Since 1967, when the NFL went to a multiple division format (as opposed to only two divisions) there has never been a division that has had all its member teams have a winning percentage greater than .500.
Between 1933-1966, when the NFL had only two divisions, East and West, this mathematical oddity happened only once. In 1935 the NFL West had all its teams achieve a better than .500 win percent. Please note prior to 1950 ties did not count in NFL win percent calculations. The NFL West records in 1935 were:
1935 NFL West
Detroit Lions 7-3-2 .700
Green Bay Packers 8-4 .667
Chicago Bears 6-4-2 .600
Chicago Cardinals 6-4-2 .600
Prior to 1933 the NFL had only one division and all the teams in the league were part of it.
While no modern era division has not had all teams achieve a greater than .500 win percent, there have been five instances where all teams in a division have been .500 or better. These were:
2007 AFC South
Indianapolis Colts 13-3 .813
Jacksonville Jaguars 11-5 .688
Tennessee Titans 10-6 .625
Houston Texans 8-8 .500
2007 NFC East
Dallas Cowboys 13-3 .813
New York Giants 10-6 .625
Washington Redskins 9-7 .563
Philadelphia Eagles 8-8 .500
2002 AFC East
New York Jets 9-7 .563
Miami Dolphins 9-7 .563
New England Patriots 9-7 .563
Buffalo Bills 8-8 .500
2002 AFC West
Oakland Raiders 11-5 .688
Denver Broncos 9-7 .563
Kansas City Chiefs 8-8 .500
San Diego Chargers 8-8 .500
1995 AFC West
Kansas City Chiefs 13-3 .813
San Diego Chargers 9-7 .563
Oakland Raiders 8-8 .500
Denver Broncos 8-8 .500
Seattle Seahawks 8-8 .500
The first determining factor for the playoffs is whether you won your division. Division winners get automatic playoff berths, regardless of their record. Overall records only come into play for tiebreakers.
There record is 16-13 over Pac 10 teams.
There are two conferences in the NFL and each conference is broken into four divisions. Six teams from each conference make he playoffs. In each conference, the four division winners advance to the playoffs and the two teams that were not division winners that have the best regular season record, called wild cards, also advance to the playoffs.Six teams from the NFC and six teams from the AFC make the play-offs. There are three division winners and three wildcard teams from each conference.
To qualify for the playoffs in the NBA you have to finish as one of the top eight teams in your conference. Winning your division doesn't necessarily get you a playoff berth, as another team from a different division could potentially win more games during the regular season and have the advantage over you record-wise in securing the final playoff spot.
It truly depends on what you consider Pro. Some consider Division 1 pro, as well as division 2. The other problem is that many teams have been dropping out due to economic issues. Though if it helps any. In the NPPL in 2007, there where over 100 teams in the Division 1 trounament.
Only in the 2008 playoffs. The CFL has an East and a West division, comprising 4 teams apiece. The team with the best regular season record in each division automatically gains a berth in their division final, while the 2nd and 3rd place teams play off in the division semi-final. If the 4th place team from either division has a better regular season record than the 3rd place team from the opposite division, that team "crosses over" to play in that division's semi-final. This means that any two teams in the league can potentially meet one another in the Grey Cup Championship game. To use the 2008 example, although Edmonton (10-8) finished in 4th place in the CFL West division in 2008, their overall record was better than that of Toronto (4-14) who finished 3rd in the East. As per the CFL playoff format, Edmonton "crossed over" to play 2nd place East team Winnipeg (8-10) in the East semi-final. They won that game, but lost to the Montreal Alouettes in the East final. Had Edmonton defeated Montreal in the East final, it could have set up an all-West (indeed, all-Alberta) Grey Cup game, as the Calgary later earned a berth in the Grey Cup by defeating B.C. in the West final.
There are 336 teams in men's college basketball.
It is not a requirement, so nope. That's not to mean that they haven't over the years.
Many schools. Over 300. Probably between 5-15 teams in each conference.
Because the game has not only affiliated teams and clubs but there are school college, university, Company teams, Forces teams, youth, junior and female teams that over 2,000,000 play
You'd actually be surprised how often this happens. I'm an alumni of the University of Delaware (1-AA), and for the second time in 4 years Delaware has defeated a division 1-A opponent (Navy, 2003 & 2007). There are a lot of 1-A programs that are absolutely terrible and play in terrible. When you take into account 2 of the marquee 1-AA over 1-A victories this year (Appalachian over Mich. and ND State over Minn.) you have 3 this year alone, and this is only what I know of off the top of my head, there is possibly more this season.
For major BCS conference teams, the Texas Longhorns have the best record at 103-25 through the 2008 season. Boise State, a Division I school not in a BCS conference is 102-24. If you want to know the best record regardless of the level, by far, the best college football record in the past 10 years belongs to the Division III Mount Union Purple Raiders with 111 wins and only 3 losses.