28,876
76 Washington State 28,023
77 Troy 27,121
78 Colorado State 26,509
79 Vanderbilt 25,509
80 James Madison 25,372
81 Duke 25,111
82 Tulane 25,021
83 San Diego State 24,832
84 UConn 24,659
85 UNLV 23,661
86 Southern Miss 23,275
87 Marshall 23,198
88 Wyoming 23,163
89 SMU 22,616
5-year Average Attendance Numbers
# School 5 Year Average
1 Michigan 110,559
2 Penn State 106,410
3 Ohio State 102,849
4 Alabama 100,420
5 Texas A&M 100,070
6 LSU 99,114
7 Texas 95,796
8 Georgia 92,760
9 Tennessee 92,709
10 Nebraska 88,198
11 Auburn 85,604
12 Florida 85,216
13 Oklahoma 83,628
14 Clemson 80,445
15 Notre Dame 76,108
16 Wisconsin 76,015
17 South Carolina 75,139
18 Michigan State 70,414
19 Iowa 67,193
20 Washington 66,221
21 Florida State 63,837
22 Arkansas 62,496
23 USC 61,638
24 Virginia Tech 60,833
25 Iowa State 58,357
Eager to track for 2024 as well:
https://247sports.com/Season/2024-Football/CollegeTeamTalentComposite/
Just a reminder that the team circled in Gold below beat the teams circled in red despite being considered less talented by a whole lot....FSU is now as talented or more talented than all of the circled schools....and still has CMN's Staff...I think we should be ok...just gotta buck the ACC.
Some random FSU Helmet History
One cool uni-related detail I noticed last week:
— FSU Uniform Tracker (@NolesUnis) September 9, 2023
FSU has added a sticker for the Seminole Tribe of Florida on the back of its helmets. They have done this for one-off games before but it wasn’t there last season.
Photos from https://t.co/muqWu4tNvO pic.twitter.com/ExqCBnqXK6
https://www.on3.com/boards/threads/for-the-historians-on-the-board.1296824/#post-24738213
Found an expired eBay listing for this helmet, the description says "AUTHENTIC 1969 FLORIDA STATE SEMINOLES "100" THROWBACK MINI HELMET | eBay" but the link doesn't go anywhere.
Most of the following information as to the dates of use of these various FSU helmets is summarized from information found at the "Helmet Hut" web site (www.helmethut.com).
The one "missing" helmet design is the one used by FSU during its first two games in 1969 (vs Wichita State and vs Miami (FL)); during these two games, FSU used gold helmets with a version of the "100" logo that many teams used that year to commemorate the college football centennial. I have seen no color photographs of this helmet, but the "Helmet Hut" web site reports that the football-shape was blue in color. I would appreciate any color photographs from the game.
*1 In 1962, plain gold helmets were used only during the first two games (vs The Citadel and Kentucky).
*2 Beginning with the team's third game in 1962, FSU introduced a triple helmet design scheme. On their helmets the offensive unit wore an arrow logo, the defensive unit a tomahawk, and the multi-purpose players an "indian head". This scheme was in place until the end of the 1962 season.
*3 While this design was apparently in use for most of the 1964 season, the team used plain gold helmets (like the first helmet shown above) during at least the game against Georgia in 1964.
*4 This design was used only during the inaugural Peach Bowl game in Atlanta, GA, which was a 31-27 loss to LSU.
*5 This design was used during games against Texas Tech and Utah State at the beginning of the 1975 season.
*6 Used during one game only - a 10-6 loss to Iowa State.
*7 I have only one photograph - showing only one FSU helmet - from the 1975 FSU game against Memphis State; in this photograph, the FSU helmet lacks any stripes. I would appreciate additional photographs from this game to confirm whether or not the entire team was using stripeless helmets during this game - if so, this would "count" as an additional historical helmet design for FSU.
*8 Black helmets were worn during the 2009 home game against Maryland in order to "[pay] tribute to Osceola, the legendary Native American warrior whose leadership of the Seminoles during the Second Seminole War has made him an enduring symbol of the unconquered spirit that Florida State athletes seek to embody".
