xusandy wrote:So X clobbers a so-so Miami of Ohio, and Auburn and Wisconsin (2 of X's 3 losses) both get to the NET top ten after Ohio State's loss, and presto-chango, X leaps from 118 to 62. It seems to me that NET is a bit hyperactive, over-reactive when given relatively few data points to work with. Time will tell if it produces reasonably accurate rankings by the end of the season. At present, both the KenPom and Sagarin rankings look more reasonable to me.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:I think what's funny about all this data crunching this early is that our focus seems to be on the 2nd and 3rd degrees of separation. Instead of wondering if a Miami loss to Rutgers is good or bad for specific BE programs based on head to head results, maybe at this point we should just recognize that a Miami loss might simply be good for all at year's end. They're probably in that 7-12 range of ACC teams--clearly in that usual bubble range for this conference. This loss might end up hurting them tremendously should Rutgers finish in the basement of the B10 and they are on the cusp of a bid.
Just win the games in front of you and let the data take care of itself. Clearly the NET is going to wildly fluctuate until more games can be played anyway.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:I think what's funny about all this data crunching this early is that our focus seems to be on the 2nd and 3rd degrees of separation.
Just win the games in front of you and let the data take care of itself. Clearly the NET is going to wildly fluctuate until more games can be played anyway.
adoraz wrote:Stever, I don't know how you can look at these numbers and not see that they clearly overvalue beating up on cupcakes. I'm stating more of a fact here rather than an opinion. It is not just me saying this, it's also analytics experts like Nate Silver (538 founder).
A team like Houston absolutely should not be ranked #34. You're either being naive or dishonest in defending them. Their best win is @ #130 (NET) BYU. Their other wins are all against awful competition at home. You theorize away games being a major factor, but no that's not it. Houston only has ONE away game and ZERO neutral games. In other words, their schedule sucks big time to date. Their schedule gets a lot better in December, but as of today it has to be one of the worst in the nation.
Why do you think the AAC is doing so much better in NET than RPI? It's because the AAC's SOS is horrible. They hardly participated in the tournaments last week, and they haven't had a conference challenge.
No need to be argumentative here, what I'm saying is actually a good thing for the AAC. They may have a better year due to scheduling a bunch of cupcakes. Don't worry, I'm not the NCAA. I won't change it up. I actually prefer it this way being a SJU fan.
How is it that the NCAA overlooked this? I have no clue.
stever20 wrote:adoraz wrote:Stever, I don't know how you can look at these numbers and not see that they clearly overvalue beating up on cupcakes. I'm stating more of a fact here rather than an opinion. It is not just me saying this, it's also analytics experts like Nate Silver (538 founder).
A team like Houston absolutely should not be ranked #34. You're either being naive or dishonest in defending them. Their best win is @ #130 (NET) BYU. Their other wins are all against awful competition at home. You theorize away games being a major factor, but no that's not it. Houston only has ONE away game and ZERO neutral games. In other words, their schedule sucks big time to date. Their schedule gets a lot better in December, but as of today it has to be one of the worst in the nation.
Why do you think the AAC is doing so much better in NET than RPI? It's because the AAC's SOS is horrible. They hardly participated in the tournaments last week, and they haven't had a conference challenge.
No need to be argumentative here, what I'm saying is actually a good thing for the AAC. They may have a better year due to scheduling a bunch of cupcakes. Don't worry, I'm not the NCAA. I won't change it up. I actually prefer it this way being a SJU fan.
How is it that the NCAA overlooked this? I have no clue.
Well, several AAC teams had tournaments the week before which count just as much..... UCF, UConn, Wichita. Pretty much I think everyone but Houston, ECU had a tournament.... So that goes out the door. And tournaments the week before count exactly the same as tournaments last week....
I do think Houston is somehwat overrated right now- but that after tomorrow will change after they see Oregon.
I think one thing that is gone is the thought you can play a great team and lose, and have it benefit you.....
Providence right now has the #139 SOS. A LOT of that is obviously playing Michigan. The 2 teams they lost to are 8-3. The teams that they beat are 12-13. I think their SOS in the NET reflects a lot more the 12-13 part of the schedule instead of the 8-3 part of the schedule. Part of why they are much worse in the NET than they are the RPI. They're looking a lot more at the SOV than they are the SOS.
paulxu wrote:Here are Warren Nolan's RPI calculations. If they were still using them (and granted it is early in the season) the BE would be in 3rd place.
3 pts separate the top 4.
10 pts separate #1 and #10
Conference RPI Rank NC Rec NC WP
Big 12 0.6253 1 52 - 12 0.8125
Big Ten 0.6086 2 75 - 20 0.7895
Big East 0.6018 3 50 - 15 0.7692
ACC 0.5908 4 81 - 21 0.7941
SEC 0.5697 5 61 - 28 0.6854
Pac-12 0.5475 6 52 - 22 0.7027
West Coast 0.5425 7 43 - 24 0.6418
Southern 0.5199 8 32 - 26 0.5517
Missouri Valley 0.5185 9 34 - 26 0.5667
American Athletic 0.5161 10 58 - 25 0.6988
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