TGHusker Posted October 24, 2016 Share Posted October 24, 2016 I glad living in Okla that we are ahead of OU. Now if we can add to our NC soon. Quote Link to comment
VectorVictor Posted October 24, 2016 Share Posted October 24, 2016 This seemed interesting and relevant to the discussion going on: http://www.stassen.com/feedback/records.html I think page is best viewed with Netscape Navigator, if you can pick up what I'm laying down. And broganreynik linked to the NCAA's own site, and those numbers mirror those from the article that I referenced from before the 2016 season started. Quote Link to comment
RunMickeyRun02 Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 This was the number of all time wins of the top four programs in college football before anybody played today: 1. Michigan 915 2. Texas 884 3. Notre Dame 882 4. Nebraska 881 Texas lost, the other three notched another win. Nebraska has a very good chance to move past Texas this season, and an outside chance to jump over Notre Dame. Good post, I was wondering what the totals were while watching the K-State / Texas game this weekend. I don't think Bowfin's data is 100% accurate though... Fair enough, still appreciate bringing this back to the front of my brain. Another thing I noticed is the way Ohio State and Alabama have been playing in recent years they could be passing us in the not to distant future. Quote Link to comment
gbr93 Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 Sports-reference.com is a very accurate site for all different sports. They list us with 852 wins putting us 3rd behind Michigan at 906 and Alabama at 886. Right behind us is Penn St at 839 and Texas at 838. Quote Link to comment
knapplc Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 This seemed interesting and relevant to the discussion going on: http://www.stassen.com/feedback/records.html I think page is best viewed with Netscape Navigator, if you can pick up what I'm laying down. And broganreynik linked to the NCAA's own site, and those numbers mirror those from the article that I referenced from before the 2016 season started. The NCAA's site cites a source that has Nebraska at #9 with 846 wins, but their data stops at 2010. Add 50 more wins from 2011-present, that gets us to 896, which isn't right. HuskerMax uses Stassen, which has Nebraska at #4 at the end of the 2015 season with 880 wins. If Stassen is correct, it's currently: 1. Michigan - 932 2. Notre Dame - 894 3. Texas - 889 4. Nebraska - 887 5. Ohio State - 881 Quote Link to comment
RunMickeyRun02 Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 I'm not normally the anal-retentive perfectionist type but the fact I can't find one good source of truth really bothers me. Here are my numbers. I went here sorted by Wins descending and added this years games so far: Michigan 936 (7-0 this year) Notre Dame 895 (2-5) TexA$$ 889 (3-4) NEBRASKA 887 (7-0) Ohio State* 881 (6-1) Alabama* 872 (8-0) * both schools have had wins vacated by the NCAA these totals exclude those wins and are not recognized by the NCAA BUT then the pdf it uses as a reference doesn't seem to jive.... :-( Quote Link to comment
beorach Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 I think there's some cool functionality on that site and others it links to besides. E.g., did you see you can calculate winning percentage for whatever eras that interest you? If you just look at the years TO was the head coach at Nebraska, you'll see that the Cornhuskers led the nation in both wins and winning percentage during that period. I was not sharing it because I thought anything shared previously was lacking (though I had never previously heard of cheatsheet.com and was not impressed by the writing, let alone the spam ads, in the article you linked). I didn't have any trouble viewing Stassen's page in Google Chrome either. I understand the discussion on the exact page I linked to was dated but it speaks to details on sampling methodologies relevant to this