ecasadoSBU wrote:I think so far Georgetown's strategy is working like a charm.
When they won tonight against Maine it said "Georgetown first 5-0 start since the 2010-11 season" in FS1. Perception is important. Outsiders won't know the wins came from playing crappy teams. People like teams that WIN even if the diehards are pissed. I think Ewing was smart not loading up on major opponents. Right now the perception is that Georgetown is trending upward with one of its stars coaching the team. Keep loading on the wins and be 8-0 before Syracuse match up @ home. The good thing is that the Big East bails GT out of a weak schedule until they catch up.
Now, imagine they beat Syracuse at home. All that weak schedule talk will be forgotten with a victory against the Orange.
Georgetown and Ewing just need to make sure they don't lose any of these cupcakes. A loss looks ugly and hurts the conference. But if they win them all I think the strategy will work better than DePaul
To the casual, basketball fan, their (Georgetown) record may catch the eye. But, to the true hoop head, it won't fly, as they know who Georgetown is beating up on. Even if the true hoop head isn't watching their games, they'll quickly go look up Georgetown's opposition to find out. The casual fan won't do so, but hoop heads like us will look up the results.
FS1 is just promoting a team in the Big East, as the Big East is their "money" conference. Again, it might work with the extremely, casual fan, but not with the true hoop heads. I still don't understand this perception that Ewing should've or had to load up on 10 cupcakes. You do know the Hoyas could've played 4 or 5 other schools, and none of them had to be "major opponents." That's a weak argument and has tons of holes in it.
Just decent or even average opponents would've sufficed. Remember, this is the worst schedule in the last 13 years in all of college basketball. The only one worst was a school coming off a murder scandal.
The weak scheduling not only kills their RPI, but can drag down the RPI of the conference as a whole. It will also hurt their chances of any postseason bids (NCAA or NIT), if they were to overachieve in conference play.
Say, if Depaul goes into Big East play at 8-4 or 7-5 and Georgetown goes into conference play at 10-1, right? DePaul would likely be in better position for an NIT bid than Georgetown, if they both--for, instance--were to end up being 7-11 in conference play. A much, better strength of schedule.
In today's college basketball, most teams in Power 5 conferences are being challenged around 4 or 5 times before conference play. It can possibly get a team prepared for conference play, and it's always a good idea to put your team in a position to make the tournament each season.
Beating Syracuse won't quell the weak scheduling talk. It would only raise it because beating a potential NCAA tournament team in Syracuse would make some people wonder what could've been with a better schedule. Besides, Syracuse looks to have a decent team, but they aren't some juggernaut of a team this season. At least, not at this juncture, that's not the case. They're certainly beatable, and I feel it could turn out to be a decent game between them and the Hoyas.