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DEEP and wide analysis by Bill Connelly on 2025 college football teams who may break through (turnovers and luck)

Eagle5

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For my money, Bill Connelly has NO equal in the nerdly quantitative analysis of college football. Below are two excerpts, and the LINK to his timely analysis of the LUCK and other factors that may help identify which teams may make a big breakthrough in winning this 2025 season.

Auburn prominently makes Connelly’s list. Hmmmm. I happen to lean Connelly's way on Auburn, for a host of reasons on this roster, and with the way AU's schedule unfolds starting in October. I see more talent, depth, and probability of an 8-win + season than I do a case for a 3rd straight "collapse".

E5


The FULL Bill Connelly article HERE (long but worth a read):

https://www.espn.com/college-footba...llege-football-team-luck-index-clemson-auburn

Excerpts:

Turnovers, roster upgrades and teams that could turnaround in 2025

Bill Connelly
May 2, 2025, 08:00 AM ET



Almost no word in the English language makes a college football fan more defensive than the L-word: luck.

We weren't lucky to have a great turnover margin -- our coaches are just really good at emphasizing ball security! We're tougher than everyone else -- that's why we recovered all those fumbles!

We weren't lucky to win all those close games -- we're clutch! Our coaches know how to press all the right buttons! Our quarterback is a cool customer!

We weren't lucky to have fewer injuries than everyone else -- our strength-and-conditioning coach is the best in America! And again: We're just tougher!

As loath as we may be to admit it, a large percentage of a given college football season -- with its small overall sample of games -- is determined by the bounce of a pointy ball, the bend of a ligament and the whims of fate. Certain teams will end up with an unsustainably good turnover margin that turns on them the next year. Certain teams (often the same ones) will enjoy a great run of close-game fortune based on some combination of great coaching, sturdy quarterback play, timely special teams contributions ... and massive amounts of unsustainable randomness. Certain teams will keep their starting lineups mostly intact for 12 or more games while another is watching its depth chart change dramatically on a week-to-week basis.

As we prepare for the 2025 college football season, it's worth stepping back and looking at who did, and didn't, get the bounces in 2024. Just because Lady Luck was (or wasn't) on your side one year, doesn't automatically mean your fortunes will flip the next, but that's often how these things go. Be it turnovers, close-game fortune or injuries, let's talk about the teams that were dealt the best and worst hands last fall.

It probably isn't a surprise to see that, of last year's 12 playoff teams, eight benefited from positive turnovers luck, and six were at plus-3.3 or higher. You've got to be lucky and good to win, right?

You aren't often lucky for two straight years, though. It might be noteworthy to point out that, of the teams in Mark Schlabach's Way-Too-Early 2025 rankings, five were in the top 20 in terms of turnovers luck: No. 5 Georgia, No. 7 Clemson, No. 9 BYU, No. 11 Iowa State and No. 17 Indiana (plus two others from his Teams Also Considered list: Army and Baylor).

It's also noteworthy to point out that three teams on Schlabach's list -- No. 6 Oregon, No. 8 LSU and No. 15 SMU -- ranked in the triple-digits in terms of turnovers luck. Oregon started the season 13-0 without the benefit of bounces. For that matter, Auburn, a team on the Also Considered list, ranked 125th in turnovers luck in a season that saw the Tigers go just 1-3 in one-score finishes. There might not have been a more what-could-have-been team in the country than Hugh Freeze's Tigers.
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Major turnaround candidates

It's fair to use this information as a reason for skepticism about teams like Indiana (turnovers luck and injuries luck), Clemson (turnovers luck), Iowa State (close-games luck), Penn State (injuries luck) or Sam Houston (all of the above, plus a coaching change), but let's end on an optimistic note instead. Here are five teams that could pretty easily enjoy a big turnaround if Lady Luck is a little kinder.

Auburn Tigers: Auburn enjoyed a better success rate than its opponents (44.7% to 38.5%) and made more big plays as well (8.9% of plays gained 20-plus yards versus 5.7% for opponents). That makes it awfully hard to lose! But the Tigers made exactly the mistake they couldn't make and managed to lose games with 94%, 76% and 61% postgame win expectancy. There's nothing saying this was all bad luck, but even with a modest turnaround in fortune, the Tigers will have a very high ceiling in 2025.

Florida Gators: The Gators improved from 41st to 20th in SP+ and from 5-7 to 8-5 overall despite starting three quarterbacks and 12 different DBs and ranking 132nd on the list above. That says pretty spectacular things about their overall upside, especially considering their improved experience levels on the O-line, in the secondary and the general optimism about sophomore quarterback DJ Lagway.

Florida Atlantic Owls: Only one team ranked 111th or worse in all three of the tables above -- turnovers luck (111th), second-order win difference (121st) and injury ratio (131st). You could use this information to make the case that the Owls shouldn't have fired head coach Tom Herman, or you could simply say that new head coach Zach Kittley is pretty well-positioned to get some bounces and hit the ground running.

Florida State Seminoles: There was evidently plenty of poor fortune to go around in the Sunshine State last season, and while Mike Norvell's Seminoles suffered an epic hangover on the field, they also didn't get a single bounce: They were 129th in turnovers luck, 99th in second-order win difference and 110th in injury ratio. Norvell has brought in new coordinators and plenty of new players, and the Noles are almost guaranteed to jump up from 2-10. With a little luck, that jump could be a pretty big one.

Utah Utes: Along with UCF, Utah was one of only two teams to start four different quarterbacks in 2024. The Utes were also among only four teams to start at least 11 different receivers or tight ends and among five teams to start at least nine defensive linemen. If you're looking for an easy explanation for how they fell from 65th to 96th in offensive SP+ and from 8-5 to 5-7 overall, that's pretty succinct and telling.
 
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