calculation (that can be as simple or detailed as one wants to make it). Getting into specifics, I'd be more interested in a table on an NCAA site (.com or .org) that shows all-time wins and winning percentage but what was linked to was just an article with a few figures. The best thing I found (on NCAA.com) was a list of champions by year. These data are not easily found for whatever reason. All I can think about now is that I've lost track of better websites. I remember one that allowed you to sort through historical, final AP rankings. I might choose a decade and ask for a list of top 5 or 10 or 25 teams. The site would list all the teams that finished in the top 5 for that decade and how many times each finished with that high a final ranking. It was a good, quick way to argue conference strength with visiting fans of other programs. p.s. - I hope you didn't step in what you were laying down. I wasn't about to pick it up. p.p.s. - Here's what I started to blather (if you can do that via text) about in that last paragraph: http://collegepollarchive.com/football/ap/app_final.cfm#.WA9ztSHR9hG Quote Link to comment
knapplc Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 I went through HuskerMax's W/L records for all 127 (counting 2016) years of Husker football. Add 'em up and you get 887 wins. I'm betting Stassen is accurate, then. That means we're two games behind Texas, with a solid chance to pass them this year. Here are the wins I counted. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong. 1890 - 2 1891 - 2 1892 - 2 1893 - 3 1894 - 6 1895 - 6 1896 - 6 1897 - 5 1898 - 8 1899 - 1 1900 - 6 1901 - 6 1902 - 9 1903 - 10 1904 - 7 1905 - 8 1906 - 6 1907 - 8 1908 - 7 1909 - 3 1910 - 7 1911 - 5 1912 - 7 1913 - 8 1914 - 7 1915 - 8 1916 - 6 1917 - 5 1918 - 2 1919 - 3 1920 - 5 1921 - 7 1922 - 7 1923 - 4 1924 - 5 1925 - 4 1926 - 6 1927 - 6 1928 - 7 1929 - 4 1930 - 4 1931 - 8 1932 - 7 1933 - 8 1934 - 6 1935 - 6 1936 - 7 1937 - 6 1938 - 3 1939 - 7 1940 - 8 1941 - 4 1942 - 3 1943 - 2 1944 - 2 1945 - 4 1946 - 3 1947 - 2 1948 - 2 1949 - 4 1950 - 6 1951 - 2 1952 - 5 1953 - 3 1954 - 6 1955 - 5 1956 - 4 1957 - 1 1958 - 3 1959 - 4 1960 - 4 1961 - 3 1962 - 9 1963 - 10 1964 - 9 1965 - 10 1966 - 9 1967 - 6 1968 - 6 1969 - 9 1970 - 11 1971 - 13 1972 - 9 1973 - 9 1974 - 9 1975 - 10 1976 - 9 1977 - 9 1978 - 9 1979 - 10 1980 - 10 1981 - 9 1982 - 12 1983 - 12 1984 - 10 1985 - 9 1986 - 10 1987 - 10 1988 - 11 1989 - 10 1990 - 9 1991 - 9 1992 - 9 1993 - 11 1994 - 13 1995 - 12 1996 - 11 1997 - 13 1998 - 9 1999 - 12 2000 - 10 2001 - 11 2002 - 7 2003 - 10 2004 - 5 2005 - 8 2006 - 9 2007 - 5 2008 - 9 2009 - 10 2010 - 10 2011 - 9 2012 - 10 2013 - 9 2014 - 9 2015 - 6 2016 - 7 Total - 887 3 Quote Link to comment
TGHusker Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 I would love nothing better than to move past Texas this year. Next year, ND. Ohio State gained a lot of ground on us over the past few years. Need to get them in our rear mirror and out of our side mirror by winning. Quote Link to comment
Bowfin Posted October 25, 2016 Author Share Posted October 25, 2016 Where are you getting these numbers Bowfin? I pulled them from here, which was the first list I found: http://social.quintevents.com/bid/204365/The-Top-10-Winningest-College-Football-Teams-and-Coaches-of-All-Time At the time, I didn't know that there were several different variations of such a list. Some places make a tie "half a win, half a loss", some may or may count games that were retroactively forfeited because of cheating, etc., etc. I can't or won't say which is right, but I suppose the NCAA would be the final arbiter of these things. Whatever is the consensus, I will go with that. I just saw that rankings might change this season. Quote Link to comment
Landlord Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 Another important question is whether different sources factor in vacated wins Quote Link to comment
