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Phil Steele rates the homefield advantage for all 120 Division 1 football teams
Posted on 7/30/11 at 2:47 am
Posted on 7/30/11 at 2:47 am
quote:
I have gotten many requests to do a blog to explain how I compute each teams home field edge in the magazine. I have 27 different factors in my computer’s grade of a team. I then compare the computer’s analysis to my own and make the final decision.
While I mention that there are 27 factors in my home field computer ratings, there are actually nine individual factors that I use each year and I then combine the grades for the last three years giving half of the grade to last year, 30% to the numbers from two years ago and 20% to the computer rankings from three years ago.
Today I will go over the nine different areas that I use to rate home field edge. The first category is the stadium capacity. The largest stadium in the country last year was Penn St which held 107,282 and my computer gave them the maximum score of 6 for that category. My home field edges go from 0 to 6 in the magazine so they have the same scale in the computer. The smallest capacity is Idaho’s Kibbie Dome which seated just 16,000 and they received a 0 in that category. The rest of the capacities are done with a simple equation of Capacity-16,000 divided by 15,250. The reason I divide by 15,250 is that Penn St at 107,282-16,000 = 91,282 and 91,282 divided by 6 (0-6 scale) = 15,214 and I rounded up to get the 15,250. You can figure out what your favorite team is graded in this category by using this simple equation.
The second category is actual attendance reported by the school in 2010. Once again Michigan was at the top with 111,825 and this time the team at the bottom was Ball St which averaged just 8,947 fans per game last year. I used the same method as above to turn this data into a 0 to 6 rating where Michigan received a 6, Ball St a 0 and as an example Florida St with an attendance of 71,270 earned a 4.15 grade.
The third category is % of capacity. Let’s face it, a crowd of 45,000 in a 45,000 seat stadium is louder than a crowd of 45,000 in a half-full 90,000 seat stadium. The winner in this category last year was Alabama at 111% of capacity as they had an avg attendance of 101,821 with a listed capacity of 92,138. Oregon had a 110% capacity with an avg attendance of 59,398 with a stadium capacity of 54,000. There were 10 schools that had a larger average attendance than their listed capacity last year. At the bottom of this category was UAB which brought in an average of 18,360 fans to their 72,000 seat stadium which is just 26%. Five teams had an average attendance of less than 40% capacity and 9 had an average attendance of less than 50% of capacity.
The next category is last years straight up win/loss record for each team at home. There were 15 teams last year that finished with an undefeated record at home while there were 2 teams last year that were actually winless at home. Those 2 teams were Eastern Michigan and North Texas.
The fifth category is the last 3 years straight up records at home. Oklahoma, Boise St and TCU are all undefeated at home in that span while Alabama, Troy and Utah all have just one loss. At the bottom of the scale is Western Kentucky and North Texas who have won just 1 home games in the last 3 years. Once again this is on a 0-6 point basis.
The next category is the last 5 years records at home. Boise St and Oklahoma come in #1 here at a perfect 32-0 and 31-0 game at home respectively. TCU is next up with just 2 losses. North Texas and Eastern Michigan are at the bottom over 5 years with NT at 5-22 and EMU 5-19.
Sometimes teams compile great home records because they play a bunch of cupcakes. Sometimes teams compile a weak record because they play a large amount of ranked teams. The easiest way to determine if a team played above or below expectations is to look at their records against the Las Vegas spread. If a team was favored to win by 30 that means the opponent was weak and a 3 point win is unimpressive vs that caliber of opponent. I weigh each of the different factors and the actual home win record is given twice the weight of the ATS record. I used the records for last year, the last 3 years and the last 5 years. The best record over the last 5 years is CMU at 16-6 with Oklahoma #2 at 21-8 and TCU #3 at 20-8. At the bottom are Army at 6-18, and Fresno 7-20.
I then factor in the 9 categories from the 2009 and 2008 seasons which gives me 27 categories for the computer to factor in and I have them appropriately weighted. I then look at the computer’s grade which had Oklahoma #1 with a 5.65 home edge. Ohio St #2 at 5.59 and Oregon #3 at 5.23. At the bottom the computer has Eastern Michigan #120 at 1.19, North Texas #119 at 1.36 and WKU #118 at 1.54.
The final category is my own personal grade. I have 12 TV’s in front of me and watch 12 games all day long on Saturday and watch every nighttime game on ESPN. I can hear the crowd noise at each stadium and I weigh in how many times I thought it was a factor in a game. I look at how good the team has been the last 5 years and what percentage of games they win at home and on the road in my personal evaluation.
After that evaluation, I gave three teams a 6-point home edge in this year’s magazine in Oklahoma, Boise St and Oregon. Virginia Tech and Ohio St hav a 5.75 grade while Florida, Penn St, TCU, Wisconsin and Alabama all earned 5.25 grades from me. At the bottom of the scale I gave a 1.5 point home edge to Eastern Michigan with WKU, New Mexico St and Tulane all earning 2s.
Here are all my 2011 Homefield edges for all 120 Teams.
LINK
Posted on 7/30/11 at 2:49 am to CapstoneGrad06
8 of the top 26 are SEC teams
capstone

