JasonB wrote:Harry0569 wrote:If y'all don't subscribe to Football Outsiders, you should go do it now. Best football site on the web.
Here is what they said regarding SMU's season:
SMU: 3-9 (3-5)
1% chance to go 7-5
5% chance to go 6-6
13% chance to go 5-7
24% chance to go 4-8
28% chance to go 3-9
20% chance to go 2-10
8% chance to go 1-11
1% chance to go 0-12
Interesting... love statistics so I'm interested in their methods. What were the released predictions for 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013? Interested to see the historical accuracy...
Fairly close...
No. 91 SMU Mustangs (4-8, 2-6) was their prediction last year:
"On paper, it is a match made in football nerd heaven. SMU head coach June Jones, one of the greatest champions of the run-and-shoot, needed help in boosting an offense that fell to 96th in Offensive F/+ last season. So he called on Hal Mumme, architect of the Air Raid offense so prominent in recent college football. Mumme’s coaching tree—Washington State head coach Mike Leach, West Virginia head coach Dana Holgorsen, California head coach Sonny Dykes, Texas Tech head coach Kliff Kingsbury, and Baylor head coach Art Briles all either served on Mumme’s staff or the staff of a direct Mumme disciple—is more impressive than his win-loss record.
Now, Jones had made something of the Southern Methodist program before Mumme came along. After attending zero bowls in the first 20 seasons since their return from the death penalty, the Mustangs have gone bowling for four straight years, going 30-23 since 2009 after going 30-85 in the previous 10 seasons. But the team slid in 2012. SMU couldn’t even pretend to pass the ball (Texas transfer and former blue-chipper Garrett Gilbert completed just 53 percent of his passes with a 15-to-15 TD-to-INT ratio), and the offense had almost no big-play capability. Mumme’s offense is designed to help the quarterback maximize efficiency, so even if the big plays don’t increase, Gilbert’s completion rate should. At least, it better, because the Mustangs can’t lean on big (and graduated) running back Zach Line anymore. And the offense will have to improve to offset potential defensive regression. Defensive end Margus Hunt and linebackers Taylor Reed and Ja’Gared Davis combined for almost exactly half of SMU’s tackles for loss last year, and all three are gone. The secondary could still be strong with the return of safety Jay Scott and corner Kenneth Acker, but it will probably be put under pressure a lot more in 2013."
"smupony94: Harry, you have been promoted to purveyor of official status capabilities."