herodotus wrote:The problem with using margin of victory is that it often lies. Let's say two games end with a 10 point margin. Same thing right? Wrong! Game one had the loser with a one point lead with 1:30 left in the game. The winning team hits a three to take a 2 point lead with 1:20 left. After a miss by the loser, the winner drains another three with 50 seconds left. The loser sends the winner to the foul line 3 times in a desperate attempt to catch up. They make all 6 shots, while the loser misses long threes. Final score 80-70. In the second game, the winning team has a double digit lead from the middle of the first half on. They lead by 25 with 5:30 left, when the coach empties his bench. The scrubs are outscored by 15 points the rest of the game. In KenPom, these results are identical. These are not rare results, endings like this happen all the time. Thus, KenPom rewards teams that run up the score, and punishes teams that keep trying when a game gets away from them in the last 2 minutes.
stever20 wrote:Creighton and Tulsa seem to be scheduling pretty damn well... I mean, I know Creighton had some cupcakes this year, but even still got Arizona St playing there. Last year they got Oklahoma and St Mary's at home. 2 years ago, they got Tulsa, Nebraska, Cal there.
Tulsa got Wichita at their place 2 years ago. last year, they got Creighton and Oklahoma at their place. This year Wichita again.
anXUfan wrote:Should teams be seeded mostly based on what they've earned (win/loss focused RPI) or how they are projected to perform in the future (MOV focused KenPom)? I lean towards what they've earned.
bmorex wrote:Seton Hall as a 6 is a travesty.
herodotus wrote:stever20 wrote:And about St Bonnie's how can a team like Monmouth get those games, and you can't? Part of it is you didn't do an exempt tourney where you can get those big games OOC some times.
The A10 doesn't allow it's teams to take more than one buy game a year. Also, when looking for easy home games, the P5 powers prefer to avoid games against teams that might be dangerous. No one expects a MAAC team to be a threat. The better A 10 teams are viewed as dangerous. The exempt tourneys don't want teams like Bona, because they don't want to risk their marquee being upset, and not reaching the final. Monmouth was mistakenly viewed as garbage, which is why they got those chances.
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