Weighted Wins

NCAA Division I Football Standings

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WW vs. Selection Committee

Comparing top 12 teams: WW vs. CFP

BCS Standings:
1998-2013

16-year WW summary

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Weighted Wins

The basic premise of "Weighted Wins" is one the average fan would readily accept. All wins are not equal. Defeating a highly successful team, one with a winning record, is more difficult than defeating an unsuccessful team, one with a losing record. Therefore, the system assigns a weight to each opponent. This weight is determined in a fair, unbiased, and systematic manner by considering a team's record and the records of its opponents. After the weights are assigned, teams accumulate weighted wins and weighted losses.

Unlike the polls and some of the computers, "Weighted Wins" starts all teams from the same position. Each team begins the season with 0.00 wins and a weight of 1.00. (Since wins in all major sports count 1 win, the weight of 1.00 was chosen for the starting point.) As the season develops, the weight of a team increases or decreases depending on whether the team wins or loses. A weight of 1.20 would indicate a relatively strong team and a weight of 0.85 would indicate a much weaker team. Weights usually range from a high of approximately 1.35 to a low of 0.65.

The value of a team's win is determined by its opponent's weight. Losses are also weighted and determined in a consistent manner.

During the first sixteen years of the Bowl Championship Series, in eleven of those years, the team with the most "Weighted Wins" actually won the BCS Championship game. In all sixteen years, the BCS Champion came from the top four teams in the Weighted Wins standings. Check out a 16-year summary of Weighted Wins standings.

In fact, when comparing WW with BCS formula components, the WW system does better than all eight of the components at having the national chamption rated number one before the title game. It also compares favorably when having both the #1 and #2 teams in the championship game.

You can take a look at how the Weighted Wins standings have compared to the NCAA Selection Committee's picks over the past 5 years.

Note: In 2006, the WW system ranked Florida (12-1) as the #1 team and Ohio State (12-0) as the #2 team. This was the first time that a team with one loss finished with more weighted wins than a no loss team from a BCS conference in over 25 years.