I wish I could fit 50 helmets in a top 10. pic.twitter.com/D3dEcqDNfs
— Mike Farrell (@mfarrellsports) May 2, 2020
— ᴄᴏʟʟᴇɢᴇ ꜰᴏᴏᴛʙᴀʟʟ ᴛᴏᴜʀ (@college_fb_tour) February 20, 2022
Not posted much on ACC lawsuit but just odds and ends posted here. The most obvious answer that gets ignored is $30 extra million dollars a year. But there are many more.
Never forget the ACC was better prepared to preemptively drop a lawsuit on Florida State than it was to coordinate bowl selections with its member institutions on Selection Sunday.
— Slowdell Haggins 🎒 (@CSteph90) December 29, 2023
ACC commish statement on FSU lawsuit is longer than his statement on his 13-0 conference champ being left out of the CFP.
— Kyle Meredith (@kmeredith22) December 22, 2023
Pretty telling, if you ask me
College football fans: "Stop bitching about not getting in the playoffs. Your conference sucks"
— Tyler Huck (@TylerHuck) December 22, 2023
Also college football fans: "Stop bitching about wanting to leave the ACC."
Conference Comparison Data/Graphs
Big Ten Expansion Series - Understanding Florida State University - Budget, Research, Doctoral Degree Awards, University Growth, Alumni, Capital Projects
— Big Ten information. College football fan (@Genetics56) July 4, 2023
Some important data points:
- FSU offers 78 Ph.D. programs. The University of Wisconsin, to do a comparison, offers 110.… pic.twitter.com/1mdse2n48J
Big Ten Expansion Series About ACC Schools
— Big Ten information. College football fan (@Genetics56) June 10, 2023
Florida State University
AAU Member? No. But they do have a strategic plan to try and be positioned for the potential invite to the AAU. That is their goal.
Enrollment size: 44,597:
Research Expenditures: $ 356M (2022)
Acceptance… pic.twitter.com/LC9Xi5yMy9
ACC football. pic.twitter.com/JJBGtZEV0G
— Big Ten information. College football fan (@Genetics56) June 21, 2023
I would welcome this move. FSU vs Mich Orange Bowl brought in 11.5 mill viewers and a sold out orange bowl. The highest rated non cfp game ever. 2022 highest rated non ny6 game was ou and fsu. Now historically vs Mich, OSU,PSU, MSU, Neb, Wisc, IU, MD (35W-1Tie-6L) #BoxOfficeBoys https://t.co/3spEtLi2U0
— The Program Podcast (@theprogrampod) April 16, 2023
https://t.co/blVgdAuV8Q pic.twitter.com/ft9RfcTcih
— Big Ten information. College football fan (@Genetics56) June 13, 2023
The Big Ten is made up of 11 Land-Grant Institutions https://t.co/huP6X2f298 pic.twitter.com/6kwdB1LvPC
— Big Ten information. College football fan (@Genetics56) June 15, 2023
WHAT IS CIC
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Ten_Academic_Alliance
The BTAA's collaborative efforts span the academic enterprise of its members, including:
https://edcircuit.com/how-the-big-ten-academic-alliance-is-driving-higher-education/
https://bigten.org/sports/2018/6/6/trads-big10-trads-html.aspx
Since opening in the fall of 2013, the Big Ten conference center hosts more than 300 meetings annually for member institutions, Big Ten Academic Alliance (formerly CIC) related committees and coaches’ groups.
While academics have always played an integral role in the conference, presidents of the Big Ten member institutions formalized the primacy of academics with the establishment of the Big Ten Academic Alliance (formerly the Committee on Institutional Cooperation) in 1958. The Big Ten Academic Alliance is an academic consortium of all Big Ten universities. Annually, the schools currently constituting the Big Ten Academic Alliance produced over $10 billion in funded research, $5 billion more than any other conference.
