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BE has the toughest SOS in 2005
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Post: #1
 
<a href='http://www.sportsline.com/collegefootball/story/8521762' target='_blank'>From CBS Sportsline</a>

BE will play more OOC BCS teams per team than any other conference in the country in 2005. If BE teams perform, I hope the bashing stops. BE teams have scheduled pretty tough for 2005.

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Heels coach says brutal schedule builds toughness

Dennis Dodd May 31, 2005
By Dennis Dodd
CBS SportsLine.com Senior Writer
Tell Dennis your opinion!

This is the last of a weeklong SportsLine.com series on college football scheduling. Today: Strength of schedule.

North Carolina's schedule is a joke. Not in the I-AA, cream-puff, pushover sense. More like: What the Heel is John Bunting thinking?

"I've got to believe we have the toughest schedule," said Bunting, heading into his fifth season as coach of that other sport in Chapel Hill. "Our kids know that."

John Bunting's Tar Heels were 6-6 in 2004. (Getty Images)
John Bunting's Tar Heels were 6-6 in 2004. (Getty Images)
Hard to tell whether that is a boast or a cry for help. Some of it has been inherited, some of it is manufactured, but North Carolina's schedule has a lot in common with Ashlee Simpson's treatment of the musical scale.

Both are brutal.

If anything, the degree of difficulty has increased for 2005.

North Carolina and Georgia Tech tied for No. 1 in schedule strength, according to the formula devised by CBS SportsLine.com. That's not exactly a surprise considering Carolina had the second-toughest schedule in 2004, according to the NCAA and was No. 1 in the respected Sagarin Ratings.

The catch is that schedule strength doesn't necessarily translate into success. In fact, it makes it damn hard for programs like Carolina. Since 2001, the Heels are 6-9 in non-conference games, 2-6 against teams from BCS leagues.

A team like Kansas State has played a total of eight BCS-league non-conference games in the past 11 years. North Carolina did it in the past four, having played teams from seven different leagues during that span as the joke took shape.

"Some of that scheduling was there (when I arrived) and the ACC wasn't the way it is today," Bunting said. "The ACC the way it is now, you don't want to be scheduling powerhouses."
Rating by Conferences
Rnk Conference Rating
1 Big East 1.2955
2 SEC 1.1887
3 Big 12 1.1750
4 ACC 1.1544
5 Pac-10 1.1294
6 Indep. 1.0883
7 Big Ten 1.0716
8 WAC 0.9094
9 M. West 0.8908
10 MAC 0.7853
11 C-USA 0.7362
12 Sun Belt 0.6661

Bunting, 54, arrived at his alma mater at a weird time. ACC expansion had yet to become an issue in 2001. North Carolina was initially against it.

Meanwhile, the schedule had been upgraded from the Mack Brown-Carl Torbush days. With expansion, Miami is an annual opponent in the ACC Coastal Division and the non-conference hits just keep on coming. This year's out-of-league Burma Road includes Wisconsin, Utah and Louisville, a combined 32-4 in 2004.

"I was one that wanted it, because I think it will help us in recruiting," Bunting said of expansion. "I think we're the best university in the ACC, in terms of everything it has to offer."

Bunting asked his first team if they wanted to travel to Oklahoma to open the season in '01. What do kids know? Of course, the seniors voted enthusiastically to play the Sooners in their first game since winning the 2000 national championship.

"We almost got blown out in the first five, six minutes," he said. "A turnover returned for a touchdown, a kickoff returned for a touchdown. It was 28-0 at the end of the first quarter."

The Heels were respectable, losing by 14, but in the second week of September 2001, Bunting's first team was 0-3 after roadies to Oklahoma, Maryland and Texas. Then 9/11 hit, pushing a layup against SMU to the end of the season. But a funny thing happened during the two-week layoff -- Carolina got better. It beat Florida State at home, starting a five-game winning streak, the highlight of an 8-5 season.

In 2002, Carolina played Syracuse (win) and Texas (loss) back-to-back. In 2004, Louisville and Utah popped up on the schedule. The two top 10 teams whipped the Heels by a combined 80-16.

"Who knew that Louisville was going to be like they are (11-1)?" Bunting said. "Who knew that Utah was going to have Alex Smith and Urban Meyer was going to construct that type of offense that destroyed everybody?"

Before this year's first spring practice, Bunting had a short film made for his team embracing the schedule issue. It starred fifth-year quarterback Matt Baker.

"He's going through the schedule, eyeballing it in the lockerroom," Bunting said. "The first time he shakes his head. The second time he goes, 'Oh wow' and the third time he goes, 'Holy S---, look at this schedule?'"

Then, mimicking a current office supplier commercial, Baker presses the "easy" button.

If it were only that simple.

