Alltime Team Records

Started by Greg Berge, April 27, 2003, 10:08:09 AM

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Greg Berge

Season Records: http://www.spiritone.com/~kepler/rptTeamsAlltimeBySeason/rptTeamsAlltimeBySeasonFrame.html

Alltime Totals: http://www.spiritone.com/~kepler/rptTeamsAlpha/rptTeamsAlphaFrame.html

At first I expect to make a TON of corrections.  On the seasonal breakdown there are years with missing GF and GA and naturally these affect the Totals page.  The W-L records are all there, but many primary sources contradict each other.

Little by little I expect to fix the data over the summer.  For now, this is a start.



Post Edited (04-27-03 16:34)

jtwcornell91

Your choice of team nicknames seems a little arbitrary, e.g., Lowell Chiefs vs Quinnipiac Bobcats.  (I still thought they were the Fighting Deerticks until I saw the MAAC championship game on TV.)


Greg Berge

Arbitrary my ass, I just forgot Lowell changed their nickname.  2490 records x 30 fields = 74,700 numbers, give a guy a frickin' break.  :-D

Jim Hyla

No criticism here, just respect for a Herculean task. You continue to amaze me with your efforts.

"Cornell Fans Made the Timbers Tremble", Boston Globe, March/1970
Cornell lawyers stopped the candy throwing. Jan/2005

jtwcornell91

Sorry, no criticism intended, I was just trying to figure out your convention for schools that have changed nicknames.  BTW, Miami is also no longer the Redskins.


Greg Berge

I was kidding about taking it as criticism -- I welcome all corrections and like I said I expect there to be A TON of them!   ::nut::  ::nut::

CowbellGuy

Actually, Quinnipiac are the Bobcats now.

"[Hugh] Jessiman turned out to be a huge specimen of something alright." --Puck Daddy

jtwcornell91

Er, yes, that was my point: one old team name, one new.


Greg Berge

BTW, the obscure teams are now up on the pages.  Naturally someone on USCHO has already pointed me to at least 8 other obscure schools, incluidng some JuCos that played D-1-like opponents in the 30's and 40's.

The Obscurity Award so far goes to Fort Devens.  After WWII, the federal government funded UMass to make an existing army fort at Devens a branch college for 4 years specifically to get the guys stationed there college degrees under the G.I. Bill, after which UMass closed the college and the army decommissioned the Fort.  Best example of beating swords into plowshares I've ever heard of -- you can bet nothing so obvious and sane will be done again anytime soon.



Post Edited (04-28-03 15:15)