https://www.libraryjournal.com/story/big-ten-academic-alliance-plans-big-collection-across-15-libraries
For more than 60 years, Big Ten Academic Alliance (BTAA) member schools have combined purchasing power and shared software licenses, aggregated course sharing and information technology services, and maintained an extensive faculty community. In mid-January, the library deans and directors of the BTAA announced the next step in the consortium’s collaboration: the BIG Collection, which will manage the institutions’ separate library collections as a single entity.
$$ from athletics to academics
https://thecomeback.com/ncaa/less-than-1-in-every-100-of-public-athletic-departments-revenue-goes-to-academics-only-10-schools-gave-on-balance.html
https://www.ajc.com/sports/college/uga-athletic-board-gives-million-university/WLKEyrfjt5lmcQ28O8SrXJ/
https://www.redandblack.com/uganews/football-revenue-bolsters-athletics-academics/article_706019cc-01dd-11e6-8b16-0ba043051140.html
https://www.redandblack.com/uganews/athletic-association-contributes-5-million-to-academics/article_421b12b4-5d83-11e5-a76d-5fffd0f9c685.html
They lost AAU status about 2 1/2 months before joining officially. They were voted in while having AAU status, but that was taken away before they fully joined. The B1G had options, especially considering the reasons they lost AAU status was very cut and dry (have a medical program on their main campus, add in more non agricultural areas of study), but chose to basically not care they lost AAU status nor care that Nebraska isn’t even attempting to get back AAU status.
The B1G doesn’t care anymore about AAU status, as long as the schools they bring in, bring in a lot of money.
https://www.on3.com/boards/threads/realignment-update.723540/page-113
IF FSU can't get in the SEC, I would also be happy in the B1G.
I have followed this expansion issue for the last 15 plus years.....I promise you, the B1G values UNC and UVA over FSU. Can I prove it? No. Can you prove FSU is more valued? No. But everything I have ever read indicates UNC/UVA over FSU.
Here is the issue....you need to prioritize and consider WHY you are joining a new conference:
*Football's need for revenue. Both the P2 provide this.
*Football experience: IE recruits preference, culture, geography for fans, rivals locations, alumni location, travel location attractiveness for fans. This isn't a simple one, but I 100% believe this leans to the SEC. Maybe not as much as I believe.....but it's SEC.
*Academics: This leans B1G, but not NEAR as much as people keep repeating (because someone told them, but they really don't know). I can talk research and FSU's history all day long. I promise you, like with the decision to join the ACC........academics stated a narrative, it was repeated by fans, it wasn't true. Nor is the BIG narrative. YES, the big is better for academics, but not near enough to make this the key driver for the decision.
*Demographics: All demographic trends in this country have people leaving the northeast/mid west and heading to the southeast. IT makes no sense to tie our future to these areas that are shrinking.
*Other sports: SEC and it isn't close. I don't believe "they will be fine"....but I can accept "I don't care"...but make that choice specifically....'they'll be fine' is a weak review of this. It's not accurate.
*Fans preference: Again, no way to prove for certain, but I have no doubt the SEC wins this one.
I just don't see the justification for BIG over SEC. But I agree with you....I'll take either of the P2, but prefer SEC.
....
SEC Schools in AAU: Florida, Mizzou, Vanderbilt and Texas A&M (and soon Texas)
POLL
https://www.on3.com/boards/threads/which-conference-would-you-prefer-fsu-in.894385/
POLL
Football, weather, recruiting (4 of 5 top states for blue chips) and proximity -- SEC has it.
Academics -- Big 10/14/16 has it over SEC (on par w/ACC, which I concur ought not to be an option). Both academic conferences average on US News rankings about 57 (ACC drops to 54 w/ND added) w/SEC only having 5 schools in Top 100 (avg. about 112). Obviously, USC/UCLA will improve Big 10 avg.
Cities/locales -- mixed bag depending upon preferences. LA (soon)/MSP/Chi/DC/Det/NYC for Big 10, some nice small towns for SEC along w/Austin (soon) and Nashville.
...
Over the last 10 years here is the number of national championships each conference has won in 19 of the sports that we have not including beach volleyball.
