Last week we looked at how
Big 12 teams fared in terms of yards per play. This week, we turn our attention to how the season played out in terms of the Adjusted Pythagorean Record, or APR. For an in-depth look at APR,
click here. If you didn’t feel like clicking, here is the Reader’s Digest version. APR looks at how well a team scores and prevents touchdowns. Non-offensive touchdowns, field goals, extra points, and safeties are excluded. The ratio of offensive touchdowns to touchdowns allowed is converted into a winning percentage. Pretty simple actually.
Once again, here are the 2024 Big 12 standings.
And here are the APR standings with conference rank in offensive touchdowns, touchdowns allowed, and APR in parentheses. This includes conference games only with the championship game excluded.
Finally, Big 12 teams are sorted by the difference between their actual number of wins and their expected number of wins according to APR.

I use a game and a half as a somewhat arbitrary demarcation to determine if a team's conference record differed significantly from their APR. By that standard, six teams, or roughly forty percent of the conference, saw their actual record differ significantly from their APR. BYU, Houston, and West Virginia exceeded their APR, while Cincinnati, Oklahoma State, and UCF underachieved relative to their APR. BYU finished with a +8 turnover margin in Big 12 play which buoyed them to a tie atop the
conference standings. Houston was 2-0 in close conference games, which is not an outrageous record, but the Cougars were blown out in all six of their league defeats. All their Big 12 losses came by double digits with the average margin of defeat totaling more than 21 points per game. West Virginia finished 3-0 in one-score Big 12 games, and like Houston, all their losses came in blowout fashion. The Mountaineers four conference losses came by an average of nearly 23 points. As for the underachievers, Cincinnati finished 1-3 in one-score Big 12 games while Oklahoma State was 0-3 in such contests. Oklahoma State also finished with the worst in-conference turnover margin of any Big 12 team (-11). As for UCF, we went over the multitude of reasons for their underperformance in YPP last week and those same reasons apply here.
Free Fallin'
A
couple weeks ago, we examined teams that made dramatic improvements in their conference records (specifically Indiana) and what that might mean for their fortunes heading into 2025. This week, we're going to look at the opposite. That is, teams that saw significant declines in their conference record. From the beginning of the BCS era (1998) through 2023, 17 power conference teams saw their conference winning percentage decline by more than .500 in one season. Those 17 teams are listed chronologically in the table below.
With
NIL, less restrictive
transfer rules, and conference expansion, the trend seems to be accelerating as an incredible five power conference teams saw their conference winning percentage decline by more than .500 between 2023 and 2024. Two of those teams play in the Big 12 (one used to), but our focus is going to be on one in particular.

Mike Gundy, along with
Kyle Whittingham, is the second longest tenured FBS coach (behind
Kirk Ferentz). 2024 was Gundy's twentieth in Stillwater and it was
arguably his worst. It was definitely his worst relative to
preseason expectations. The Cowboys finished winless in conference play for the first time since
1994. After playing in the conference championship game the year prior, Oklahoma State saw their conference record decline by seven games (.778 in winning percentage). Can Gundy pull out of the nose dive and revitalize the program or are the Cowboys in for a continued slide into irrelevance? To answer that question, let's look at how the previous 17 teams fared the season after their precipitous decline.

The good news for Oklahoma State is that things will probably not get any worse. Collectively, those 17 teams increased their cumulative conference winning percentage from .184 to .464. That translates to about two and half more wins on average. Overall, 14 of the 17 teams improved their conference record the following season, three held steady, and none declined.
If nothing else, Oklahoma State should marginally improve in 2025. However, Gundy's situation is unique. As I mentioned earlier, he has been in his current position for two decades. What if we just looked at coaches from the previous list that had been on the job for at least a decade before suffering a precipitous decline in conference record? Four coaches (but five instances) fit the criteria. And the results are a mixed bag.

Paul Pasqualoni did not have a losing season at Syracuse until 2002, his twelfth in upstate New York. His first eleven seasons saw the Orange finish ranked seven times and even win a few Big East titles. The Orange got back to six wins in 2003, but their conference record did not improve and Syracuse did not finish with a winning record for the rest of his tenure, topping out at 6-6 twice. One season after playing for the national title,
Mack Brown and Texas finished with a losing record in his thirteenth season in Austin. The Longhorns improved slightly in 2011, but they ceded control of the Big 12 to Oklahoma and lost at least four games in each of his final three seasons. After qualifying for the College Football Playoff in 2015, Michigan State won just three games in
Mark Dantonio's tenth season. The Spartans bounced back quickly, winning ten games in 2017, but posted back-to-back 7-6 campaigns in Dantonio's final two seasons. And finally, we have
Captain Boomerang himself,
Pat Fitgerald, who pulled the feat off two times in four seasons. In Fitgerald's thirteenth season in Evanston, the Wildcats played in the
Big 10 Championship Game. The next season, they finished 3-9. They bounced back in the Covid-shortened 2020 season and again played in the Big 10 Championship Game. However, once the world returned to relative normalcy, the Wildcats returned to the bottom of the Big 10 standings in 2021. The Wildcats stayed bad in 2022 and Fitgerald
was fired for off the field issues prior to the 2023 season.
While Oklahoma State should improved in 2025, Gundy's best days may be behind him. The other long-tenured coaches on this list were able to rebound somewhat, but they were never fully able to pull out of the skid. Each coach ended their tenure with mediocre or worse records. Perhaps Gundy can defy this historical trend, but I would wager the best run in modern
Oklahoma State football history is likely over.
Thanks as always for your continued support. Next week, we pause our football recaps for one week. Instead, we'll offer you three posts with some NCAA Tournament bracket advice. If you make any cash based on that advice, we gladly accept donations.