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Week 10 TRAM Reactions: Season Openers, Strength of Schedule, and Alabama

Patrick Barlow • Nov 07, 2022

Each week during the college football season, we'll come here to react to the new TRAM Top 25. TRAM, like most models and systems, gets better and more accurate as the season progresses.

TRAM Week 11 Top 25

Team TRAM Score

1. Season Openers matter

A glance at the latest poll reveals some interesting rankings. Oregon sits at #15, despite being #6 in both the Coaches and AP Polls and #8 in the CFP Poll (though they will undoubtedly be higher in this week's edition). Sitting above Oregon, among others, are 2-loss Utah and LSU and 3-loss Notre Dame. What do these 4 teams have in common? A loss in week 1. The difference? LSU lost to an upward-trending Florida State by 1. Utah lost to a competitive Florida team by 3. Notre Dame lost to Ohio State by 11. Oregon lost to Georgia by 46. It's hard to be considered a top-10 team when you have a 46-point loss on your resume, even if it's against the #1 team in the land.

2. Strength of Schedule

Some teams' placements this week can be baffling at first. How can a blind, objective computer still have Alabama at #5? Why is TCU still at #6? How are Notre Dame, Kansas State, and Texas (all 3-loss teams) wrapped around 1-loss Oregon? The answer is revealed when looking at each team's Opponent Rating.

The simplest explanation for Opponent Rating is that it's a Performance Adjusted Strength of Schedule or a more advanced Strength of Record. Opponent Rating essentially looks at an average game for each team and compares how opponents performed relative to that average. So if you play lots of really good teams, and keep each game close, you'll score high. The better your schedule, and the better you perform, the better your Opponent Rating will be.

The simple explanation, then, for some of the more baffling TRAM Scores is that some teams simply perform well against their schedule, regardless of who they are playing. Others don't.

3. When Alabama loses, they still win

Alabama currently sits at 7-2. They are 2 plays away from being 9-0, but also 2 plays away from being 5-4. They are currently in their worst season under Nick Saban, excluding his first. They currently sit at #10 in the AP Poll and #11 in the Coaches Poll. So why does TRAM love them so much?


There is no 1 answer to this question. Their losses have come against good teams. They only really have 1 bad win (Texas A&M). TRAM considers Alabama and Texas relatively equal, meaning that was still a good win for the Crimson Tide. They've dominated the other teams they've played thus far this season. In short, they have no bad losses, and their wins, with 1 exception, have been exceptional.

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