- May 5th, 2020, 4:21 pm
#599926
So if we isolate football in this question I comes down to philosophy on SOS.
I think most of us, minus probably @tyndal23 , agree that having a strength of schedule around 65-75 is the sweet spot for a sustainable medium term goal for LU.
So far, Indy has missed that mark. Our SOS for 2019 finished at 125 and 2020 is marginally better at 119. 2018 was actually our best at 118.
I think most here would agree that being a top 4 CUSA team would be the reasonable goal.
Those teams are UNT, Southern Miss, FAU, and FIU.
Their 2019 and 2020 strength of schedules are below.
UNT: 121 and 100
Southern Miss: 91 and 103
FAU: 106 and 115
FIU: 114 and 111.
This isn't our goal.
Our goal is to be at the top of G5 scheduling. I have said this before and I will say it again and Tyndall will hunt me down for it one day. Going halfway on P5 scheduling is exactly what we need to do. BYU is 65 or 66 in SoS every single year because of it.
BYU schedules enough P5s to "game" every metric out there into thinking it has a tougher schedule than it does. This allows BYU to finish the season 7-6 and be in the top 60 in ranking. And I will tell you all this minute, I don't care if we lose half our home games on their schedule. I'm going to be two hours early to Michigan State, Utah State, Houston, and Missouri.
The powers that be measure success on the metrics and we are NOT EXPLOITING THAT FACT.
CUSA is not the answer and neither is our current scheduling. I will make it super analytical for everyone. The aggregate FPI of our schedule should not exceed 850.
4 P5+BYU/ND games(all of these will be 65 and below.) We will place hold 260 FPI points here.
This leaves the remaining 8 games to average an FPI of 74. Any game scheduled past that average needs another game scheduled to compensate. I'm an advocate for dropping FCS to game metrics.
If this method is followed, we will have a Strength of Schedule approximately at 71 that will be lower based on any P5 games being better ranked than the bottom feeders of P5.
For example, if we follow 8 games averaging 74FPI(592FPI Points) and our 4 P5 games are against say, VT(18) UNC(29) Miz(55) and Arkansas(59) those add to 161 FPI Points. Added to 592 is 753. And divided over 12 games gives us an average opponent ranking of 62.75.
That mathematically means our average opponent was P5 even though only a third of the opponents actually were.
Football players use every inch of turf to their advantage. Just look at the touching touchdowns. We should do the same in scheduling. It is the easiest way to get a great record with the highest SoS. Both can be achieved which means GREAT BOWL GAMES.