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SEC Football Programs ranked by total number of wins
Posted on 3/31/16 at 8:46 am
Posted on 3/31/16 at 8:46 am
Here is a look at the number of wins throughout the league.
1. Alabama: 864
2. Tennessee: 820
3. Georgia: 787
4. LSU: 770
5. Auburn: 748
6. Texas A&M: 717
7. Arkansas: 702
8. Florida: 701
9. Missouri: 660
10. Ole Miss: 655
11. Kentucky: 591
12. Vanderbilt: 589
13. South Carolina: 587
14. Mississippi State: 540
Pretty impressive that at least 8 teams in the league have at least 700 wins. Comparing, the Big Ten only has 4 teams with 700 or more wins. The Big 12 has 3 with 700 or more, the Pac 12 has 2, and the ACC has 5.
Again, the SEC leading the way
1. Alabama: 864
2. Tennessee: 820
3. Georgia: 787
4. LSU: 770
5. Auburn: 748
6. Texas A&M: 717
7. Arkansas: 702
8. Florida: 701
9. Missouri: 660
10. Ole Miss: 655
11. Kentucky: 591
12. Vanderbilt: 589
13. South Carolina: 587
14. Mississippi State: 540
Pretty impressive that at least 8 teams in the league have at least 700 wins. Comparing, the Big Ten only has 4 teams with 700 or more wins. The Big 12 has 3 with 700 or more, the Pac 12 has 2, and the ACC has 5.
Again, the SEC leading the way
Posted on 3/31/16 at 8:50 am to Hawgeye
2 of those 8 are expansion teams but without them the sec still has 2 more than the big 10
Does the big 10's four include Nebraska?
Does the big 10's four include Nebraska?
Posted on 3/31/16 at 8:53 am to Hawgeye
Good list.
Ole Miss has a chance within the next 2 years to move up to 9th.
Arkansas/Florida could change after this season. Florida has the edge playing in the East.
South Carolina should swap with Vandy this year. That 11-13 battle is tight.
Bama will never not be #1 at this point.
MSU trending much better than UK, USC and Vandy. It still will take around half a century to get out of last place.
Ole Miss has a chance within the next 2 years to move up to 9th.
Arkansas/Florida could change after this season. Florida has the edge playing in the East.
South Carolina should swap with Vandy this year. That 11-13 battle is tight.
Bama will never not be #1 at this point.
MSU trending much better than UK, USC and Vandy. It still will take around half a century to get out of last place.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 8:56 am to Old Sarge
quote:
2 of those 8 are expansion teams but without them the sec still has 2 more than the big 10
Does the big 10's four include Nebraska?
Yea. Nebraska helps the Big Ten out in this one, and in the bowl thread I just posted. Also helping the ACC is recent expansion teams as well.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 8:57 am to Hawgeye
770 wins for LSU since the year 2000. Pretty impressive.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 8:59 am to Hawgeye
quote:
12. Vanderbilt: 589
13. South Carolina: 587
14. Mississippi State: 540
LMMFFAO at Swiss State and SCAR
Posted on 3/31/16 at 9:02 am to Serraneaux
quote:
LMMFFAO at Swiss State and SCAR
Yeah, because we really beat our chests about being a traditional powerhouse.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 9:02 am to Hawgeye
quote:
1. Alabama: 864
36 wins to 900. 3 years or 4 years? My guess is 3.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 9:06 am to hg
quote:
770 wins for LSU since the year 2000. Pretty impressive.
610 wins in the first 107 years of your program (5.7/year).
160 wins since 2000 (average of 10/year).
21% of all wins from the history of your program come from that 16 year stretch (13% of your history).
To argue that LSU was some incredible program prior to 2000 is to live in LA and wear P&G glasses. Decent program? I guess, if you consider less than 6 wins per year on average to be "decent". But LSU since 2000 is a completely different animal than at any other point in your history.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 9:15 am to bamasgot13
quote:17% of all Alabama wins in their history have come in the last 16 years. They averaged 6.64 wins the first 108 years. Manipulating stats can be fun
21% of all wins from the history of your program come from that 16 year stretch (13% of your history).
This post was edited on 3/31/16 at 9:17 am
Posted on 3/31/16 at 9:17 am to bamasgot13
quote:
610 wins in the first 107 years of your program (5.7/year).
Bama averaged 6.6 per year before 2000.
quote:
21% of all wins from the history of your program come from that 16 year stretch (13% of your history).
17% of all Bama wins have come over the last 16 years.
quote:
To argue that LSU was some incredible program prior to 2000 is to live in LA and wear P&G glasses. Decent program? I guess, if you consider less than 6 wins per year on average to be "decent". But LSU since 2000 is a completely different animal than at any other point in your history.
So, all of this applies to Bama as well, right?
Go be stupid somewhere else please.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 9:18 am to hg
quote:
770 wins for LSU since the year 2000. Pretty impressive.
I will never accuse you of not being self aware
Posted on 3/31/16 at 9:21 am to Hawgeye
Are these official numbers or what actually happened on the field?
And that's counting Penn State and Nebraska who didn't join until 93 and 2011.
quote:
the Big Ten only has 4 teams with 700 or more wins.
And that's counting Penn State and Nebraska who didn't join until 93 and 2011.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 9:27 am to Korin
quote:
Are these official numbers or what actually happened on the field?
Official numbers
quote:
And that's counting Penn State and Nebraska who didn't join until 93 and 2011.
Yea. The Big Ten teams are....
Michigan: 925
Nebraska: 880
Ohio State: 875
Penn State: 856
The closest team to 700 wins below those four is Michigan State, at 681 wins. Followed by Minnesota(674), Wisconsin(673), and Rutgers(645).
Posted on 3/31/16 at 9:30 am to Hawgeye
More then half the conference has over 700 wins and two schools are in the 800 club, with two more likely to join them before too long.
Its the depth of the SEC that is impressive, especially considering that a powerhouse like Alabama is lurking in the conference.
Its also a sign of the commitment Southern schools have put into football, our closest rival after all is the mostly Southern ACC, not perennial blue blood conferences like the Big 10 and PAC 12.
Its the depth of the SEC that is impressive, especially considering that a powerhouse like Alabama is lurking in the conference.
Its also a sign of the commitment Southern schools have put into football, our closest rival after all is the mostly Southern ACC, not perennial blue blood conferences like the Big 10 and PAC 12.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 10:02 am to lsufball19
quote:
17% of all Alabama wins in their history have come in the last 16 years.
So a smaller percentage of a bigger number? Ok. What percentage of Alabama's National and SEC championships have been won since 2000? What percentage of LSU?
Posted on 3/31/16 at 10:04 am to bamasgot13
quote:
So a smaller percentage of a bigger number? Ok. What percentage of Alabama's National and SEC championships have been won since 2000? What percentage of LSU?
Don't try to spin it now. You'll just look dumber than you already do.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 10:08 am to RB10
quote:
Don't try to spin it now. You'll just look dumber than you already do.
No he doesn't.
You look dumb for avoiding his question.
Posted on 3/31/16 at 10:08 am to bamasgot13
quote:
So a smaller percentage of a bigger number?
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