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Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, Titan32 said:

I knew someone would point that out...I almost qualifed my response but didn't think it woudl be necessary.  So here it is...any P/P that put any focus on football.  Halfway decent coach who will end up being a legend, enough tradition that they can call someone elses field their own, fans that only show up if they are a state contender, etc.

Hater alert incoming…

Bill Peebles:  75% winning percentage at Cathedral…53% winning percentage at Southport/Lawrence Central.

Kevin O’Shea:  92% winning percentage at Lafayette Central Catholic…56% winning percentage at Delta/McCutcheon/Attica/North Central/Twin Lakes.

Just two examples off the top of my head.

 

Edited by temptation
  • Like 2
Posted (edited)
8 minutes ago, temptation said:

Hater alert incoming…

Bill Peebles:  75% winning percentage at Cathedral…53% winning percentage at Southport/Lawrence Central.

Kevin O’Shea:  92% winning percentage at Lafayette Central Catholic…56% winning percentage at Delta/McCutcheon/Attica/North Central/Twin Lakes.

Just two examples off the top of my head.

 

Anyone doubting the impact of socioeconomics is either lost or is purposely leaving their head in the sand.

I’ll once again repeat the line that I have stated on this forum for years…

“If you’re going to be at a socioeconomic disadvantage, you better have an enrollment advantage.”

Edited by temptation
  • Like 4
Posted
  •  
17 minutes ago, temptation said:

Hater alert incoming…

Bill Peebles:  75% winning percentage at Cathedral…53% winning percentage at Southport/Lawrence Central.

Kevin O’Shea:  92% winning percentage at Lafayette Central Catholic…56% winning percentage at Delta/McCutcheon/Attica/North Central/Twin Lakes.

Just two examples off the top of my head.

 

De-hater sanity incoming ...

  • LCC number of regional wins, 1976 - 2007 ... 32 years, prior to Kevin O'Shea: 2 ... 6.25%
  • LCC number of regional wins, 2007-2016 ... 10 years, with Kevin O'Shea: 6 ... 60%

Sometimes the right mix of coach and kids just happens to come together at the same time.

  • Like 1
Posted

Success factor is not a good measure for pound for pound. SF points are determined by accumulating them in one’s said classification. Similar “ pounds” so to speak. 
 

Success in classifications that are above enrollment classification is a good qualifier, schedule strength and record vs schools above their enrollment is another, and margin of defeat vs larger school classes is another.

  • Like 1
Posted
23 minutes ago, temptation said:

Anyone doubting the impact of socioeconomics is either lost or is purposely leaving their head in the sand.

I’ll once again repeat the line that I have stated on this forum for years…

“If you’re going to be at a socioeconomic disadvantage, you better have an enrollment advantage.”

Speaking of such, interesting that six of the top 10 pound-for-pounds are outside of +/- standard deviation for FRL.  Of note, with a couple of p/ps mentioned in this thread for comparison:

Andrean/Chatard as a datapoints, here's a bit of comparison: Andrean FRL 25.3% (https://indianagps.doe.in.gov/Summary/school/2403)/Chatard FRL 19.3% (https://indianagps.doe.in.gov/Summary/School/2351)

From the original pound-for-pound list - FRL %

1.   New Palestine 24.8%

2.  Adams Central 24.5%

3.  Decatur Central 56.2%

4.  Lafayette Jefferson 58%

5.  East Central 18.9%

6.  Heritage Hills 28.7%

7.  East Noble 32.5%

8.  Gibson Southern 23.7%

9.  Westfield 18.9%

10. Merrillville 47.3%

  • Indiana average by school across all public schools ... includes schools that provide meals for all of their students: 48.9%
  • Indiana median across all public schools: 48.9%
  • Indiana standard deviation across all public schools: 18.7%
  • Indiana +/- 1 stddev range across all public schools: 30.2 - 67.6%
  • +2 stddev or higher regarding FRL% impact (positive)
  • numbers for public schools calculated using IDOE data from their site
  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
6 minutes ago, foxbat said:

Speaking of such, interesting that six of the top 10 pound-for-pounds are outside of +/- standard deviation for FRL.  Of note, with a couple of p/ps mentioned in this thread for comparison:

