San Francisco St. (5-17)


San Francisco St.'s opponents in order of rating:
     Team            Rating        Score  Effect  W- L
   ---------------   ------       ------- ------ -----
   St. Mary's, Cal.   767.5 LOSS   52-86         22- 2 Division I
   Cal Poly-Pomona    618.4 LOSS   59-73         14- 5 Division II
   Cal Poly-Pomona    618.4 LOSS   54-65         14- 5 Division II
   Chico State        617.5 LOSS   66-72         17- 5 Division II
   Chico State        617.5 LOSS   44-61         17- 5 Division II
   Concordia (CA)     615.5 LOSS   75-90          6- 1 NAIA I
   Humboldt St.       613.7 LOSS   70-87         15- 5 Division II
   CSU-SanBernardino  604.0 LOSS   57-84         12- 7 Division II
   CSU-SanBernardino  604.0 LOSS   60-67         12- 7 Division II
   CSU-DominguezHill  596.4 LOSS   55-60         11- 7 Division II
   Sonoma St.         592.1 LOSS   69-81         12- 8 Division II
   CSU-Los Angeles    591.2 LOSS   71-82         12- 7 Division II
   CSU-Stanislaus     591.2 LOSS   65-82         12- 8 Division II
   CSU-Stanislaus     591.2 LOSS   68-72         12- 8 Division II
   UC San Diego       562.8 LOSS   50-72          9-12 Division II
   Simon Fraser       519.1 LOSS   69-81          6-13 Division II
   Alaska             479.2 LOSS   85-88          4-19 Division II
>> San Francisco St.  524.4 <<                    5-17 Division II
   Jacksonville St.   584.4 WIN    71-68   ++    10-16 Division I
   UC San Diego       562.8 WIN    56-45   ++     9-12 Division II
   CSU-East Bay       549.3 WIN    78-72   ++     7-12 Division II
   CSU-Monterey Bay   496.9 WIN    92-82    +     2-17 Division II
   Academy of Art     479.7 WIN    93-61    +     3-19 Division II

Games against teams within about 100 rating points are often the best indicators of a team's actual strength.

"Effect" ranges from "---", a game that caused a large decrease in the team rating, to "+++", a game that produced a large increase in rating.

Note that wins over very weak teams may actually hurt a team's rating (the opposite is true for losses to very good teams).