Are the Florida Gators perennially overrated or underrated?

CBS Sports attempted to answer that question, measuring performance on a year-to-year basis based on their preseason expectations.

Offseason prediction time can be controversial in college football, and often fans of programs believe their team is being underrated by the national media while their rivals are overhyped.

But what do the numbers say?

CBS Sports attempted to answer that question, measuring which teams overperform or underperform on a year-to-year basis based on their preseason expectations.

Florida was considered “+1” meaning that, on average, it slightly overperforms based on its preseason predictions, but it generally finishes around where it was projected to.

CBS Sports listed the Gators in the “properly ranked” section, along with Arkansas, LSU, Alabama, Ole Miss and Texas A&M. Here’s what they had to say about the Gators.

The Gators have been pretty stable over the last two seasons, but the wild ride came during the Jim McElwain years from 2015-17. They surprised everybody by winning the SEC East in 2015 after being picked fifth and did it again the next season after being predicted to finish second. The roller coaster went speeding downhill in 2016 when they finished fifth after being picked to finish second. Not surprisingly, McElwain was fired two months into that season.

And here are the full rankings.

 

 

TEAM

PERFORMANCE

VS.

HYPE

AVERAGE

PER

YEAR

Kentucky +9 +1.13
Mississippi State +9 +1.13
Vanderbilt +4 +0.50
Missouri +3 +0.38
Texas A&M +2 +0.25
Ole Miss +1 +0.13
Florida +1 +0.13
Alabama -2 -0.25
LSU -2 -0.25
Arkansas -3 -0.38
Georgia -4 -0.50
Auburn -5 -0.62
Tennessee -5 -0.62
South Carolina -8 -1.00

[lawrence-related id=23578,23520,23518,23515,23493,23469]

[vertical-gallery id=20711]

[vertical-gallery id=20730]

5 Most Underrated or Overrated Cowboys in Madden 21 ratings

Zack Martin and Amari Cooper lead the charge, but as usual Madden has some questionable ratings in their initial release.

As the new football season draws closer, video game and fantasy football enthusiasts are preparing for yet another year of exhilarating ancillary enjoyment. While the latter is in for the same wild ride fans are, not knowing what the actual product on the field will look like, the virtual versions have no such worries.

EA Sports and Madden 21 are once again the exclusive rights holders to the NFL kingdom and last week the company released the player ratings for each individual in the league. The Dallas Cowboys have four players who received a 90 rating or above, though there were a handful of questionable slights, as always.

No member of the team garnered inclusion in the famed 99 club, with right guard Zack Martin earning the highest rating on the team at 98.

Quarterback Dak Prescott wasn’t one of those who received a 90 rating, or an 85 for that matter. He checked in as the eighth-highest rated Cowboy player at an 84.

Martin and Prescott headline the underrated Cowboys, but we’ll go ahead and question some others high grades as well.

La’el Collins (87) Underrated

In our estimation, Collins and Smith are worthy of the same grades, with the former being one of the best run blockers in the game but the latter one of the best pass protectors. EA has Smith better at both.

Chidobe Awuzie (82) Overrated

Um, what? Awuzie has talent, but he was constantly picked on by opposing QBs and the front office admitted that he is under heavy consideration to be demoted to being part of the safety rotation. He seems to have a CB1 standard spike.

Chris Jones (81) Overrated

Jones hasn’t been one of the league’s better punters in the last several seasons. Hopefully the hiring of ST Coordinator John Fassel will reignite some of the extreme athleticism The Puntisher has shown in the past.

Here’s the complete rundown of all of the ratings.

[vertical-gallery id=650836][lawrence-newsletter]

Who is College Football’s Biggest Annual Underachiever?

I don’t defend Michigan football very often but I feel the need to here.  Does Michigan underachieve?  No doubt about it.  No College Football Playoff appearances to date, no division titles in the Big Ten since the conference expanded in 2011 and just a 3-11 mark in their last 14 bowl appearances.  That’s clearly not performing at a level that matches the hype that surrounds Michigan each and every year.

You’ve got to love the off-season.  We’re in the heart of a period where anything and everything is up for debate in regards to college football and…wait, that’s exactly what college football is pretty much all the time.

Argue, debate and talk trash.  College football in a nutshell right there.

Rivals put together a list of five statements in regards to college football Monday and one of them hits close to home for a Notre Dame rival as it reads:

2.  Michigan is the biggest underachiever in college football.

Farrell’s take: FACT. Michigan pumps out NFL players but not division titles, not conference titles, not College Football Playoff appearances, not even bowl wins (lost 11 of its last 14 bowls). I can’t think of another program that qualifies for this title.

Gorney’s take: FACT. Not only is the biggest underachiever in college football but someone needs to start asking coach Jim Harbaugh and his staff where this program is headed. Clearly, the problem is Ohio State, which is far superior to every team in the Big Ten and only getting better. But Penn State isn’t going anywhere and the Wolverines seem stuck in neutral. That’s incredibly hard to believe since Michigan has produced 28 NFL Draft picks over the last four years.

You can read the entire “Fact or Fiction” piece here.

I don’t defend Michigan football very often but I feel the need to here.  Does Michigan underachieve?  No doubt about it.  No College Football Playoff appearances to date, no division titles in the Big Ten since the conference expanded in 2011 and just a 3-11 mark in their last 14 bowl appearances.  That’s clearly not performing at a level that matches the hype that surrounds Michigan each and every year.

I know some will throw Notre Dame in there and yes, guilty as being over-hyped frequently but certainly not always of late with a BCS Championship and College Football Playoff appearance in the last decade.  There is certainly one team that I’d have above Michigan, though.

Can someone tell me what Texas A&M has really ever done?

There might not be a program in the nation that has more resources in terms of money, at least that’s what much of their base claimed when luring Jimbo Fisher there a few years back.  And what do they have to show?

Nationally they haven’t claimed a national championship since before the United States entered World War II.

On the lesser scale even they haven’t won their own division in either the Big XII or SEC since winning the Big XII in 1998.

They’ve had two Heisman Trophy winners in the long history of their program and I get they have a traditional powerhouse in Texas to deal with in-state, but it’s a state that has as much football talent as any state you’ll find.

Texas A&M should be set up to be a powerhouse and knocking on the door of winning big annually.  The closest they got to ever being that was the early nineties when they went 42-5-1 between 1991 and 1994 but three of those seasons ended in Cotton Bowl losses (twice to Notre Dame) and in 1994 they went 10-0-1 but NCAA sanctions prohibited them from being allowed to claim a SWC championship or accept a bowl berth.

Listen, Michigan is a pretty massive underachiever.  The way you often hear Jim Harbaugh discussed you’d think he had more the track record of James Franklin at Penn State than Harbaugh’s had in Ann Arbor.  He and Michigan both have been disappointing for quite some time but let’s not confuse it, they’re levels of underachievement are nothing compared to those in College Station.