DudeAnon wrote:The teams that deserve to get in will get in. Simple, no point bitching about it.
butlerguy03 wrote:DudeAnon wrote:The teams that deserve to get in will get in. Simple, no point bitching about it.
+1
Save a few obvious exclusions, maybe 5 since 1985? The committee usually gets it right. If you're close to the bubble, you should've won more.
Seeding is another story. That's why we have so many "upsets." From experience, many years Butler was a 12 or so and clearly were a top 40 team (single digit seeds). Sometimes I wonder if they purposely seed some stronger teams in the double-digits to allow for more upsets and storylines, which the entire tournament is based on.
butlerguy03 wrote:DudeAnon wrote:The teams that deserve to get in will get in. Simple, no point bitching about it.
+1
Save a few obvious exclusions, maybe 5 since 1985? The committee usually gets it right. If you're close to the bubble, you should've won more.
Seeding is another story. That's why we have so many "upsets." From experience, many years Butler was a 12 or so and clearly were a top 40 team (single digit seeds). Sometimes I wonder if they purposely seed some stronger teams in the double-digits to allow for more upsets and storylines, which the entire tournament is based on.
shupirate98 wrote:I've been an obsessive bracketology nerd for over 20 years. In all that time I believe there has been exactly ONE team which got screwed in being left out of the NCAA Tournament, Vanderbilt in 2000.
HoosierPal wrote:shupirate98 wrote:I've been an obsessive bracketology nerd for over 20 years. In all that time I believe there has been exactly ONE team which got screwed in being left out of the NCAA Tournament, Vanderbilt in 2000.
The biggest snub ever has to be the 2006 Missouri State Bears. RPI of 21 and a 20-8 record, left on the sidelines.
HoosierPal wrote:shupirate98 wrote:I've been an obsessive bracketology nerd for over 20 years. In all that time I believe there has been exactly ONE team which got screwed in being left out of the NCAA Tournament, Vanderbilt in 2000.
The biggest snub ever has to be the 2006 Missouri State Bears. RPI of 21 and a 20-8 record, left on the sidelines.
shupirate98 wrote:HoosierPal wrote:shupirate98 wrote:I've been an obsessive bracketology nerd for over 20 years. In all that time I believe there has been exactly ONE team which got screwed in being left out of the NCAA Tournament, Vanderbilt in 2000.
The biggest snub ever has to be the 2006 Missouri State Bears. RPI of 21 and a 20-8 record, left on the sidelines.
Hey, I did say the 2006 committee was lousy. And while I definitely had Missouri State in that year I don't feel their snub was egregious. The committee clearly felt the Valley had gamed the RPI system that year and didn't give the teams from that league credit for Top 50 wins that came against each other. If anything was egregious that year it was Air Force getting in, not anybody getting left out.
Bill Marsh wrote:stever20 wrote:1 thing today did I think is almost completely eliminate the chance of 7 bids(w/o the BET).
Seton Hall and St John's both have 8 losses. Both if they get to 12 are likely out barring a run in the BET....
The loser of their game is in deep trouble... While the winner is still not out of the woods by any stretch...
Seton Hall- would need 4 wins from Georgetown, Providence, Villanova, Creighton, Providence, and Georgetown. Good luck with that.
St John's would need 5 wins from DePaul, Xavier, Georgetown, Xavier, Georgetown, Marquette, and Villanova. Also good luck with that.
And, if St John's got 2 wins from Xavier in their process-
Xavier would need then 4 wins from Marquette, Cincy, Butler, Villanova, and Creighton. Tough...
Also if you notice Seton Hall and St John's have 2 games each vs Georgetown. That's 4 of the Hoya's final 6 games. We still need 2 more wins at least.
At it again with the old double standard?
You've been repeatedly posting that UConn will win the American because they have home court advantage in the conference tournament, but you don't even mention the possibility of a St. John's win of the BE auto bid with their home court advantage in the conference tournament. Why is that? St. John's has been a stronger team than UConn this year.
Why does 12 losses = "likely out" for either of these teams RPI projects Seton Hall to have 12 losses and still has them as likely in anyway. What do you know that they don't?
If 12 losses are an automatic disqualifier, I guess that means that Michigan State and Florida, who currently project into the tournament with 12+ losses, will also be staying home, right? And who will they be replaced with? Teams like Illinois and LSU with11 losses? The committee will look at nothing else except that one loss?
mel ott wrote:HoosierPal wrote:shupirate98 wrote:I've been an obsessive bracketology nerd for over 20 years. In all that time I believe there has been exactly ONE team which got screwed in being left out of the NCAA Tournament, Vanderbilt in 2000.
The biggest snub ever has to be the 2006 Missouri State Bears. RPI of 21 and a 20-8 record, left on the sidelines.
I believe the Mo State snub was the worst ever. They even had the the film crew for the CBS telecast and announcements for the NCAA picks and showed when the team didn't get in. Barry Hinson and his team, one of my favorite coaches when we were in the Mo Valley, got absolutely screwed.
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