uofmman1122 wrote:Also, Griz get into the playoffs this year. If we had a D-II I'd be worried, but we don't.
Big Sky teams play 8 non-Big Sky FCS teams this year: San Diego, South Dakota, Appalachian State, Liberty, Drake, Stephen F. Austin, South Dakota State, McNeese State. San Diego and Drake are non-scholarship. Montana plays 3 of the FCS teams: South Dakota, Appalachian State, and Liberty. This does add to Montana's playoff chances.
6 Big Sky teams play a fellow conference team as a non-conference game: Cal Poly, Eastern Washington, North Dakota, Northern Colorado, Portland State, Sacramento State.
There are 17 games against FBS teams: Nebraska, Washington State, Arizona State, Utah, Washington, Colorado, California, BYU, San Diego State, Wyoming, Air Force, UNLV, Fresno State, Utah State, San Jose State, Idaho, New Mexico State.
There are 6 games against NCAA Division II teams: Chadron State, Ft. Lewis, Colorado Mesa, New Mexico Highlands, Azusa Pacific, South Dakota Mines.
There are 2 games against NAIA teams: Black Hills St, Carroll College.
I ran the Big Sky schedule 10,000 times in computer simulation, with win probabilities based on Sagarin and Massey recent ratings, and accounting for home field advantage, with the teams achieving 7 or more Division I wins the following number of times:
Montana 5850
Cal Poly 5078
Montana State 4303
Weber State 2147
Eastern Washington 2033
Southern Utah 1233
North Dakota 971
Northern Arizona 515
Sacramento State 497
Portland State 362
UC Davis 328
Northern Colorado 87
Idaho State 48
And the number of teams achieving 7 or more Division I wins distributed among the 10,000 runs as follows:
0 236
1 1692
2 3779
3 3114
4 1041
5 132
6 6
7 0
8 0
Telling me that most likely 2 or 3 teams will achieve 7 or more wins, but there is a slim chance for as many as 6 and a small chance everybody beats up each other so much (and loses non-conference games) that nobody gets to 7 wins.