32 College Football Great Teams on the Way
By
Glenn Guzzo
Strat-O-Matic must love a good argument.
With college-football software that already allows gamers to challenge the BCS system’s selection of annual national-championship contenders, Strat-O-Matic is not stopping there. It is nearly ready to tackle the debate over which team is the best in history.
Nearly three dozen of the most powerful college football teams from 1966 through 2005 will be featured in a College Great Teams roster for Version 5 of Strat-O-Matic’s Computer College Football game. Strat-O-Matic is accepting orders now for the Great Teams.
Gamers
will get to relive the 1966 “Game of the Century” between Notre Dame and
Michigan State, the first BCS champion in 1998 Tennessee, Archie Griffin’s Ohio
State, Bo Jackson’s Auburn, and Tony Dorsett’s Pittsburgh. Eighteen
universities will be represented, with three seasons each for
Strat-O-Matic began re-creating all the Division I teams with the 2004 NCAA season, so three of these teams will look familiar, but will not be identical twins to their predecessors.
The 2004 Auburn, 2004 USC and 2005 Texas teams will showcase Cadillac Williams, Matt Leinhart and Vince Young, respectively, with ratings intended for play against the other 32 teams in this set, not the original offering.
“While the College Great Teams will be compatible with our season rosters, they are designed primarily for play against each other,” Strat-O-Matic Director of Development Bob Winberry explained.
Soon, gamers will be trying to answer the perpetual question: Who is No. 1? With Strat-O-Matic, there will be a better answer.
With 120 years of college football to draw on, selecting 32 great teams is bound to be controversial, maybe even as argumentative as the current BCS system.
Gamers
will find Johnny Rodgers’ 1971
Steve Reiter, who did most of the research and made the selections, said he found it exciting just to choose some schools and seasons over others.
“There are a lot of great teams, a lot of great games people will want to replay,” Reiter said.
Reiter has been dubbed “The College Football ‘Bwana” by fellow fanatic Fred Bobberts, who initiated the research. Reiter said there always has been interest among Strat football gamers for such a product, but interest “amped up 100 percent in the last year.”
So
Reiter traveled from his home in
Now
Reiter has a ready answer to such questions as why a famous national champion
like 1968 Ohio State is not on this list: “Neither Billingsley nor Berryman had
them among the top six Ohio State
teams. They were behind ’73, 2002, ’54, ’96 and ’75. Berryman also had them
behind the ’98, 2006 and ’79
That doesn’t mean the 32 teams offered will absolutely be the best 32 in the ratings.
“If
this was a pure top 32,” Reiter said, “ ’66 Michigan State would never have
gotten on the list … ’96 Florida was not on there, nor ’81 Clemson. There would
be no
Instead,
we’d have teams like ’94
So how did Reiter decide?
Billingsley and Berryman narrowed 120 years of NCAA football to 350 teams worth consideration. Looking at the stats reduced the list to 220 who could compete.
Then Reiter applied some practical rules:
n Start with 1966. Earlier than that, there are unresolved issues about how the software will handle two-way players and single-wing offenses.
n
No more than three teams per school. Make sure
any schools with three would universally be considered worthy of three: USC,
n No more than three teams from any season.
Now Reiter had a manageable group of 45 to choose from.
“The
top 15-20 were mortal locks,” he reported. Other choices included notable
football programs in the top 45, such as
Here are the 32 teams to be featured:

