Premo-Porretta Power Poll
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (July 2025) |
The Premo-Porretta Power Poll is a retroactive end-of-year ranking for American college basketball teams competing in the 1895–96 through the 1947–48 seasons.[1]
The Premo-Porretta Polls are intended to serve collectively as a source of information regarding the relative standings of college basketball teams within given seasons during the early decades of the sport. No systematic end-of-season national tournament existed in college basketball until the founding of the National Invitation Tournament in 1938 and the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship Tournament in 1939, the latter of which determines the NCAA champion for a given season. Furthermore, no regular, recognized national polling took place for college basketball prior to the establishment of the Associated Press poll and the coaches poll in the 1948–49 and 1950–51 seasons, respectively.[1]
Background
[edit]Patrick Premo, a professor emeritus of accounting at St. Bonaventure University, and Phil Porretta, a former computer programmer, have each spent more than 40 years[timeframe?]—first separately, and later collaboratively—researching the early history of college basketball.[1][2] Their archival work has often uncovered game results that had not previously been reported in books and basketball program media guides, such as the results of competition against AAU, semi-professional, club, and YMCA teams.[1] Whereas Bill Schroeder of the Helms Athletic Foundation retroactively named only his choice of the top team nationally for each season from 1900–01 through 1941–42 (and then annually selected a national champion for each season from 1942–43 through 1981–82),[3] Premo and Porretta have used the data they have compiled to compare teams against one another and assign rankings to multiple teams for each season—15 teams for the 1895–96 season, 20 teams for each season from 1896–97 through 1908–09, and 25 teams for each season from 1909–10 through 1947–48.[1]
Premo and Porretta first published results of their early collaboration in 1995.[where?][better source needed] Most recently, in 2009, their full rankings were included with the core information for each season prior to 1949 in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia.[1]
National champions
[edit]Pre-NCAA tournament champions
[edit]
|
|
† NIT champion for that season |
Pre-Associated Press poll champions
[edit]Year | Team | Record |
---|---|---|
1938–39 | Long Island † | 24–0 |
1939–40 | Indiana ‡ | 20–3 |
1940–41 | Long Island † | 25–2 |
1941–42 | Stanford ‡ | 28–4 |
1942–43 | Illinois | 17–1 |
1943–44 | Army | 15–0 |
1944–45 | Iowa | 17–1 |
1945–46 | Oklahoma A&M ‡ | 31–2 |
1946–47 | Kentucky | 34–3 |
1947–48 | Kentucky ‡ | 36–3 |
† NIT champion for that season ‡ NCAA tournament champion for that season |
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Editors of ESPN (2009). ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia. New York: ESPN Books; Ballantine Books. pp. 526–587. ISBN 978-0-345-51392-2.
The Early Years: The Premo-Porretta Polls (1895–96 through 1947–48 seasons) provide a rare snapshot of the sport's hierarchy in the years before national polling. Pat Premo, a professor emeritus at St. Bonaventure University, and Phil Porretta, a former computer programmer, have 40 years' experience each researching college basketball games. Their archival work, first published in 1995, has helped them retroactively determine rankings, because they often uncover game results that were not reported in record books or media guides, including competition against YMCA, club and AAU teams.
- ^ Smarr, Emilee (March 13, 2025). "Did you know Alabama basketball won a national championship? That's OK: UA didn't either". The Tuscaloosa News.
Decades ago, a couple of sports junkies − a professor and a computer programmer − got together to dedicate their spare time to determining who would have cut down championship nets before the NCAA Tournament began. [...] Premo died in 2021 and Porretta two years later.
- ^ Jenkins, Dan (September 11, 1967). "This Year The Fight Will Be In The Open". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved May 3, 2015.