adoraz wrote:
Appears that 50% of the rating will just be whether you win/lose (just like RPI) . . .
The RPI comprises a team's winning percentage (25%), its opponents' winning percentage (50%), and the winning percentage of those opponents' opponents (25%).
The opponents' winning percentage and the winning percentage of those opponents' opponents both comprise the strength of schedule (SOS). Thus, the SOS accounts for 75% of the RPI calculation and is 2/3 its opponents' winning percentage and 1/3 its opponents' opponents' winning percentages.
adoraz wrote:NET rankings, the NCAA's main consideration for the Tournament this year, will be released later today.
https://twitter.com/marchmadness/status ... 0753573889
Appears that 50% of the rating will just be whether you win/lose (just like RPI), while the other half is based on efficiency/margin of victory/loss. Seems like a fair system.
SJU will almost definitely be rated worse in NET than RPI (which we're currently #6) due to winning a few games by small margins. Obviously after 5 games though, margins in any given game are meaningless and simply winning is most important. Same for virtually any metric at this point, there's not enough data (games) for the ratings to matter.
Still, will be fun to see how the league does.
stever20 wrote:and they are out....
St John's 29
Creighton 36
Villanova 38
Butler 45
Georgetown 76
DePaul 78
Seton Hall 85
Marquette 99
Xavier 101
Providence 115
kayako wrote:Predictably hilarious, but that was expected this early in the season.
1. Ohio State
10. Loyola Marymount
12. Belmont
https://www.cbssports.com/college-basketball/news/ncaas-new-net-rankings-debut-ohio-state-shockingly-no-1-with-duke-no-6-and-kentucky-no-61/
billyjack wrote:Using a formula that isn't transparent is asinine. I felt this way from the moment they first proposed NET, not just because it looks like the Friars initially get hammered by it. RPI had flaws, but the math was in front of us.
Basing team rankings on margin of victory (or efficiency) to me is a bad idea. In every other sport, the object is to win games. Except European soccer uses point differential as a tiebreaker. And NASCAR has a point system. And the NFL has its like 7th tiebreaker based on points... i remember it coming into play once, in 1979, when the Bears ran up like a 62-6 win over the St Louis Football Cardinals, which put Chicago in over Washington.
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