adoraz wrote:Looking at the conference RPI rankings one last time (before we get NET):
1. SEC
2. Big XII
3. Big East
4. Big Ten
5. Mountain West
6. Pac 12
7. ACC
8. West Coast
9. Southern
10. Atlantic 10
https://www.warrennolan.com/basketball/ ... conference
kayako wrote:adoraz wrote:Looking at the conference RPI rankings one last time (before we get NET):
1. SEC
2. Big XII
3. Big East
4. Big Ten
5. Mountain West
6. Pac 12
7. ACC
8. West Coast
9. Southern
10. Atlantic 10
https://www.warrennolan.com/basketball/ ... conference
I think SEC and B12 conveniently had softer schedules so far. #1 is within reach for the BE if we have a nice next couple of weeks.
adoraz wrote:Easy to say when X is ranked #2 in RPI (kidding).
I'm aware of how RPI works, but it's still pretty flawed. Villanova for instance I'm sure would be ranked higher than #42 when NET comes out. They lost 2 very close games against top 3 teams and shouldn't be punished for challenging themselves. If RPI were still the metric being used, then I think they'd be more likely to schedule teams in the top 25 (teams they'd be favored against) rather than the top 3 (teams they've been underdogs against). Despite the results thus far, I've enjoyed seeing Nova play UCLA and Purdue over Tennessee.
Anyway, I'm just glad we can stop using RPI (and other useless metrics like KenPom- which still factors in 2020-21) once we get the official NET rankings. I think NET is flawed, too, but it's the metric being used and at least we'd have official numbers to use.
DudeAnon wrote:adoraz wrote:Easy to say when X is ranked #2 in RPI (kidding).
I'm aware of how RPI works, but it's still pretty flawed. Villanova for instance I'm sure would be ranked higher than #42 when NET comes out. They lost 2 very close games against top 3 teams and shouldn't be punished for challenging themselves. If RPI were still the metric being used, then I think they'd be more likely to schedule teams in the top 25 (teams they'd be favored against) rather than the top 3 (teams they've been underdogs against). Despite the results thus far, I've enjoyed seeing Nova play UCLA and Purdue over Tennessee.
Anyway, I'm just glad we can stop using RPI (and other useless metrics like KenPom- which still factors in 2020-21) once we get the official NET rankings. I think NET is flawed, too, but it's the metric being used and at least we'd have official numbers to use.
If I recall correctly the formula behind the NET isn't even published so I am not sure how reliable it is. I appreciate the science behind kenpom and other metrics, but at the end of the day I want bids decided by wins and losses. RPI only gets more accurate as the season goes along and is as good a metric that exists for comparing 350 schools in a 30 game season.
X-man wrote:DudeAnon wrote:adoraz wrote:Easy to say when X is ranked #2 in RPI (kidding).
I'm aware of how RPI works, but it's still pretty flawed. Villanova for instance I'm sure would be ranked higher than #42 when NET comes out. They lost 2 very close games against top 3 teams and shouldn't be punished for challenging themselves. If RPI were still the metric being used, then I think they'd be more likely to schedule teams in the top 25 (teams they'd be favored against) rather than the top 3 (teams they've been underdogs against). Despite the results thus far, I've enjoyed seeing Nova play UCLA and Purdue over Tennessee.
Anyway, I'm just glad we can stop using RPI (and other useless metrics like KenPom- which still factors in 2020-21) once we get the official NET rankings. I think NET is flawed, too, but it's the metric being used and at least we'd have official numbers to use.
If I recall correctly the formula behind the NET isn't even published so I am not sure how reliable it is. I appreciate the science behind kenpom and other metrics, but at the end of the day I want bids decided by wins and losses. RPI only gets more accurate as the season goes along and is as good a metric that exists for comparing 350 schools in a 30 game season.
The RPI, even with the recent modifications, is pretty crappy because it is so easy to game. The old Big East was notorious for gaming the RPI in its earlier formulation. The revised version ain't much better. And surely it's a good thing to not publish the formula, which makes it harder to game any metric.
BEXU wrote:2. Xavier
22. Marquette
25. Providence
42. Villanova
51. DePaul
60. Creighton
75. Seton Hall
101. UConn
193. St. John's
211. Butler
275. Georgetown
Seems Uncle Git may have erred in panning our non-con schedule.
adoraz wrote:BEXU wrote:2. Xavier
22. Marquette
25. Providence
42. Villanova
51. DePaul
60. Creighton
75. Seton Hall
101. UConn
193. St. John's
211. Butler
275. Georgetown
Seems Uncle Git may have erred in panning our non-con schedule.
Providence is up to #16 today. Marquette, Xavier and Providence all might have a chance to break into the AP Top 25 if they win this weekend. I'll do another post on that tomorrow.
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