SEC-53
ACC-26
BIG10-8
BIG12-26
PAC12-56
Non P5- 21
The BIG 10 is by far the worst P5 conference athletically. The Big 10 has won 1 football natty, 1 in womens soccer, 4 in volleyball, 1 in womens cross country and 1 in mens swimming. Having USC and UCLA will definitely help them but the SEC is also getting much better with Texas and Oklahoma.
It doesn’t matter what conference we’re in. We’ll be at least top 15 and maybe top 10 in public universities by the end of the decade just because of the way Florida is growing. Doesn’t make any sense to join the BIG 10 and destroy our athletic department when we could go to the SEC and be great in academics and athletics.
.....
Overall the SEC can claim 42 national championships and the Big ten 41. Seems pretty close however in my lifetime I just remember every time the Big ten came down south for a significant bowl game they got that *** whooped. And in the last decade and a half it hasn't even been close. Southern teams have dominated. Check this out:
2021: Georgia
2020: Alabama
2019: LSU
*2018: Clemson
2017: Alabama
*2016: Clemson
2015: Alabama
*2014: Ohio State
*2013: Florida State
2012: Alabama
2011: Alabama
2010: Auburn
2009: Alabama
2008: Florida
2007: LSU
2006: Florida
So I would rather join a conference that produces national champions.
....
Big ten versus Southern football in national championships over the last decade and a half:
2021: Georgia
2020: Alabama
2019: LSU
*2018: Clemson
2017: Alabama
*2016: Clemson
2015: Alabama
*2014: Ohio State
*2013: Florida State
2012: Alabama
2011: Alabama
2010: Auburn
2009: Alabama
2008: Florida
2007: LSU
2006: Florida
...
Michigan has 1 national championship in the last 75 years. Penn State won 2 in a 5 year period 35 years ago. Yes Michigan got to the playoffs two years in a row but got destroyed by Georgia and then lost to TCU who then got destroyed by Georgia. Michigan will probably continue to make the playoffs but won’t win anything.
The 4 BIG 10 teams that can win a championship are Ohio State Michigan Penn State and USC. UCLA isn’t going to win a championship in football. I’ll include Nebraska just because of what they did in the 90s but they’re not winning anything either. So that would be 5 in the BIG 10 and 8 in the SEC. The 8 SEC teams that can win a championship are Alabama Auburn uf Georgia LSU Tennessee Texas Oklahoma. I won’t include Texas AM cause they haven’t won anything in 80 years but if they got the right coach they’d have a better chance than Michigan, Nebraska and Penn State. They have too much in state talent, money, fan support to not be good and they’re in a superior conference. All of them have won championships more recently than Michigan Penn State and Nebraska.
The SEC wins championships. The BIG 10 has the potential to win championships but doesn’t.
....
Here's a summary of two metrics: alumni and student enrollment. Can't find a breakdown of Booster members.
If we focus just on the three core metro urban regions (not even including their full metro areas but just 7 counties -- Tampa (Hboro/Pinellas), Orlando (Orange/Seminole), Miami-FtL-Palm Beach (Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach)...
those counties represent 40% of FSU alumni in Florida and 48% of FSU students from Florida.
If we look at all counties on the I-4 corridor and south ... actually, let's just go with the coastal counties, plus Polk and Osceola ...
those account for 54% of FSU alumni in Florida and 64% of FSU students from Florida.
Alumni | Students | |
Broward | 17,368 | 3,653 |
Miami-Dade | 14,346 | 3,572 |
Hillsborough | 14,241 | 2,710 |
Palm Beach | 13,871 | 2,934 |
Orange | 12,344 | 2,240 |
Pinellas | 10,828 | 1,478 |
Seminole | 5,798 | 938 |
Brevard | 5,621 | 738 |
Volusia | 4,056 | 493 |
Polk | 3,590 | 546 |
Sarasota | 3,585 | 784 |
Lee | 3,375 | 720 |
Manatee | 3,019 | 582 |
Collier | 1,960 | 673 |
Martin | 1,892 | 306 |
Saint Lucie | 1,349 | 247 |
Indian River | 1,273 | 205 |
Osceola | 1,065 | 321 |
Monroe | 741 | 148 |
Charlotte | 678 | 124 |
....