capstone

Posted on 7/30/11 at 2:49 am to Bench McElroy
How dare he call ULL Louisiana
Posted on 7/30/11 at 5:43 am to Sev09
OU must play a bunch of cupcakes.
Posted on 7/30/11 at 6:04 am to northshorebamaman
That was terrific spelling wasn't it.
Posted on 7/30/11 at 8:23 am to Bench McElroy
Phil Steele is just getting worse and worse.
Posted on 7/30/11 at 8:24 am to loweralabamatrojan
quote:
OU must play a bunch of cupcakes
Yes. And don't forget they play Texas on a neutral field every year in Dallas.
Posted on 7/30/11 at 8:35 am to spslayto
OSU and A&M haven't been very good the last 10 years. Texas is on a neutral site. But 0U keeps at least one good OOC game on the schedule. They played FSU at home last year but won by like 40. This year they go to Tallahassee and Stillwater but have A&M at home.
Hopefully we can end their home winning streak but it's not going to be easy. They're about a 7 point favorite
Hopefully we can end their home winning streak but it's not going to be easy. They're about a 7 point favorite
Posted on 7/30/11 at 9:32 am to Bench McElroy
All that work to prove he's stupid.
Posted on 7/30/11 at 11:08 am to Bench McElroy
I take Saturday Night in Death Valley!
Here is a sample...
Tiger Stadium, formally known as Death Valley, is one of the toughest venues to play a road game period, especially at night. LSU has won 77% of their night games since 1960, and I can imagine some of their success comes from their 90,000+ yelling purple and gold clad fans, including those drunk Swamp People…
Once the school noticed an uptick in attendance in night games, the tradition was here to stay. But while night games started off as a practical arrangement for the school, it eventually became a huge advantage to the team. As of 2006, LSU was 187-62-4 (a .747 winning percentage) during home night games. During day games the team was just 16-21-3 (.438). Yeah, we’d say that’s a distinct advantage.
Bear Bryant owned the Tigers during his tenure, going an impressive 14-2 at Tiger Stadium during his career. But even he hated going to Baton Rouge. “Baton Rouge happens to be the worst place in the world for a visiting team,” Bryant said. “It’s like being inside a drum.” ESPN once recorded the decibel level in the stadium and it measured to 130 decibels. Eardrums can rupture at 150 and the human pain threshold is between 120-130 decibels. So LSU night games aren’t only dangerous to a team’s record, but also their health!
Here is a sample...
Tiger Stadium, formally known as Death Valley, is one of the toughest venues to play a road game period, especially at night. LSU has won 77% of their night games since 1960, and I can imagine some of their success comes from their 90,000+ yelling purple and gold clad fans, including those drunk Swamp People…

Once the school noticed an uptick in attendance in night games, the tradition was here to stay. But while night games started off as a practical arrangement for the school, it eventually became a huge advantage to the team. As of 2006, LSU was 187-62-4 (a .747 winning percentage) during home night games. During day games the team was just 16-21-3 (.438). Yeah, we’d say that’s a distinct advantage.
Bear Bryant owned the Tigers during his tenure, going an impressive 14-2 at Tiger Stadium during his career. But even he hated going to Baton Rouge. “Baton Rouge happens to be the worst place in the world for a visiting team,” Bryant said. “It’s like being inside a drum.” ESPN once recorded the decibel level in the stadium and it measured to 130 decibels. Eardrums can rupture at 150 and the human pain threshold is between 120-130 decibels. So LSU night games aren’t only dangerous to a team’s record, but also their health!

Posted on 7/30/11 at 11:20 am to Jaketigger
Worst set of criteria to determine a home field advantage I have ever seen. The idea of home field advantage has 0 to do with spread or cupcakes... It is 100% atmosphere. Your stadium and fans either have it or they don't.
Posted on 7/30/11 at 11:37 am to Bench McElroy
This guy has to be one of the most over-rated "experts" out there. 

Posted on 7/30/11 at 11:55 am to I-59 Tiger
I think LSU has the best homefield advantage. Am I an expert now?
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