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Anderson & Hester

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mathematical system for ranking collegiate American football teams

Anderson & Hester is a mathematical system for rankingcollegiate American football teams based on performance. The system was created in 1992 by Jeff Anderson and Chris Hester, roommates at theUniversity of Washington.[1] Anderson & Hester is one of over 40 systems listed by the NCAA as major selectors ofcollege football national champions.[2]: 108–110  The rankings are published weekly inThe Seattle Times.[2]: 110 

National champions

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Anderson & Hester selections from the 1997 season to present.[3]

SeasonChampion[3]RecordCoach
1997Nebraska13–0Tom Osborne
1998Tennessee13–0Phillip Fulmer
1999[4]Florida State12–0Bobby Bowden
2000[5]Oklahoma13–0Bob Stoops
2001[6]Miami (FL)12–0Larry Coker
2002Ohio State14–0Jim Tressel
2003LSU13–1Nick Saban
2004USC11–0Pete Carroll
2005Texas13–0Mack Brown
2006Florida13–1Urban Meyer
2007Missouri12–2Gary Pinkel
2008Utah13–0Kyle Whittingham
2009Alabama14–0Nick Saban (2)
2010Auburn14–0Gene Chizik
2011LSU (2)13–1Les Miles
2012Alabama (2)13–1Nick Saban (3)
2013Florida State (2)14–0Jimbo Fisher
2014Ohio State (2)14–1Urban Meyer (2)
2015Alabama (3)14–1Nick Saban (4)
2016Clemson14–1Dabo Swinney
2017Alabama (4)13–1Nick Saban (5)
2018Clemson (2)15–0Dabo Swinney (2)
2019LSU (3)15–0Ed Orgeron
2020Alabama (5)13–0Nick Saban (6)
2021Georgia14–1Kirby Smart
2022Georgia (2)15-0Kirby Smart (2)
2023Michigan15–0Jim Harbaugh
2024[7]Oregon13–1Dan Lanning

References

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  1. ^Mark Schlabach (August 21, 2014)."What are the BCS computer guys doing now?". ESPN.
  2. ^ab2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records(PDF). Indianapolis: National Collegiate Athletic Association. August 2018. RetrievedNovember 14, 2018.
  3. ^ab2020 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records(PDF). The National Collegiate Athletic Association. 2020. p. 119. RetrievedMay 24, 2020.All "major selectors" not otherwise listed also selected the BCS champion as its highest ranked team in those seasons
  4. ^Anderson, Jeff; Hester, Chris (January 5, 2000)."Anderson & Hester/Seattle Times computer rankings — Final 1999 rankings (through bowl games)".The Seattle Times. Archived fromthe original on January 6, 2000. RetrievedMay 7, 2024.No. 1 Florida State 12–0 .826 | No. 2 Nebraska 12–1 .794
  5. ^Anderson, Jeff; Hester, Chris (January 3, 2001)."Anderson & Hester/Seattle Times computer rankings — Final through bowl games (2000)".The Seattle Times. Archived fromthe original on June 4, 2001. RetrievedMay 7, 2024.No. 1 Oklahoma 13–0 .842 | No. 2 Miami, Fla. 11–1 .815 | No. 3 Washington 11–1 .812
  6. ^Anderson, Jeff; Hester, Chris (January 3, 2002)."Anderson & Hester/Seattle Times computer rankings — Final rankings for 2001 season".The Seattle Times. Archived fromthe original on January 26, 2002. RetrievedMay 7, 2024.No. 1 Miami, Fla. 12–0 .837 | No. 2 Oregon 11–1 .797
  7. ^Anderson, Jeff; Hester, Chris."Three Big Ten Teams Finish in the Top-4".AndersonSports.com. Archived from the original on January 29, 2025. RetrievedJanuary 29, 2025.While national champion (14-2) Ohio State had a much stronger finish, Big Ten champion (13-1) Oregon had the better overall, season-long results

External links

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