Since I started this mess, I thought I should weigh in again.
I think Inside NU is a great idea, and I am fully aware and supportive of the fact that it is a site run by students. As a Medill grad (in a different era), I can only applaud their efforts and also realize that this is not a full-time job. I write this with a bit of understanding: After graduating, I worked as a newspaper and magazine journalist for more than 20 years in the US and the UK before taking corporate roles.
I still stand by my original comment: that one sentence --
"But the true effectiveness of a team should not be measured in wins and losses." -- was on its face so silly that I did not read the rest of the article carefully. While I am a stat geek in some respects, especially when it comes to baseball and cricket, I have never lost the idea that the purpose of the game -- other than to have fun -- is to win.
I am sure that the players and coaches would prefer the team to be 10-0 than to lead the nation in any statistical category.
Each week, I look at College Football Ranking Composite (
http://masseyratings.com/cf/compare.htm); this week NU ranks No. 28. Is this a true reflection of where Northwestern should be ranked in comparison to other teams? Probably not. This comparison captures 107 polls and websites that rank college football teams according to various criteria. Some are very well-founded, and some are likely half-baked. In this week's ranking, the Maas and Mark websites rank NU as No. 10 in the nation; Nutshell ranks us as No. 87! The standard deviation amongst the polls/websites that rank NU is 17.18, the second highest of any of the 128 teams (No. 69 Georgia Tech ranks first with a standard deviation of 18.46).
In short, Northwestern can be regarded as an elite team or a below-average team, depending on which rating service you wish to use. I do not have a great knowledge of statistical analysis, so I have no idea if the S&P+ rankings are any better than any of the 107 rankings compiled by the College Football Ranking Composite. Henry Bushnell chose this ranking for his analysis, which is his prerogative. He could have chose many others.
Since I started this debate, I wish to point out that I have nothing against Henry Bushnell or any of the students writing for Inside NU. In fact, I applaud them for working as sports journalists while still in school. They should be congratulated. I would like them all to succeed in their chosen career paths. However, as a former newspaper and magazine editor, I would advise Henry to either read his own work more carefully before he posts it or to have someone else critically read/edit it before it goes public. (Henry, if you read this, I would be happy if you sent me a message so if you would like to discuss this.)
I do understand what Henry is trying to say, and I defend his right to say it. However, if he writes something stupid, even if it is unintentional, he will (a) turn off some readers, including me, and (b) lose credibility. That's an important lesson for any budding journalist to learn.
I was wrong in saying that Inside NU and Henry has lost my support because that is not true. I still think that what these students are doing is fantastic. No one has to read it; that's our choice. Inside NU can publish whatever its writers wish to write as long as it is not defamatory; that's their choice and their right.
However, I still think that one sentence, no matter what Henry meant to write, was really stupid!