You just wonder why Bunting continues to endure (or welcome?) the punishment. With a 19-30 record in his four seasons, he has played roulette with his career. Bunting has been close to termination (if you believe the pundits). Now the former Tar Heels all-ACC linebacker says he's close to glory.

"Our kids are toughened to the point where they don't get rattled," Bunting said. "Playing the types of opponents we play, they're not scared. I just think they're battle-hardened."

The evidence suggests that Carolina is making a slow, deliberate turnaround.

After a 5-19 patch in 2002 and 2003, Carolina rebounded in 2004 with a 6-6 bowl season that included a life-changing upset of the Hurricanes. Ninety minutes after the game, Bunting was surprised to find a fellow Class of '72 Tar Heel waiting to congratulate him -- Roy Williams.

If Carolina can beat the Canes with a third-string tailback (the departed Chad Scott) and a porous defense, think what it can do this year. Bunting has arguably his best team with the return of 18 seniors and 10 defensive starters. All that group has to do is get past four 2004 bowl teams in the first five weeks.

North Carolina (eight) and Georgia Tech (six) are at the top primarily because they face a combined 14 bowl teams. The programs are among a handful of the 119 I-A teams playing three teams with at least 10 wins from 2004.

The symmetry is beautiful. North Carolina opens the season at Georgia Tech on Sept. 10. The winner and loser know the schedule will only get harder.

Notes on the formula

Each conference team started with a base number. That number was reached by determining the overall 2004 winning percentage of each conference (based on 2005 membership). In the ACC that number was .571. To that number was added the percentage of 2004 bowl teams multiplied by .75. Seventy-five percent of the ACC's seven bowl teams (including Boston College) is .4374.

Added together the ACC's base number is 1.0088.

Teams were then given credit for playing 2004 bowl teams in the non-conference (.0178 per team) and for each game overall against a 10-win team (.109). The thinking being that even though it is a new year, bowl teams, especially really good bowl teams, will have some carryover.

Both Carolina and Georgia Tech were from the same conference. Each face three bowl teams in the non-conference and three 10-win teams from 2004. That's why their total is identical -- 1.3893.

The Big East has the toughest schedule strength overall largely because six of its eight teams went to bowls last season. The league got a huge boost in schedule strength by inheriting Louisville and Cincinnati, two 2004 bowl teams from Conference USA.

Seven of the top 12 teams in CBS SportsLine.com's strength of schedule rating are from that reconfigured Big East. That will be a big surprise to SEC (No. 2 in schedule strength) and Big 12 (No. 3) loyalists who annually argue about the strongest conference.

What about defending champion USC? It is in the middle at No. 56 overall. Orange Bowl opponent Oklahoma is tied for the 36th-toughest schedule. Not that that necessarily indicates success. Last year USC ended the season No. 18 in NCAA schedule strength. Oklahoma was No. 11.

