kayako wrote:Savannah Jay wrote:Put another way, if you were ranking those teams in the order that you would want to play them to advance, I would want Minny first, Maryland second, then Wisconsin the team I'd least want my team to play. And that's the opposite order of their seeding.
I am going to do a 360 and actually think the committee did our conference a huge favor. Xavier gets very beatable #6 seed, Butler's 2nd round opponent stinks, and it matters little who gets fed to Nova in the 2nd round.
stever20 wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:I guess my biggest gripe with looking at OOC SOS as part of a RPI # is that numbers can get easily skewed by outlier type games. When MN plays a team with an RPI of 200, it is so much better than UW playing a team with an RPI of 300. On the court they are both cupcakes. You can't tell me that MD challenged itself more OOC when it stayed on its home court for its toughest 5 games and UW went out and played tough teams in tough places. Those games are all but negated by whether MD played teams in the high 100 & 200's and UW sprinkled in a few games in the 300's. I still contend they challenged themselves more than MD did. And UW performed better than both MD and MN in conference and the BTT. And yet the committee sees them as 9/12 spots worse than MN and 5/8 worse than MD. If that is mostly because UW played one or two more games vs the teams in the 300's then it was a disservice to UW, VT and Nova.
But should you get rewarded by just scheduling those tough road/neutral games?
Also a few sub 300 games would be 2 or 3. 5 of them is 38% of the OOC schedule. You know when you schedule Central Arkansas, Chicago St, Prairie View, Idaho St, and Florida A&M that you are getting dregs.
I think part of your problem with it is the name of the team. It's because of Wisconsin's reputation. If the names were switched, I don't think you would have had anywhere near the problem with the matchups.
stever20 wrote:I look at the way the NCAA calculates their SOS as a total joke- because they look at just win loss record. NCAA thinks Wichita St at 29-4 is better than Kansas at 28-4. Ignorant.
looking at Nova vs Minnesota-
NCAA way- #60 vs 29
way normally accounted where opponents record is 2/3 and opponents opponents record is 1/3- 41 vs 27
you take into account all games-
NCAA way- 26 vs 21
normal way- 25 vs 23
when it's that close, I just think of them as equal....
Nova- 4 top 50 OOC games, 6 top 100 games, 8 top 150 games, 5 sub 150 games.
Min- 4 top 50 OOC games, 4 top 100 games, 10 top 150 games, 3 sub 150 games.
Wisconsin's problem is that they had 2 top 50 games, and they lost them both OOC. And a lot of what Wisconsin was counting on preseason OOC totally fell apart. End of the day- THAT's the story I feel.
Bill Marsh wrote:The unfortunate torn ACL for Oregon's Chris Boucher opens up a path for Creighton to the Sweet 16. This is a terrible break for a good kid with a challenging history, whose story was featured in SI several months ago. Boucher was the Ducks' leading shot blocker, #2 rebounder, and #3 scorer, a 6-10 forward who could step outside and pop 3's as well as blocking shots and shooting 63% on 2's. He will definitely be missed. His absence makes this a winnable game for the Jays and one they should now be favored in.
stever20 wrote:here's the thing though. Why should Wisconsin get credit for just scheduling games? Minnesota beat 2 teams better than Wisconsin did OOC, with 1 of them neutral.
When you combine with their conference play-
vs top 50 teams..... road neutral.
Wisconsin 1-6
Minnesota 4-4
That's a pretty huge difference, wouldn't you say? That metric to me is just huge. vs the top 50 teams away from home.
kayako wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:The unfortunate torn ACL for Oregon's Chris Boucher opens up a path for Creighton to the Sweet 16. This is a terrible break for a good kid with a challenging history, whose story was featured in SI several months ago. Boucher was the Ducks' leading shot blocker, #2 rebounder, and #3 scorer, a 6-10 forward who could step outside and pop 3's as well as blocking shots and shooting 63% on 2's. He will definitely be missed. His absence makes this a winnable game for the Jays and one they should now be favored in.
I was just thinking of how the illogical B1G ranking affects our teams, but yeah Oregon may not even make it to the 2nd round. Do you think Boucher's absence hurts Oregon more than Watson's absence? Both teams still have talented players, but man, Creighton's a toothless tiger without Watson.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:Just somestever20 wrote:here's the thing though. Why should Wisconsin get credit for just scheduling games? Minnesota beat 2 teams better than Wisconsin did OOC, with 1 of them neutral.
When you combine with their conference play-
vs top 50 teams..... road neutral.
Wisconsin 1-6
Minnesota 4-4
That's a pretty huge difference, wouldn't you say? That metric to me is just huge. vs the top 50 teams away from home.
UW's record on the road/neutral vs the Top 50 is 2-5, not 1-6. Their record vs the Top 100 is 7-7. MN is 4-4 vs Top 50 and 6-5 vs Top 100. So UW played 3 more games away vs the Top 100 and still finished with a better record than MN. And I'm not even arguing that UW should be the 5 seed and MN the 8. I think they are both probably 6/7's. It's just that UW is way underseeded and MN way overseeded which is my point.
Comment on the following (if you don't mind)...
Pomeroy Rank:
UW - 23
MN - 33
MD - 45
Is that a good metric in looking at seeding in your opinion? Why? Why not?
BPI:
UW - 21
MN - 40
MD - 50
Is it an acceptable metric? If not, why? BPI takes things like major injuries into account. Shouldn't Nova's win at Creighton with a healthy Watson count for more than Xavier's when Watson was out?
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