adoraz wrote:stever20 wrote:I think one major thing this year, and this bodes really well for the big east, is records mattering.
Indiana at 17-15 not making the tourney. Continues a trend where if you are less than 4 games over .500 you don't make the tourney.
So how much did the 20 conference game schedule help Indiana?
I really don't think the Big East has to go 11 to get to 20 conference games.
That, and they also didn't favor NET in the selection process. Would've been rough to see NC State chosen over St. John's. I believe St. John's had the worst NET (and in prior years, RPI) of any at large team in history. In my opinion, the formula relied way too much on margins (a major negative for the Johnnies) and I'm glad they decided to base their decision around whether teams won or lost. Winning and losing always needs to be held in the highest regard.
NC State and Clemson being so far off was telling, as both had great NETs in the 30s but awful RPIs (NC State= 97). No way State should have that much of a discrepancy. St. John's RPI was also in the low 50s with a NET of 73.
For next year, I think they need to settle directly in the middle of RPI and NET. The formula is clearly flawed. Don't punish teams that much simply because they won by 2 points rather than 10, and don't reward teams for blowing out cupcakes.
stever20 wrote:I think one major thing this year, and this bodes really well for the big east, is records mattering.
Indiana at 17-15 not making the tourney. Continues a trend where if you are less than 4 games over .500 you don't make the tourney.
So how much did the 20 conference game schedule help Indiana?
I really don't think the Big East has to go 11 to get to 20 conference games.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:stever20 wrote:I think one major thing this year, and this bodes really well for the big east, is records mattering.
Indiana at 17-15 not making the tourney. Continues a trend where if you are less than 4 games over .500 you don't make the tourney.
So how much did the 20 conference game schedule help Indiana?
I really don't think the Big East has to go 11 to get to 20 conference games.
Not so sure that you figured out the secret sauce. I listened to the Committee chair repeat about Q1/Q2 wins especially. Take a look at the below and tell me what you see...
IN:
Temple: Q1 = 2-6; Q2 = 6-2 Total 8-8
ASU: Q1= 3-3; Q2 = 8-3 Total 11-6
SJU: Q1 = 5-7; Q2 = 5-3 Total = 10-10
Belmont: Q1 = 2-2; Q2 = 3-1 Total= 5-3
Out:
TCU: 3-9 / 6-4 = 9-13
NC St.: 3-9 / 5-0 = 8-9
UNCG: 2-6 / 2-0 = 4-6
IU: 6-9 / 2-6 = 8-15
Clem.: 1-10 / 6-3 = 7-13
The last 4 teams all had .500 or better records against Q1 & Q2, and the first 5 out were all under .500 vs. Q1/Q2. Sounds simple but maybe that was how they eventually decided. There are actually a bunch of teams who got in comfortably with losing records vs Q1/Q2 (Syracuse, Florida, Old Miss, Louisville to name a few) but it seems to have played a roll when trying to figure out the last few spots.
stever20 wrote:adoraz wrote:stever20 wrote:I think one major thing this year, and this bodes really well for the big east, is records mattering.
Indiana at 17-15 not making the tourney. Continues a trend where if you are less than 4 games over .500 you don't make the tourney.
So how much did the 20 conference game schedule help Indiana?
I really don't think the Big East has to go 11 to get to 20 conference games.
That, and they also didn't favor NET in the selection process. Would've been rough to see NC State chosen over St. John's. I believe St. John's had the worst NET (and in prior years, RPI) of any at large team in history. In my opinion, the formula relied way too much on margins (a major negative for the Johnnies) and I'm glad they decided to base their decision around whether teams won or lost. Winning and losing always needs to be held in the highest regard.
NC State and Clemson being so far off was telling, as both had great NETs in the 30s but awful RPIs (NC State= 97). No way State should have that much of a discrepancy. St. John's RPI was also in the low 50s with a NET of 73.
For next year, I think they need to settle directly in the middle of RPI and NET. The formula is clearly flawed. Don't punish teams that much simply because they won by 2 points rather than 10, and don't reward teams for blowing out cupcakes.
I have no problem with them dinging you if you beat a bad team by only 2 points. And I really don't have a problem with teams getting punished if they get blown out. I think they can and will do something about the big margins of victory.
adoraz wrote:stever20 wrote:I think one major thing this year, and this bodes really well for the big east, is records mattering.
Indiana at 17-15 not making the tourney. Continues a trend where if you are less than 4 games over .500 you don't make the tourney.
So how much did the 20 conference game schedule help Indiana?
I really don't think the Big East has to go 11 to get to 20 conference games.
That, and they also didn't favor NET in the selection process. Would've been rough to see NC State chosen over St. John's. I believe St. John's had the worst NET (and in prior years, RPI) of any at large team in history. In my opinion, the formula relied way too much on margins (a major negative for the Johnnies) and I'm glad they decided to base their decision around whether teams won or lost. Winning and losing always needs to be held in the highest regard.
NC State and Clemson being so far off was telling, as both had great NETs in the 30s but awful RPIs (NC State= 97). No way State should have that much of a discrepancy. St. John's RPI was also in the low 50s with a NET of 73.
For next year, I think they need to settle directly in the middle of RPI and NET. The formula is clearly flawed. Don't punish teams that much simply because they won by 2 points rather than 10, and don't reward teams for blowing out cupcakes.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:Here where the NET doesn’t make sense to me... Hypothetically let’s say that Creighton knocks off Gonzaga in Omaha. And then has an OOC game at Univ of San Fran. Both carry the same weight. That’s nonsense to me. The Committee chair himself stated that Q1 / Q2 wins were significant. The NET itself did not carry as much weight. If that is the case then why have a NET rating itself at all. Just use Q1/2 wins as another metric along with RPI, KenPom, record, conference standing, etc. ?
GumbyDamnit! wrote:Here where the NET doesn’t make sense to me... Hypothetically let’s say that Creighton knocks off Gonzaga in Omaha. And then has an OOC game at Univ of San Fran. Both carry the same weight. That’s nonsense to me. The Committee chair himself stated that Q1 / Q2 wins were significant. The NET itself did not carry as much weight. If that is the case then why have a NET rating itself at all. Just use Q1/2 wins as another metric along with RPI, KenPom, record, conference standing, etc. ?
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