In case you're wondering about the Big Three talent-producing states: Baylor (Texas), South Florida (Florida) and Stanford (California) have the toughest schedules in those states.
2005 Strength of Schedule
Rnk School Conf. Rating
1 North Carolina ACC 1.3893
1 Georgia Tech ACC 1.3893
3 West Virginia Big East 1.385
3 Rutgers Big East 1.385
5 Notre Dame Independent 1.380
6 Kentucky SEC 1.369
7 Syracuse Big East 1.320
8 South Florida Big East 1.293
9 Georgia SEC 1.287
10 Connecticut Big East 1.276
10 Pittsburgh Big East 1.276
12 Cincinnati Big East 1.258
13 Arizona Pac-10 1.2718
13 Stanford Pac-10 1.2718
15 South Carolina SEC 1.269
16 UCLA Pac-10 1.262
17 Arkansas SEC 1.260
18 Duke ACC 1.235
19 Baylor Big 12 1.229
20 Maryland ACC 1.226
21 Kansas Big 12 1.2208
21 Oklahoma State Big 12 1.2208
21 Texas A&M Big 12 1.2208
24 Ohio State Big Ten 1.213
25 Texas Tech Big 12 1.211
26 Illinois Big Ten 1.189
27 Florida SEC 1.178
28 Louisville Big East 1.030
29 LSU SEC 1.1697
30 Mississippi SEC 1.1697
31 Alabama SEC 1.1608
32 Kansas State Big 12 1.1565
33 Missouri Big 12 1.1565
34 Washington Pac-10 1.153
35 Oregon Pac-10 1.144
36 Colorado Big 12 1.1386
36 Iowa State Big 12 1.1386
36 Oklahoma Big 12 1.1386
36 Texas Big 12 1.1386
40 Washington State Pac-10 1.136
41 Virginia ACC 1.1356
42 Miami (Fla) ACC 1.1356
43 Mississippi State SEC 1.134
43 Vanderbilt SEC 1.134
45 Nebraska Big 12 1.129
46 NC State ACC 1.1178
46 Boston College ACC 1.1178
48 Temple Independent 1.101
49 Tennessee SEC 1.087
50 Penn State Big Ten 1.0861
50 Michigan Big Ten 1.0861
50 Northwestern Big Ten 1.0861
50 Purdue Big Ten 1.0861
54 Indiana Big Ten 1.0683
54 Wisconsin Big Ten 1.0683
56 Arizona State Pac-10 1.0449
56 Southern Cal Pac-10 1.0449
58 Florida State ACC 1.0445
59 Auburn SEC 1.042
60 Clemson ACC 1.0266
60 Virginia Tech ACC 1.0266
62 California Pac-10 1.018
63 Hawaii WAC 1.011
64 Wake Forest ACC 1.008
65 Army Independent 1.004
66 Air Force Mountain West .9857
66 TCU Conf. USA .9857
68 Fresno State WAC .9851
68 Utah State WAC .9851
70 Ball State MAC .9778
71 Michigan State Big Ten .9771
72 Iowa Big Ten .968
73 Minnesota Big Ten .959
74 Oregon State Pac-10 .944
75 Rice Conf. USA .927
76 San Diego State Mountain West .912
77 New Mexico State WAC .902
78 Colorado State Mountain West .894
79 Boise State WAC .893
80 BYU Mountain West .8767
80 Wyoming Mountain West .8767
82 Louisiana Tech WAC .867
83 Navy Independent .866
84 New Mexico Mountain West .8589
84 UNLV Mountain West .8589
86 Bowling Green MAC .8511
86 Ohio MAC .8511
88 Idaho WAC .8494
88 Nevada WAC .8494
90 San Jose State WAC .840
91 Kent State MAC .8332
91 Miami (Ohio) MAC .8332
93 Tulsa Conf. USA .818
94 Marshall Conf. USA .7734
94 Memphis Conf. USA .7734
94 Tulane Conf. USA .7734
94 UAB Conf. USA .7734
98 Utah Mountain West .767
99 Louisiana-Lafayette Sun Belt .7536
100 Louisiana-Monroe Sun Belt .7535
101 Buffalo MAC .7421
102 Eastern Michigan MAC .7240
103 Western Michigan MAC .733
104 Akron MAC .7242
105 Northern Illinois MAC .7152
105 Toledo MAC .7152
107 Central Michigan MAC .706
108 East Carolina Conf. USA .6734
109 SMU Conf. USA .6734
109 UCF Conf. USA .6734
111 Southern Miss Conf. USA .6644
111 UTEP Conf. USA .6644
113 Florida Atlantic Sun Belt .6535
113 Middle Tennessee Sun Belt .6535
115 Houston Conf. USA .646
116 North Texas Sun Belt .6356
116 Troy Sun Belt .6356
118 Arkansas State Sun Belt .626
119 Florida International Sun Belt .61
06-01-2005 10:19 AM
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Post: #2
 
Although it is impossible to tell how tough some teams will be this season, it is nice to know what we have at stake. Playing OOC games against UCF, FAMU, Miami, and PSU, we should go 2-2, 1-3 at worst (shoot me please if we lose to FAMU), and 4-0 at best. So, in reality, if Miami stinks this year, would that change our strength of schedule?
06-02-2005 07:24 PM
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USFBullSpit Wrote:Although it is impossible to tell how tough some teams will be this season, it is nice to know what we have at stake. Playing OOC games against UCF, FAMU, Miami, and PSU, we should go 2-2, 1-3 at worst (shoot me please if we lose to FAMU), and 4-0 at best. So, in reality, if Miami stinks this year, would that change our strength of schedule?
Honestly the only game I see you guys losing is to Miami. A nice win over the State Penn folks would be good for you, for the conference, and for their decline.
06-02-2005 07:33 PM
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Post: #4
 
Maybe I just got dizzy from scrolling, but is Rice at #75 CUSA's highest ranked out of 12 teams?
(looks like TCU at #66 is mistakenly still listed as in CUSA).
06-02-2005 07:45 PM
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Post: #5
 
USFBullSpit Wrote:Although it is impossible to tell how tough some teams will be this season, it is nice to know what we have at stake. Playing OOC games against UCF, FAMU, Miami, and PSU, we should go 2-2, 1-3 at worst (shoot me please if we lose to FAMU), and 4-0 at best. So, in reality, if Miami stinks this year, would that change our strength of schedule?
You might watch out there, Howard "The Pipe" Schnellenburger is coaching FAMU and he is pretty good, they might nip you on a good night!
06-02-2005 08:04 PM
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