BigRedBuster Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 If Stassen is correct, it's currently: 1. Michigan - 932 2. Notre Dame - 894 3. Texas - 889 4. Nebraska - 887 5. Ohio State - 881 Well, here is Texas's remaining schedule: Baylor L TT W W Virginia L KU W TCU W I'm seeing them at 3-2 with that schedule. Of course, as we see many times in college football the wheels can always fall completely off and start losing to even really bad teams. I will be a big J Hawk fan that weekend. I would love it if they would lose every single one but I doubt if they do. Notre Dame's remaining schedule: Miami W Navy L Army L VT L USC L Now, let's say we split the next two and win the rest. That's 4-1. So, end of regular season: ND 895 Texas 892 Nebraska 891 I think we will have to wait till next year to pass either of them. BUT...next year we could make a big move in the rankings. 1 Quote Link to comment
TGHusker Posted October 25, 2016 Share Posted October 25, 2016 If Stassen is correct, it's currently: 1. Michigan - 932 2. Notre Dame - 894 3. Texas - 889 4. Nebraska - 887 5. Ohio State - 881 Well, here is Texas's remaining schedule: Baylor L TT W W Virginia L KU W TCU W I'm seeing them at 3-2 with that schedule. Of course, as we see many times in college football the wheels can always fall completely off and start losing to even really bad teams. I will be a big J Hawk fan that weekend. I would love it if they would lose every single one but I doubt if they do. Notre Dame's remaining schedule: Miami W Navy L Army L VT L USC L Now, let's say we split the next two and win the rest. That's 4-1. So, end of regular season: ND 895 Texas 892 Nebraska 891 I think we will have to wait till next year to pass either of them. BUT...next year we could make a big move in the rankings. We'll also have a bowl game. If it rolls right, maybe we tie Texas based on your analysis. I could also see texas loosing to either TT or TCU. Then we could move ahead of them. Quote Link to comment
Bowfin Posted October 25, 2016 Author Share Posted October 25, 2016 I looked around a little bit, and the lists of "all time wins" are like snowflakes: No two are ever exactly alike. One even had Nebraska already ahead of Texas. That being said, I think Nebraska gains ground on Notre Dame and Texas. Quote Link to comment
admo Posted October 26, 2016 Share Posted October 26, 2016 I went through HuskerMax's W/L records for all 127 (counting 2016) years of Husker football. Add 'em up and you get 887 wins. I'm betting Stassen is accurate, then. That means we're two games behind Texas, with a solid chance to pass them this year. Here are the wins I counted. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong. 1890 - 2 1891 - 2 1892 - 2 1893 - 3 1894 - 6 1895 - 6 1896 - 6 1897 - 5 1898 - 8 1899 - 1 1900 - 6 1901 - 6 1902 - 9 1903 - 10 1904 - 7 1905 - 8 1906 - 6 1907 - 8 1908 - 7 1909 - 3 1910 - 7 1911 - 5 1912 - 7 1913 - 8 1914 - 7 1915 - 8 1916 - 6 1917 - 5 1918 - 2 1919 - 3 1920 - 5 1921 - 7 1922 - 7 1923 - 4 1924 - 5 1925 - 4 1926 - 6 1927 - 6 1928 - 7 1929 - 4 1930 - 4 1931 - 8 1932 - 7 1933 - 8 1934 - 6 1935 - 6 1936 - 7 1937 - 6 1938 - 3 1939 - 7 1940 - 8 1941 - 4 1942 - 3 1943 - 2 1944 - 2 1945 - 4 1946 - 3 1947 - 2 1948 - 2 1949 - 4 1950 - 6 1951 - 2 1952 - 5 1953 - 3 1954 - 6 1955 - 5 1956 - 4 1957 - 1 1958 - 3 1959 - 4 1960 - 4 1961 - 3 1962 - 9 1963 - 10 1964 - 9 1965 - 10 1966 - 9 1967 - 6 1968 - 6 1969 - 9 1970 - 11 1971 - 13 1972 - 9 1973 - 9 1974 - 9 1975 - 10 1976 - 9 1977 - 9 1978 - 9 1979 - 10 1980 - 10 1981 - 9 1982 - 12 1983 - 12 1984 - 10 1985 - 9 1986 - 10 1987 - 10 1988 - 11 1989 - 10 1990 - 9 1991 - 9 1992 - 9 1993 - 11 1994 - 13 1995 - 12 1996 - 11 1997 - 13 1998 - 9 1999 - 12 2000 - 10 2001 - 11 2002 - 7 2003 - 10 2004 - 5 2005 - 8 2006 - 9 2007 - 5 2008 - 9 2009 - 10 2010 - 10 2011 - 9 2012 - 10 2013 - 9 2014 - 9 2015 - 6 2016 - 7 Total - 887 The Callahan years weren't too kind, but we really need to make up for the 40's. (And maybe the 50's too) Quote Link to comment
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