Andrean/Chatard as a datapoints, here's a bit of comparison: Andrean FRL 25.3% (https://indianagps.doe.in.gov/Summary/school/2403)/Chatard FRL 19.3% (https://indianagps.doe.in.gov/Summary/School/2351)

From the original pound-for-pound list - FRL %

1.   New Palestine 24.8%

2.  Adams Central 24.5%

3.  Decatur Central 56.2%

4.  Lafayette Jefferson 58%

5.  East Central 18.9%

6.  Heritage Hills 28.7%

7.  East Noble 32.5%

8.  Gibson Southern 23.7%

9.  Westfield 18.9%

10. Merrillville 47.3%

  • Indiana average by school across all public schools ... includes schools that provide meals for all of their students: 48.9%
  • Indiana median across all public schools: 48.9%
  • Indiana standard deviation across all public schools: 18.7%
  • Indiana +/- 1 stddev range across all public schools: 30.2 - 67.6%
  • +2 stddev or higher regarding FRL% impact (positive)
  • numbers for public schools calculated using IDOE data from their site

Good stuff.

So those outliers truly are top dog when it comes to pound for pound.

Maybe we can even incorporate a formula that calculate SOS, W/L record and FRL to get an even more accurate picture.

 

 

Edited by temptation
  • Like 2
Posted
5 minutes ago, temptation said:

Good stuff.

So those outliers truly are top dog when it comes to pound for pound.

Maybe we can even incorporate a formula that calculate SOS, W/L record and FRL to get an even more accurate picture.

 

 

I'll put it on my "things to do in retirement" list. :classic_laugh:

Posted (edited)

Top 10 p4p p/p

1. Andrean

2. Indianapolis Lutheran

3. Evansville Mater Dei

4. Fort Wayne Luers

5. Evansville Memorial

6. Indianapolis Chatard

7. Indianapolis Cathedral

8. Providence

9. Heritage Christian

10. Brebeuf Jesuit

Edited by adambetz
Posted
7 hours ago, adambetz said:

Top 10 p4p p/p

1. Andrean

2. Indianapolis Lutheran

3. Evansville Mater Dei

4. Fort Wayne Luers

5. Evansville Memorial

6. Indianapolis Chatard

7. Indianapolis Cathedral

8. Providence

9. Heritage Christian

10. Brebeuf Jesuit

Presuming this is all time? No Dwenger? 

Reminder, this topic was intended to be 2025 only. 

Posted
16 hours ago, temptation said:

I’ll once again repeat the line that I have stated on this forum for years…

If you’re going to be at a socioeconomic disadvantage, you better have an enrollment advantage.

I'm not even sure how relevant that is at times.  Again, look at Frankfort.  A "4A" school where all their losses this season have come at the hands of 1A, 2A, & 3A schools.  Since 2020 the only other 4A school they played in the regular season was Lebanon, and that was due to them being a conference foe.    That enrollment advantage isn't worth squat. 

 

Posted
35 minutes ago, Muda69 said:

I'm not even sure how relevant that is at times.  Again, look at Frankfort.  A "4A" school where all their losses this season have come at the hands of 1A, 2A, & 3A schools.  Since 2020 the only other 4A school they played in the regular season was Lebanon, and that was due to them being a conference foe.    That enrollment advantage isn't worth squat. 

 

C'mon. Look no further than the dominance of the three largest enrollment schools. Over 30 state titles between Carmel, Ben Davis, and Warren Central. The advantage of having more kids to choose from is just common sense. If you can't win football games at a large enrollment school, you're probably either 1) Not a good football coach, or 2) don't have the passion it takes to build a program. Kevin Wright wouldn't take over at Southport or Jeffersonville no matter how much money you paid him. He goes where he knows he can win championships..........Carmel and Warren Central. He knows those large enrollment schools give him an advantage. He's smart.

Posted (edited)
19 minutes ago, 23andCounting said:

 If you can't win football games at a large enrollment school, you're probably either 1) Not a good football coach, or 2) don't have the passion it takes to build a program. 

Socioeconomics rear their ugly head again.  Can Mr. Wright build a state championship caliber football program at a school the size of Carmel but has a 90%+ of it's students on free/reduced lunches?

 

 

Edited by Muda69
Posted
17 minutes ago, Muda69 said:

Socioeconomics rear their ugly head again.  Can Mr. Wright build a state championship caliber football program at a school the size of Carmel but has a 90%+ of it's students on free/reduced lunches?