Hopefully, FSU has learned its lesson from when it chose to fly north over the SEC to play sport in the ACC. After 30+ years of being in the ACC, other than Clemson and Miami, FSU has absolutely nothing in common with any other ACC conference member.
Yes, I lived in the northeast and been to games at BC, Pitt, Notre Dame, PSU, Maryland, MSU, Michigan, OSU, Cincinnati, Rutgers, and Nebraska. In the Northeast, college football is an after thought. Pro football is everything. Yes, I know the Midwest is not the Northeast, but the Big 10 footprint is moving NE too.
MSU, Michigan, PSU, and OSU fine on occasion in the fall, please not winter. I bet OSU and its fans enjoyed the Northwestern road trip last year to Chicago. LOL.
Notre Dame, like Northwestern, is a road trip to Chicago. No need for a game - just go to Chicago. Same for BC, just go to Boston. Anything else, no thanks. Nebraska was fun, when Nebraska was in the Big 12 and recruiting Texas big and playing its main rivals Oklahoma and Colorado. Not anymore.
There are 10 SEC schools within a 500 mile radius of Tallahassee. FSU is in the heart and heartland of the SEC. FSU plays southern college football and belongs in the SEC. In the SEC, FSU in no time will be in dog fights with many SEC rivals, to which travel wont be an issue. People are excited about the home and home with Alabama and Georgia and rightfully so.
But, like the ACC, with zero rivals, there will be no Big 10 rivals, just distance and cold, rainy, dreary and snowy weather. It is one thing to live in that nasty weather. It is a whole different story when you chose to subject yourself to it for fun. Rather than enjoying cowgirl boots and keg stands at southern tailgates, the FSU faithful will be freezing their you know whats off.
FSU is an SEC fish lost in the ACC basketball ocean. If FSU joins the Big 10, FSU will still be an SEC football fish, but now it will be lost in the Midwest tundra, frozen stone cold having, once again, nothing in common with any of its conference member schools while continuing to lose out on southern recruits who want to play in the SEC.
The decision is easy and clear and the writing is written in bold on the wall. Join the SEC!
In the SEC, FSU can stay in its natural southern football lane and enjoy both home and away games without having to endure ridiculous travel to the north into the frigid cold. And, be in a conference with a whole lot in common, and in a conference in which the southern kids and recruits want to play.
FSU tried and experimented with the ACC north lane.
How did that work out?
Great under the BCS, when the ACC was only 9 members, and before big TV contracts. Now after northern ACC expansion, big TV payouts, and with the CP coming, everyone wants out and for good reason.
Hopefully, FSU has learned its lesson with the north lane.
....
https://floridastate.forums.rivals.com/threads/b10-does-not-make-sense.344431/page-2
1. Alabama | 1,027,064,000 | SEC |
2. Ohio State | 790,299,000 | Big Ten |
3. Clemson | 579,106,462 | ACC |
4. Georgia | 571,816,559 | SEC |
5. Notre Dame | 561,791,000 | IND/ACC |
6. Michigan | 520,873,532 | Big Ten |
7. Oklahoma | 488,452,372 | Big 12 |
8. LSU | 473,400,462 | SEC |
9. Auburn | 432,296,000 | SEC |
10. Florida State | 396,445,110 | ACC |
11. Florida | 379,689,796 | SEC |
12. Michigan State | 365,973,720 | Big Ten |
13. Wisconsin | 362,327,715 | Big Ten |
14. Penn State | 347,617,000 | Big Ten |
15. Oregon | 344,256,396 | Pac 12 |
16. Texas A&M | 319,785,372 | SEC |
17. Texas | 316,655,916 | Big 12 |
18. USC | 291,251,988 | Pac 12 |
19. Oklahoma State | 260,682,996 | Big 12 |
20. Nebraska | 260,098,559 | Big Ten |
1. Alabama | 1,027,064,000 | SEC |
2. Ohio State | 790,299,000 | Big Ten |
3. Clemson | 579,106,462 | ACC |
4. Georgia | 571,816,559 | SEC |
5. Notre Dame | 561,791,000 | IND/ACC |
6. Michigan | 520,873,532 | Big Ten |
7. Oklahoma | 488,452,372 | Big 12 |
8. LSU | 473,400,462 | SEC |
9. Auburn | 432,296,000 | SEC |
10. Florida State | 396,445,110 | ACC |
11. Florida | 379,689,796 | SEC |
12. Michigan State | 365,973,720 | Big Ten |
13. Wisconsin | 362,327,715 | Big Ten |
14. Penn State | 347,617,000 | Big Ten |
15. Oregon | 344,256,396 | Pac 12 |
16. Texas A&M | 319,785,372 | SEC |
17. Texas | 316,655,916 | Big 12 |
18. USC | 291,251,988 | Pac 12 |
19. Oklahoma State | 260,682,996 | Big 12 |
20. Nebraska | 260,098,559 | Big Ten |
https://thesportseconomist.com/analyzing-college-football-television-ratings/
As an economist, when I study data like this at SportsMediaWatch.com, I immediately want to make sure what is being looked at is an “apples to apples” comparison. The thing that immediately stood out to me was there are some games on stations like ESPNU or FS1, or FS2 that dramatically bring down the average rating for a team.
