MUBoxer wrote:pki1998 wrote:MUBoxer wrote:Ok lets look at a fairly current sample say the 21st century. In that time we've seen Kentucky, UNC 2x, Duke 2x, Ville, UConn 2x, Florida win but then REPEAT, MSU all repeat for titles. So of the 13 national title 10 have been repeats. I said in my post that times have changed and there is rarely going to be a new team win it now and I believe that 10/13 shows that pretty well.
Again repeating a premise doesn't make it true. It's better to admit that you are wrong then ignoring facts. When you look at the 21st century (2001 - present) there have been 13 champions. Of which three teams (Maryland, Syracuse and Florida) Have won their first championship, Florida has won two of them as such 4 out of 13 the championships won this century was by teams that had not won one in the 20th century. That's approximately 31% of the time. Plus I fail to see how your 13 year period of the 21 st century is significantly more relevant than the 15 year period expressed in my original post, that was included to prempt such an arguement. If we go to my fifteen year period I would get to include UCOnn which has won 3 titles since 1999 (it's first). So under the same math that's 7 championships won in 15 years by teams that had never won one before 1999 or approximately 47%. Or if even if you want to try saying that repeats prove your point. 4 new schools have won there first championship in the last 15 years , you still get approximately 27% first time champions in the last 15 years. I fail to see that as rare. And before you say the last 15 years are a fluke. In addition to UConn the 90s had four more schools win there first championship.
Why is the 21st century relevant? Because I said the college basketball landscape is different NOW, not in the 90s, not in the 80s, I don't give a darn about those times. They aren't now. And no Florida doesn't count when they win their second, a repeat is a repeat not a special exception because they hadn't won one before.
pki1998 wrote:MUBoxer wrote:
Why is the 21st century relevant? Because I said the college basketball landscape is different NOW, not in the 90s, not in the 80s, I don't give a darn about those times. They aren't now. And no Florida doesn't count when they win their second, a repeat is a repeat not a special exception because they hadn't won one before.
I guess 13 years is really relevant but 15 years is totally irrelevant. But even if we confine it to the 13 years and don't cont a repeat that's 3 out of 13 or 23%. I don't think many people would say on chance in three is rare. Facts are facts your premise is wrong. Further more the recent trend of teams outside of the power conferences making the final four (GM, VCU, Butler, WSU) would indicate that it is much more likely for a small conference school too win a title now than in the 90s or 80s
MUBoxer wrote:pki1998 wrote:MUBoxer wrote:Ok lets look at a fairly current sample say the 21st century. In that time we've seen Kentucky, UNC 2x, Duke 2x, Ville, UConn 2x, Florida win but then REPEAT, MSU all repeat for titles. So of the 13 national title 10 have been repeats. I said in my post that times have changed and there is rarely going to be a new team win it now and I believe that 10/13 shows that pretty well.
Again repeating a premise doesn't make it true. It's better to admit that you are wrong then ignoring facts. When you look at the 21st century (2001 - present) there have been 13 champions. Of which three teams (Maryland, Syracuse and Florida) Have won their first championship, Florida has won two of them as such 4 out of 13 the championships won this century was by teams that had not won one in the 20th century. That's approximately 31% of the time. Plus I fail to see how your 13 year period of the 21 st century is significantly more relevant than the 15 year period expressed in my original post, that was included to prempt such an arguement. If we go to my fifteen year period I would get to include UCOnn which has won 3 titles since 1999 (it's first). So under the same math that's 7 championships won in 15 years by teams that had never won one before 1999 or approximately 47%. Or if even if you want to try saying that repeats prove your point. 4 new schools have won there first championship in the last 15 years , you still get approximately 27% first time champions in the last 15 years. I fail to see that as rare. And before you say the last 15 years are a fluke. In addition to UConn the 90s had four more schools win there first championship.
Why is the 21st century relevant? Because I said the college basketball landscape is different NOW, not in the 90s, not in the 80s, I don't give a darn about those times. They aren't now. And no Florida doesn't count when they win their second, a repeat is a repeat not a special exception because they hadn't won one before.
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