Independent Country

James Leroy Wilson's one-man magazine.

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

World Series MVP Chase After Game 3 and the NFL MVP Chase Update


IN THIS ISSUE


  • World Series MVP Chase

  • NFL MVP Chase


World Series MVP after Game 3


With the Dodgers up 3-0 in the World Series, Freddie Freeman looks like a safe bet to win the Willie Mays World Series Most Valuable Player Award.


  1. Freddie Freeman, Dodgers, 15 MVP Points

  2. Walker Buehler, Dodgers, 15

  3. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (Pitcher), Dodgers, 15

  4. Tommy Edman, Dodgers, 11


NFL MVP after Week 8



James Leroy Wilson writes The MVP Chase (subscribe). Thank you for your subscriptions and support! You may contact James for writing, editing, research, and other work: jamesleroywilson-at-gmail.com. 

Monday, October 28, 2024

World Series MVP Chase and College Football Playoff Update

Photo credit: Tage Olsin


IN THIS ISSUE:


  • World Series MVP

  • College Football Playoff Update, 10/28/2024


World Series


The MVP Chase philosophy is to focus on players on winning teams. If the Dodgers and Yankees were tied at one game apiece, there would likely be Yankees contending for the World Series MVP. And who knows, a Yankee may still win it.


But for now, the Dodgers are up 2-0 so all the leaders are from that team. The points are tabulated through a system in which a good outing by a starting pitcher counts as much as three or four good games by a hitter. Two (or three) strong outings by a pitcher can win him the World Series MVP, which hasn't been done since 2019.


  1. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (Pitcher), Dodgers 15 MVP points

  2. Freddie Freeman, Dodgers, 11

  3. Tommy Edman, Dodgers, 10

  4. Jack Flaherty (Pitcher), Dodgers 8


College Football (FBS) Playoff Chase


The FBS Playoff Chase doesn't necessarily rank teams by who I think are best but by the strength of their resumes to justify an invitation to the 12-team College Football Playoff. It's mostly based on the sum of the victories by the opponents the team has beaten minus the sum of the losses of the opponents the team was beaten by, with some consideration of margins of victory (and defeats).


Teams tied in Chase points (to the left) are listed by record and then alphabetically. 


40 Oregon 8-0 Big Ten

37 BYU 8-0 Big 12

37 Indiana 8-0 Big Ten

37 Notre Dame 7-1 Independent

37 Texas 7-1 SEC

35 Miami FL 8-0 ACC

35 Ohio St 6-1 Big Ten

35 Alabama 6-2 SEC

34 Boise 6-1 Mountain West

33 Iowa State 7-0 Big 12

32 Penn St 7-0 Big Ten

31 Texas A&M 7-1 SEC

30 SMU 7-1 ACC

29 Kansas State 7-1 Big 12

29 Pitt 7-0 ACC

28 Army 7-0 AAC

26 Georgia 6-1 SEC

25 Clemson 6-1 ACC

25 Washington St 7-1 Pac

23 LSU 6-2 SEC

23 Ole Miss 6-2 SEC

22 Navy 6-1 AAC

22 Tennessee 6-1 SEC

21 Memphis 7-1 AAC

21 Colorado 6-2 Big 12

21 James Madison 6-2 Sun Belt


James Leroy Wilson writes The MVP Chase (subscribe). Thank you for your subscriptions and support! You may contact James for writing, editing, research, and other work: jamesleroywilson-at-gmail.com.

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

NFL MVP CHASE UPDATE 10/22/2024

 


The Ravens have five wins. Derrick Henry played a really good game in one of the wins and was spectacular in the other four.


I don't know how he did in the Ravens' losses. It doesn't matter. I don't even know for sure if he's leading the league in rushing. I haven't looked it up because the MVP Chase isn't about the cumulative stats that might get one into the Pro Bowl or All-Pro team.


The Most Valuable Player is, or should be, about making major contributions to victories. Because of the nature of the sport, the MVP award will tend to favor the quarterback. But we shouldn't assume that a quarterback ought to win it. In some years, there could be four, five, or more quarterbacks with great years and none clearly above the rest, while another player has a standout year.


Cooper Kupp's 2021 season is an example. Aaron Rodgers won his fourth MVP that year, but a few other quarterbacks also had a good case. Meanwhile, Cooper Kupp was very good and usually spectacular in every one of the 13 Rams wins that season. No quarterback was that consistently great in victories.