Of course. We're talking 5000 students Muda. Not all kids on the free lunch program have poor home lives. Let's say half of them do. We're talking about 500 students not on the program and 2250 who are on the program but are kids who are well taken care of. Kevin Wright is winning a state championship under those circumstances. 

Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, 23andCounting said:

Of course. We're talking 5000 students Muda. Not all kids on the free lunch program have poor home lives. Let's say half of them do. We're talking about 500 students not on the program and 2250 who are on the program but are kids who are well taken care of. Kevin Wright is winning a state championship under those circumstances. 

Disagree that it would be that simple.

Edited by temptation
  • Like 1
Posted
18 minutes ago, 23andCounting said:

Of course. We're talking 5000 students Muda. Not all kids on the free lunch program have poor home lives. Let's say half of them do. We're talking about 500 students not on the program and 2250 who are on the program but are kids who are well taken care of. Kevin Wright is winning a state championship under those circumstances. 

 

40 minutes ago, Muda69 said:

Socioeconomics rear their ugly head again.  Can Mr. Wright build a state championship caliber football program at a school the size of Carmel but has a 90%+ of it's students on free/reduced lunches?

 

 

Warren Central's FRL is a bit over 58%.  Carmel's is much lower at between 13-14%.  Heck, that's better than Chatard's percentage.  Ben Davis is over 73%.

Realistically, 90% FRL doesn't exist for many high school football programs in Indiana. 

                496   922 53.8%

Frankfort's reported FRL is 496 students and 922 is total reported student enrollment.  The 53.8% is the result of FRL divided by total enrollment.  I think a more realistic discussion is not whether Wright could create a championship program at a 90% FRL, but rather could he do so at somewhere like 3A Speedway which has around a 56% FRL number? 

Similarly, an interesting discussion would be what mid-/high- FRL 1A, 2A, 3A programs would/could a coach like Wright be able to make a positive impact on, if any, and why if so?  

Posted
1 hour ago, foxbat said:

 

Warren Central's FRL is a bit over 58%.  Carmel's is much lower at between 13-14%.  Heck, that's better than Chatard's percentage.  Ben Davis is over 73%.

Realistically, 90% FRL doesn't exist for many high school football programs in Indiana. 

                496   922 53.8%

Frankfort's reported FRL is 496 students and 922 is total reported student enrollment.  The 53.8% is the result of FRL divided by total enrollment.  I think a more realistic discussion is not whether Wright could create a championship program at a 90% FRL, but rather could he do so at somewhere like 3A Speedway which has around a 56% FRL number? 

Similarly, an interesting discussion would be what mid-/high- FRL 1A, 2A, 3A programs would/could a coach like Wright be able to make a positive impact on, if any, and why if so?  

I think your Warren/BD numbers are wrong.

Posted

Just so I can make sure I'm following, if your kids can pay for their own lunch chances of finding 11 guys who can put the ball in the end zone, and 11 guys who can keep people from putting the ball in the end zone goes up? Just taking notes, so I can walk through our cafeteria, and know who to tell to come out for the football team next year. I bet guys like Tom Brady and Peyton Manning could pay for a lot of lunch in high school.

Posted
2 hours ago, temptation said:

Disagree that it would be that simple.

He didn't do so bad at Warren Central. His system works. He's the Cignetti of high school football. Carmel might be the best team in the state his first season there. 

Posted (edited)
44 minutes ago, 23andCounting said:

He didn't do so bad at Warren Central. His system works. He's the Cignetti of high school football. Carmel might be the best team in the state his first season there. 

Warren Central 20-25 years ago was MUCH different than Warren Central today.

Edited by temptation
Posted (edited)
4 minutes ago, temptation said:

Warren Central 20-25 years ago was MUCH different than Warren Central today.

You sure? Got any evidence to back that up? Up here in Fort Wayne, the mass migration outside of the donut happened in the 90's.

I saw last year in person how much talent that school still has. 

Edited by 23andCounting
Posted
7 minutes ago, 23andCounting said:

You sure? Got any evidence to back that up? Up here in Fort Wayne, the mass migration outside of the donut happened in the 90's.

I saw last year in person how much talent that school still has. 

I mean, I can use the same excel link provided above.

In 2006 (the farthest back the online DOE data goes), Warren had a 29% FRL rate.

So its doubled.

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