admin wrote:“What does it mean for schools outside the Power 5 model, with the exception of the Big East, moving forward? A lot fewer chances to earn NCAA Tournament bids on an annual basis.
Moving to 20 league games is going to change the entire model,” one Big Ten athletic director told FanRag Sports last week. “They want to wipe out the non-Power 5 schools from getting at-large bids completely. Moving to 20 games makes that more of a realistic possibility.”
https://www.fanragsports.com/trickle-do ... schedules/
stever20 wrote:the thing that's so weird to me with this is unless the committee is going to start really taking 17-15 teams again, I don't see how this is going to do what they want it to do. I mean, looking at the MAAC their 6th and 7th place teams finished with 10-10 records. So adding in even 7-4 OOC records, they would be 17-14 regular season. That's awfully precarious in making the NCAA tourney. At some level, the records matter.
Savannah Jay wrote:stever20 wrote:the thing that's so weird to me with this is unless the committee is going to start really taking 17-15 teams again, I don't see how this is going to do what they want it to do. I mean, looking at the MAAC their 6th and 7th place teams finished with 10-10 records. So adding in even 7-4 OOC records, they would be 17-14 regular season. That's awfully precarious in making the NCAA tourney. At some level, the records matter.
Someone call a doctor...I think I agree with Stever.
A few articles I've read stated that the mid-majors are going to lose games to the football 5 schools because F5 schools go to 20 conference games...but doesn't that mean some F5 teams on the NCAA "margin" are going to (potentially) be trading buy games (or games they expect to win) for a game against conference foes, potentially very good ones?
I VERY randomly picked Illinois' schedule this year. They have non-con games against DePaul, Wake Forest, and Missouri from major conferences. Then UNLV, New Mexico State, Marshall, and Austin Peay from "mid majors." And the some buy games. If they add two conference games and you are their athletic director trying to get to 20 wins or some other threshold, which games would you drop? If you drop Wake and Missouri, maybe your win total is unaffected but the mid-majors haven't been hurt at all (contrary to much public opinion). However, if they drop almost any other games, the mid-majors are affected but they are risking having a worse record because the two new Big 10 opponents will likely be stronger than the 2 games they are dropping, which seems like it would hurt their record and chances for an at large...which, to Stever's point ( you are 1 for 8,194, baby!) records have to mean something. It sure can help their RPI but if they trade 2 wins for 2 losses, will it matter much in the end?
admin wrote:“What does it mean for schools outside the Power 5 model, with the exception of the Big East, moving forward? A lot fewer chances to earn NCAA Tournament bids on an annual basis.
Moving to 20 league games is going to change the entire model,” one Big Ten athletic director told FanRag Sports last week. “They want to wipe out the non-Power 5 schools from getting at-large bids completely. Moving to 20 games makes that more of a realistic possibility.”
https://www.fanragsports.com/trickle-do ... schedules/
CrawfishBucket wrote:admin wrote:“What does it mean for schools outside the Power 5 model, with the exception of the Big East, moving forward? A lot fewer chances to earn NCAA Tournament bids on an annual basis.
Moving to 20 league games is going to change the entire model,” one Big Ten athletic director told FanRag Sports last week. “They want to wipe out the non-Power 5 schools from getting at-large bids completely. Moving to 20 games makes that more of a realistic possibility.”
https://www.fanragsports.com/trickle-do ... schedules/
I think 11 is inevitable.
Honestly, Rhode Island may be the sneaky good move that's not really being talked about.
They've quietly become the bellcow of the A10, as coaches at both VCU and Dayton get poached.
The Rhode Island brand name fits in beautifully with Providence being a leader in the conference.
This move would improve the strength of the conference from Day 1.
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