I'd like to see the rankings you're talking about. As much because it'd be interesting to see sources for statistical analysis in college football as anything else. There's a huge difference between talking about guys doing dumb things on the field that cause their team to be penalized and talking about mythical "buckling down under pressure and showing some grit and heart" garbage. Florida averaged 7.9 penalties per game in 2013, the most in the SEC by a longshot (LSU next at 6.9). That's 121st worst in the nation for UF. That's real and it hurts, especially when you struggle to pick up first downs (113th in total offense). I will say, though, they turned the ball over less than I thought - only .8 per game (37th in nation). Tennessee was disturbingly pathetic at that, though (1.5 per game, good for 119th in nation). That's interesting. I frequent Football Outsiders for the NFL, but didn't know they ventured into college football. I'll have to look that over. That said, much like in baseball, sometimes teams simply underperform expected wins for a variety of reasons. Sometimes it's fluky, sometimes it's because managers do dumb things that cost their team wins (excessive hit and runs, steals, etc). It's the same in football - sometimes underperforming is just a fluky thing that's a result of a injuries or variance, but sometimes you just have a terrible coach (Muschamp).