For example, you have Houston listed as 10-6 versus P5. But they actually went 11-6.
2019 | Washington St | L |
2019 | Oklahoma | L |
2018 | Texas Tech | L |
2018 | Arizona | W |
2017 | Texas Tech | L |
2017 | Arizona | W |
2016 | Oklahoma | W |
2016 | L'ville | W |
2015 | L'ville | W |
2015 | Vanderbilt | W |
2015 | Florida St | W |
2014 | Pitt | W |
2013 | Rutgers | W |
2013 | Vanderbilt | L |
2012 | UCLA | L |
2011 | UCLA | W |
2011 | Penn St | W |
And you have UCF as 7-12, when they should be 9-12 (which bumps them above BYU actually)
2020 | GaTech | W |
2019 | Stanford | W |
| Pitt | L |
2018 | Pitt | W |
| LSU | L |
2017 | Maryland | W |
| Auburn | W |
2016 | Michigan | L |
| Maryland | L |
2015 | Stanford | L |
| S Carolina | L |
2014 | Penn St | L |
| Mizzou | L |
| NC State | L |
2013 | Penn St | W |
| S Carolina | L |
| Rutgers | W |
| Baylor | W |
2012 | Ohio St | L |
| Mizzou | L |
2011 | Boston College | W |
And USF or Temple I'm not sure where to start. It really depends on how you treat the Big East (which the USF was a member of when it was one of 6 AQ conferences). Are you counting games against those conference opponents at the time? That gives them quite a few more wins (and losses) What about Notre Dame? I'd generally lump them in with P5s and USF beat them whereas Temple lost to them repeatedly.