
This is part one of a two-part look at the assumed worthlessness of the pre-season poll.
It's fashionable these days to decry the terribleness of the pre-season poll. After all, it is a travesty that young men like those on Auburn's 2004 team can best every challenge laid before them, and then be denied the right to play for the national championship because, before they had even stepped on the field, some voters didn't think they were going to be very good.
It's an easy argument to make. So easy, in fact, that most folks don't give the other side of it any thought at all. Unfortunately, the challenges encountered by Auburn in 2004 are present every year, and while it's easy to point the finger at early polling, it's really just a symptom of a much larger problem with the whole polling system.
There are a few distinct problems with the polls as they currently exist, and they all contribute to the problems with the BCS. The first is the fact that the folks filling out ballots often did not watch the teams play that they are voting for (or against). The second is that the aims of the polls are poorly defined making the habits of voters patently ridiculous.
There are well over 100 football teams in Division I-A ("FBS" moniker be damned). Every week sees the vast, vast majority of them take the field. Who could possibly make time to watch all of those games? Even watching the games sans-commercials and on fast-forward would be a daunting task... add to that the complexity of actually evaluating the games you've watched and you're talking about something that no human short of, say, Stephen Hawking could actually do.
And that's talking about someone dedicated to doing nothing but watching football. The actual voters have day jobs. They're beat writers. They're football coaches. They have better things to do than watch every single football game, ever. In short, these people aren't doing the work necessary to provide a decent Top 25 -- they just don't have time.
The second issue, though, is probably the bigger one. What are the polls ranking, exactly? Are these guys supposed to be ranking the team who has had the best season to date? The team most likely to win the national championship? The team who is the best right this moment? Some would argue, and I would agree, that the ideal would be to tell the pollsters "If Team A, playing today on a neutral field, would beat Team B, then you must rank Team A more highly than Team B." Really, though, there's lots of room for reasonable people to disagree on the details, but it doesn't matter so much what the rules are, just that there needs to be a standard.
Giving the voters a blank canvas doesn't force or even suggest critical thinking (or any other kind of thinking, for that matter) and is quite prone to influence by preconceived notions and "feelings". Ask them to answer a specific question with their poll, and all of a sudden they're having to think about who they're putting at 15th as opposed to just recycling last week's poll and dropping teams that lost.
Which brings about another issue: the movement in the polls from week to week makes no sense. Consider this example: Team A is ranked #4 in the country. They play Team X, who is ranked #22. In a close game, Team A squeezes out a win in the waning seconds. What happens in the polls?
90% of the time (fake, but accurate, statistics courtesy of Dan Rather Statistics, Inc.) Team A retains their #4 ranking (or even moves up) and Team X falls out of the polls. But why? Had those rankings been accurate, we should have expected a more lop-sided game. Team X over-performed and/or Team A under-performed based on their original rankings. Why punish Team X or reward Team A for that?
From week to week, the pollsters hardly have the brain-power or attention to absorb and analyze the new information, let alone re-evaluate the whole season anew. Would forcing them to start a few weeks later really make things any different? If so, would it make them better?
Tomorrow we'll take a look at some of the possible unexpected consequences of eliminating early season polls and consider whether or not fixing the two core problems with the polls in general would be a better solution.




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-20-2008 @ 5:26PM
cfb expert said...
pete a decent article but if you want to mention auburn then you should mention boise st. the difference between the 2 is boise st was left out over a 1 loss team. auburn 2004 defeated 4 teams with winning records just like lsu did in 2003 and boise st in 2006. in auburns case who were they going over? ou who has played the toughest schedule of the 4 unbeatens and had given texas a top 5 team its only loss and had defeated 6 teams with winning records compared to auburn whose opponents had lost to someone else? if texas wouldve defeated ou then it wouldve been texas and usc not ou and usc.
now when we look at the bcs titles 7 have went to unbeatens while 3 have went to teams with 1 or 2 losses. all 3 have went to the sec and 2 of those 3 titles other teams had better records.
the best solutions for this is 1st to make all 1a programs play 1a programs and stop allowing the sec to build their tradition on cupcakes and 2nd is to have a legit playoff. the playoff should consist of 8 conference champions. polls should have absolutely no influence. form 8 super conferences of 14 teams, take the division champs and allow them to play for a conf title then take the 8 winners. you would need 7 games to decide the champion. have 7 major bowls that rotate the title game every year. keep some of the major bowl games as sites but add say domed stadiums in the north so everyone would have a fair chance instead of the sec having the bowl games to their advantages.
we have 119 1a programs now. they should drop 7 down or add 9 more. if they added 9 more then we could have 16 conferences of 8 teams and take only conference champs. it doesnt matter how they would do it the only thing that matters is they take away the power of the popular opinion polls and allow the teams to EARN their right to the playoffs.
personally i am someone who watches the 1st east coast game every saturday when it starts (11:am) and i finish with the west coast game about midnight. college football is my passion. you are correct in the fact its hard to keep up and no one can accurately predict the best teams every week. also one thing you left out about the pollsters especially the coaches is how biased some are. last season after ou defeated missouri twice and both at 11-2 4 coaches ranked missouri over ou. mike bellotti, tommy bowden, bobby bowden, and howard schnellenberger. bellotti is still pissed a hometown ref had to blow 2 calls to give oregon its only so called win ever over ou, ou has defeated bobby bowden all 4 times (3 of which bowdens team was playing for a possible national title, all 3 orange bowls) and of course howard schnellenberger was fired (given the choice of resigning or being fired) for not allowing a kid to get a drink of water during 100 degree 2 a days. the kid went into a coma 5 minutes later and of course later transferred to arkansas and sued both ou and howard (capn kangaroo) for undisclosed amounts. also the pipe didnt cover the alcohol odor from his lips. each has a problem with ou and thus vote that way.
lets have a legit playoff, line it up man to man, and find out who the real champion is each year. is that too much to ask? the biased popular opinion polls have to go. its keeping college football from being this nations top sport.
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