A complete picture of television ratings should include all twelve (or more) games that a team participates in. Unfortunately, this is not something we can figure out because of a lack of access to all relevant data. I suggest that games on the SEC Network or the Big Ten Network draw considerably more viewers than a game on the Longhorn Network. This, in turn, probably dwarfs the number of fans who are watching a game on K-State HDTV, which is internet-only.
But since games on all of these avenues (along with the Pac 12 Network, regional Fox Sports networks, syndicated ACC games, pay per view games, etc.) are not rated, it seems unfair to cherry-pick the games that warrant a broadcast on CBS, ABC, ESPN, FOX or other major networks and only count those games as an indicator of the popularity of a team. For example, Florida ranks seventh in the ratings TexAgs.com compiled, but they were only on a rated television broadcast five times this year in the eleven games. Meanwhile, Oklahoma was on a rated broadcast eleven times in the twelve games. If games against Kansas and Iowa State were on a station that did not report TV ratings, OU’s average television rating would go up fairly dramatically.
To correct this bias, I assumed that there were no viewers for games that were not rated telecasts and then recalculated the average rating per team. I realize that this is an imperfect method. Still, for the most part (with notable exceptions such as the Texas A&M vs. South Carolina game on the SEC Network), the games that do not warrant a broadcast on an established network will draw a small enough viewing audience that assuming a value of zero for these games will only bias these numbers slightly.
I would encourage suggestions on other ways to correct this bias, but I did not want to start guessing television audiences for these non-televised games. I feel that the teams most adversely affected by this correction are SEC and Big Ten teams, as the SEC and Big Ten Networks are probably drawing the most viewers for games where ratings are not available.
The TexAgs data suggests the following average ratings (I believe I have replicated this correctly).
The adjusted data suggests the following ratings:
1. SEC = 2.58 Mil, 2. B10 = 1.62 Mil, 3. B12 = 1.57 Mil, 4. ACC = 1.41 Mil, 5. P12 = 1.34 Mil
Finally, there are twelve SEC teams in the Top 25, seven Big Ten teams, three Pac 12 teams, two ACC teams, and one independent team in the original data. There are ten SEC teams, five Big Ten teams, five Big 12 teams, three Pac 12 teams, one ACC team, and one independent in the adjusted ratings. This data will have a slight “pro-Big 12 bias” as over seventy-eight percent of Big 12 games were rated while other conferences are between fifty-three and sixty percent rated. To reference the examples I pointed out above, Oklahoma finished 15th in average TV rating (up from 26th) in these adjusted ratings, while Florida finished 22nd (down from 7th).
All of my data is available on my webpage (see the bottom of my page for the links ), and any errors in calculating the number of games each team had rated are my own. Here is the revised Top 25.
(Assumes no viewers for non-rated games)
Team # of average Viewers Conference # of rated games
Avg Ratings according to rated Data Avg TV Ratings “adjusted.”