NFL General

NFL power rankings are meaningless and here is the data to prove it

Every week, ESPN, NFL.com, and every sports site publishes power rankings. They are content filler, not analysis. Here is why.

The evidence (Source: analysis of ESPN power rankings 2019-2024):

  • Preseason number 1 has won the Super Bowl 2 times in the last 20 years.
  • The eventual Super Bowl champion was ranked outside the top 5 in preseason power rankings in 12 of the last 20 seasons.
  • Week 8 power rankings have a correlation coefficient of only 0.43 with final standings. That is barely better than random.

Why they are bad at prediction:

  1. Recency bias. A team that wins 45-3 in Week 4 jumps 8 spots. A team that grinds out a 13-10 road win drops 3 spots. The margin of victory is weighted over the quality of the win.
  2. Brand bias. Cowboys, Packers, and Steelers are consistently ranked higher than their records justify. Small-market teams are ranked lower.
  3. Narrative over data. Rankings reward storylines, not statistical profiles. A team with a flashy quarterback gets ranked higher than a team with elite defense and average offense.

What actually predicts playoff success (Source: Football Outsiders DVOA):

  • DVOA (Defense-adjusted Value Over Average) has a 0.71 correlation with playoff success. Almost double the correlation of subjective power rankings.
  • Point differential through Week 8 has a 0.65 correlation with final record. Better than any human ranking.
  • Simple expected wins (based on points scored and allowed, Pythagorean expectation) outperforms expert rankings.

Sources:

  • ESPN — historical power rankings archive
  • Football Outsiders — DVOA methodology and data
  • Pro Football Reference — Pythagorean expected wins
Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 6:21 PM

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