Northeast Power Rankings Week 2 | The Boneyard

Northeast Power Rankings Week 2

shizzle787

King Shizzle DCCLXXXVII of the Cesspool
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After a considerable amount of flack for not including WVU, I will include them going forward.

Post Week 2 Power Rankings:

1. Penn State (2-0)
2. Pitt (2-0)
3. Maryland (2-0)
4. Rutgers (2-0)
5. Navy (2-0)
6. Boston College (1-1)
7. Army (1-1)
8. Syracuse (1-1)
9. Temple (2-0)
10. UConn (1-1)
11. WVU (1-1)
12. Buffalo (1-1)
13. Delaware (1-1)
14. UMass (0-2)
 
After a considerable amount of flack for not including WVU, I will include them going forward.

Post Week 2 Power Rankings:

1. Penn State (2-0)
2. Pitt (2-0)
3. Maryland (2-0)
4. Rutgers (2-0)
5. Navy (2-0)
6. Boston College (1-1)
7. Army (1-1)
8. Syracuse (1-1)
9. Temple (2-0)
10. UConn (1-1)
11. WVU (1-1)
12. Buffalo (1-1)
13. Delaware (1-1)
14. UMass (0-2)

CBS Sports Rankings in your order, and I threw in Marshall

3 Penn State
39 Pitt
56 Maryland
51 Rutgers
49 Navy
67 bcu
100 Army
48 cuse
106 Temple
69 UConn
70 WVU
101 Buffalo
130 what did Delaware
131 Marshall
134 UMass

I don't include Virginia but some maps do including the US Fish & Wildlife Service so maybe just the Hokies

55 Virginia Tech
58 Virginia
64 James Madison
98 Liberty

 
Would you classify West Virginia in the “Northeast” because of their history within the Big East?

They were south of the Mason Dixon, and Appalachia is certainly not Northeast.
 
Would you classify West Virginia in the “Northeast” because of their history within the Big East?

They were south of the Mason Dixon, and Appalachia is certainly not Northeast.
WV did fight for the north. And technically Appalachia goes all the way to Canada. I don't want to argue about it though.
 
Would you classify West Virginia in the “Northeast” because of their history within the Big East?

They were south of the Mason Dixon, and Appalachia is certainly not Northeast.
the Mason Dixon line mattered over 200 years ago. today is a different story. Cal, Stanford, SMU are in the ACC. We can surely include WV in the Northeast. Aw heck we can pull in half the mid-west if we want to!
 
Bring back long Connecticut! Bring back the Western Reserve!
didn't connecticut used to stretch all the way to present-day ohio or something? i swear i saw an oldddd map once, with "connecticut" territory out in strange strange areas in the midwest.
 
didn't connecticut used to stretch all the way to present-day ohio or something? i swear i saw an oldddd map once, with "connecticut" territory out in strange strange areas in the midwest.
Yes, there is a section of Ohio that was called the Western reserve. It's disputed, but CT went all the way to the Pacific at one time.
 
Would you classify West Virginia in the “Northeast” because of their history within the Big East?

They were south of the Mason Dixon, and Appalachia is certainly not Northeast.
Here we go again.

It's (barely) further east than Pittsburgh, further north than Navy & Maryland and as far north as Delaware.

Personally I don't believe any of are really northeast but if you include one you need to include them all.
 
The Connecticut Western Reserve was a portion of land claimed by the Colony of Connecticut and later by the state of Connecticut in what is now mostly the northeastern region of Ohio. Warren, Ohio was the Historic Capital in Trumbull County. The Reserve had been granted to the Colony under the terms of its charter by King Charles II.<a


We should get some credit for this AAU university


Western Reserve College, the college of the Connecticut Western Reserve, was founded in 1826 in Hudson, Ohio, as the Western Reserve College and Preparatory School by the Presbyterian Church. Western Reserve College, or "Reserve" as it was popularly called, was the first college in northern Ohio. The school was called "Yale of the West"; its campus, now that of the Western Reserve Academy, imitated that of Yale. It had the same motto, "Lux et Veritas" (Light and Truth), the same entrance standards, and nearly the same curriculum. It was different from Yale in that it was a manual labor college, in which students were required to perform manual labor, seen as psychologically beneficial.
 

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