BEX wrote:Bonnies were CO-CHAMPIONS of their League with a 29 rpi. They beat the A-10 tournament winner TWICE. Clearly there were some shenanigans with the Tulsa invite. 0fer 59 in bracket predictions? Fix was in.
stever20 wrote:BEX wrote:Bonnies were CO-CHAMPIONS of their League with a 29 rpi. They beat the A-10 tournament winner TWICE. Clearly there were some shenanigans with the Tulsa invite. 0fer 59 in bracket predictions? Fix was in.
and like they said the RPI isn't the sole determinant any longer. Remember the post that someone put on here a month or so ago.....
St Bonnie's did nothing OOC. Best OOC win was Ohio at #81. Tulsa had 2 wins better than that in Wichita and Iona, and they also beat Ohio themselves.
Quick question for you. Should Temple have gone to the tourney last year?
hoops22 wrote:stever20 wrote:BEX wrote:Bonnies were CO-CHAMPIONS of their League with a 29 rpi. They beat the A-10 tournament winner TWICE. Clearly there were some shenanigans with the Tulsa invite. 0fer 59 in bracket predictions? Fix was in.
and like they said the RPI isn't the sole determinant any longer. Remember the post that someone put on here a month or so ago.....
St Bonnie's did nothing OOC. Best OOC win was Ohio at #81. Tulsa had 2 wins better than that in Wichita and Iona, and they also beat Ohio themselves.
Quick question for you. Should Temple have gone to the tourney last year?
If you're going to use the RPI's of a teams opponents as justification for your argument, shouldn't the RPI of the team itself play a major role? It's a joke the Bonnies didn't get in with an RPI of 29. As far as bad loses go, La salle wasn't a good loss, but Little Rock and Oral Roberts weren't good ones for Tulsa either. I honestly feel the determining factor was Tulsa had a friend on the commitee, and St Bona didn't. And that stinks.
BEX wrote:Bonnies were CO-CHAMPIONS of their League with a 29 rpi. They beat the A-10 tournament winner TWICE. Clearly there were some shenanigans with the Tulsa invite. 0fer 59 in bracket predictions? Fix was in.
stever20 wrote:ok but where was SB's buy game?
Also look at the difference between the AAC and A10 in terms of who they can get to come play them at home.
marquette wrote:I don't mean to be mean to Bonas, but I doubt they have the money for that buy game. They are probably in one of the tougher situations in D1. Very small school, not a huge population base to draw fans from, too good to get paid for going on the road, not a big enough name to draw marquee home/homes. It is a really tough spot to be in. They recently had to put seats between their student section and the court in order to raise revenue, which I believe was supposed to make something like an extra $50k a year. That's maybe enough to afford a decent buy game.
xbr1 wrote:marquette wrote:I don't mean to be mean to Bonas, but I doubt they have the money for that buy game. They are probably in one of the tougher situations in D1. Very small school, not a huge population base to draw fans from, too good to get paid for going on the road, not a big enough name to draw marquee home/homes. It is a really tough spot to be in. They recently had to put seats between their student section and the court in order to raise revenue, which I believe was supposed to make something like an extra $50k a year. That's maybe enough to afford a decent buy game.
Bonaventure has the money they got from Xavier when they left all those NCAA credits moving to the BE.
DudeAnon wrote:XUFan09 wrote:JohnW22 wrote:How can the committee value top 50 rpi wins but not value RPI rankings for teams. Makes no sense
RPI is not a precise measure and therefore shouldn't be used directly to rank a team. Hoeever, it's close enough that it can be used indirectly to say how a team fared against different tiers of opponents, as that allows for margin of error.
Ranking systems like Kenpom are more precise and really, I think one of them should be used. The advanced metrics do a better job of indicating how well a team is playing, so they better represent how tough it is to beat that team.
Can someone explain to me what makes RPI an imprecise metric? And how Kenpom (which rewards blowouts) over close wins would be better?
herodotus wrote:xbr1 wrote:marquette wrote:I don't mean to be mean to Bonas, but I doubt they have the money for that buy game. They are probably in one of the tougher situations in D1. Very small school, not a huge population base to draw fans from, too good to get paid for going on the road, not a big enough name to draw marquee home/homes. It is a really tough spot to be in. They recently had to put seats between their student section and the court in order to raise revenue, which I believe was supposed to make something like an extra $50k a year. That's maybe enough to afford a decent buy game.
Bonaventure has the money they got from Xavier when they left all those NCAA credits moving to the BE.
You're misunderstanding what we mean by "buy games" with regard to Bona. We're not talking about Bona buying games. Bona can't buy the types of games that will help them get into the tournament. Bona can't even get home and homes against those teams. We're talking about Bona being the "bought" team. In other words, Bona going to Kentucky, with no return game. The problem Bona has, is that those are guaranteed losses, and you just can't book too many of them. If you step down to second tier P5 teams, they're only looking to schedule a handful of risky games, even at home. Teams like Bona, Creighton, and Tulsa are risky to schedule. No one will be impressed if Arizona beats those teams, but everyone will be criticizing if those teams pull an upset. Thus, the top teams will only schedule sure wins at home, along with a game or two vs a blue blood that won't really hurt them if they lose.
herodotus wrote:xbr1 wrote:marquette wrote:I don't mean to be mean to Bonas, but I doubt they have the money for that buy game. They are probably in one of the tougher situations in D1. Very small school, not a huge population base to draw fans from, too good to get paid for going on the road, not a big enough name to draw marquee home/homes. It is a really tough spot to be in. They recently had to put seats between their student section and the court in order to raise revenue, which I believe was supposed to make something like an extra $50k a year. That's maybe enough to afford a decent buy game.
Bonaventure has the money they got from Xavier when they left all those NCAA credits moving to the BE.
You're misunderstanding what we mean by "buy games" with regard to Bona. We're not talking about Bona buying games. Bona can't buy the types of games that will help them get into the tournament. Bona can't even get home and homes against those teams. We're talking about Bona being the "bought" team. In other words, Bona going to Kentucky, with no return game. The problem Bona has, is that those are guaranteed losses, and you just can't book too many of them. If you step down to second tier P5 teams, they're only looking to schedule a handful of risky games, even at home. Teams like Bona, Creighton, and Tulsa are risky to schedule. No one will be impressed if Arizona beats those teams, but everyone will be criticizing if those teams pull an upset. Thus, the top teams will only schedule sure wins at home, along with a game or two vs a blue blood that won't really hurt them if they lose.
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