One of the disadvantages Kupp faced is that no wide receiver has won MVP. If Jerry Rice hadn't won't it, how dare Cooper Kupp get it? Fortunately for Henry, running backs have won the award, four times this century in fact.


Of course, it's too early to tell and impossible to say if Henry can continue doing what he's doing as the season drags on. That's probably why quarterbacks end up with the award - they're not quite as beaten up at the end of the year.



James Leroy Wilson writes The MVP Chase (subscribe). Thank you for your subscriptions and support! You may contact James for writing, editing, research, and other work: jamesleroywilson-at-gmail.com.

Monday, October 21, 2024

Hoosier #1 Team?

 

Photo creditTorsten Bolten


Indiana's 56-7 whipping of the previously 5-1 Nebraska Cornhuskers might lead one to assume that the 49-point margin of victory is why the Hoosiers took sole possession of first place in the FBS Playoff Chase. 


Well, seventeen of those points are the reason as that is sufficient proof of a whipping. If Indiana won by nine, they'd still be in first place, although just one Playoff Chase point ahead of BYU, Oregon, and Texas. If they had beaten Nebraska by one possession (1-8 points), they'd be tied for the lead with those teams. 


The main reason Indiana is on top is that Nebraska has five wins. They are credited to Indiana's account. That, and the fact that Indiana's whipping nearly everybody they play. Their narrowest margin of victory so far is 14 points.


Much of the Playoff Chase formula goes like this: The sum of the victories by the opponents you've beaten, minus the sum of the losses of the opponents you've been beaten by. The margin of victory plays a role, but only up to a point. A blowout is a blowout if it's by 21 or 51, and there's no merit in rolling up the score when, for whatever reason, the other team has been on the ropes all game.


On the other hand, the team on the receiving end of the blowout deserves blame for getting blown out. Nebraska lost by seven possessions and lost six FBS Chase points because of it. They have a lot of ground to make up whereas Alabama, another 5-2 team, is tied for fifth in the Playoff Chase.


The Tide's position might make you shout, "What is wrong with this list?"


Well, here's the deal. The five opponents Alabama has beaten, all from the FBS, have won a combined 23 games. Alabama's two losses were narrow, and the teams they lost to, Vanderbilt and Tenessee, have lost a combined three games. 


In contrast, five FBS opponents Georgia has beaten have won 17 games. The six FBS opponents Indiana has beaten have won 19. The six FBS opponents Texas beat have won 21 games, the same as Oregon's. I won't go through every team, but it's clear that Alabama has had the best schedule so far and by far.


The following list of the top 25 in the FBS Playoff Chase has teams listed in order of Playoff Chase points. Where there are ties, they are listed by the best won-loss record and then alphabetically.


32 Indiana 7-0 Big Ten

30 BYU 7-0 Big 12

30 Oregon 7-0 Big Ten

30 Texas 6-1 SEC

28 Iowa St 7-0 Big 12

28 Miami FL 7-0 ACC

28 Alabama 5-2 SEC

27 Notre Dame 6-1 Independent

27 Ohio State 5-1 Big Ten

26 Army 7-0 AAC

25 Navy 6-0 ACC

25 Boise St 5-1 MW

24 Georgia 6-1 SEC

24 Kansas St 6-1 Big 12

23 Penn St 6-0 Big Ten

23 Clemson 6-1 ACC

23 Washington St 6-1 Pac

22 LSU 6-1 SEC

22 SMU 6-1 ACC

22 Texas A&M 6-1 SEC

21 Tennessee 6-1 SEC

19 Illinois 6-1 Big Ten

19 Memphis 6-1 AAC

19 Pitt 6-0 ACC 

19 UNLV 6-1 MW

19 Ole Miss 5-2 SEC


Every team in the MAC has three losses or more, and every team in the Sun Belt has two losses or more. All have an unlikely path to the playoffs. Undefeated Liberty, which I discussed last week, is the only hope for Conference USA but is only at 13 points. 

James Leroy Wilson writes The MVP Chase (subscribe). Thank you for your subscriptions and support! You may contact James for writing, editing, research, and other work: jamesleroywilson-at-gmail.com.