Anderson & Hester
Anderson & Hester is a system for determining the college football national champion. The system was created in 1992 by Jeff Anderson and Chris Hester, roommates at the University of Washington.[1] Anderson & Hester is one of over 40 systems designed by the NCAA as major selectors of college football national championships.[2]:108–110 The rankings are published weekly in The Seattle Times.[2]:110
National champions
Anderson & Hester selections from the 1997 season to present.[3]
Season | Champion | Record | Coach |
---|---|---|---|
1997 | Nebraska | 13–0 | Tom Osborne |
1998 | Tennessee | 13–0 | Phillip Fulmer |
1999 | Florida State | 12–0 | Bobby Bowden |
2000 | Oklahoma | 13–0 | Bob Stoops |
2001 | Miami (FL) | 12–0 | Larry Coker |
2002 | Ohio State | 14–0 | Jim Tressel |
2003 | LSU | 13–1 | Nick Saban |
2004 | USC | 11–0 | Pete Carroll |
2005 | Texas | 13–0 | Mack Brown |
2006 | Florida | 13–1 | Urban Meyer |
2007 | Missouri | 12–2 | Gary Pinkel |
2008 | Utah | 13–0 | Kyle Whittingham |
2009 | Alabama | 14–0 | Nick Saban (2) |
2010 | Auburn | 14–0 | Gene Chizik |
2011 | LSU (2) | 13–1 | Les Miles |
2012 | Alabama (2) | 13–1 | Nick Saban (3) |
2013 | Florida State (2) | 14–0 | Jimbo Fisher |
2014 | Ohio State (2) | 14–1 | Urban Meyer (2) |
2015 | Alabama (3) | 14–1 | Nick Saban (4) |
2016 | Clemson | 14–1 | Dabo Swinney |
2017 | Alabama (4) | 13–1 | Nick Saban (5) |
2018 | Clemson (2) | 15–0 | Dabo Swinney (2) |
2019 | LSU (3) | 15–0 | Ed Orgeron |
gollark: I think mine is in some generic cheap Corsair cuboid.
gollark: I... still don't actually have much of a preference.
gollark: I see. Well, I have basically no opinion on this.
gollark: What are the pros and cons of each?
gollark: Oh, did you experience an orbital bee strike?
References
- Mark Schlabach (August 21, 2014). "What are the BCS computer guys doing now?". ESPN.
- 2018 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records (PDF). Indianapolis: National Collegiate Athletic Association. August 2018. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
- 2020 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records (PDF). The National Collegiate Athletic Association. 2020. p. 119. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.