stever20 wrote:All I'm saying I wouldn't call it likely that they'll play each other 3 times. I think for one, the status of the Georgetown tiebreakers- with PC and X holding sweeps- hurts Georgetown big time. I mean look at PC- they have 3 at least 64% wins, then 2 games @ Seton Hall and vs Butler- where they are a 45-46% chance. If they win 4 games, that puts them at 11-7. For PC to be projected as 10-8 when they are already 7-5 and with those numbers- doesn't feel right at all. Xavier is favored in 4/5 final games. That puts them at 11-7. That happens, Georgetown is 5th.
And if Georgetown sweeps St John's like you said earlier, that makes the Butler game a whole lot more interesting as it would be for 2nd place.
One last thing- St John's needs to root big time against Seton Hall. Seton Hall gets 1 more win, and it could be a 3 way tie for 6th at 8-10. DePaul has that tiebreaker.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:Omaha1 wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:Records vs RPI Top 100:
SJU 6-5
FL 4-10
UCONN 3-8
Tulsa 2-5
That doesn't matter. What is their projected RPI at the end of the season?
If "projected" anything mattered then why play the games? If you know the outcomesof all remaining games please let me know. The fact of the matter is that as of today SJU has a much better resume' than the others. The rest is all noise. That is all we can judge a team by. 3 days ago we were told that FL was going to win 7 of 8 and had a 70% of beating Ole Miss. They didn't so that projection meant absolutely ZERO.
Bill Marsh wrote:Your hypotheticals are interesting, but frankly anything is possible - especially when dealing with games that figure to be close. The odd thing is that you take just the opposite approach when you're talking about St. John's where you assume losses in their upcoming close games. You really seem to be coloring the projections by your feelings about each of the teams. That's fine, but why not just say so instead of referencing stats which ultimately don't support your conclusions.
stever20 wrote:First off, just want to say I love this debate.
My point on UConn especially- while yes today they wouldn't go over St John's, today isn't the end of the season. UConn has 3 cupcakes and St John's has 3 road tough games left. When you factor those games in, those teams are a whole lot closer. UConn is 17-9 and St John's is 15-11. After that look at what they have left, and that is where UConn has a big advantage.... Heck, just let's go to Tuesday. UConn loses tonight to SMU. They are 14-10. St John's has lost to St John's and Georgetown. They are 15-10. Are you telling me that St John's is that much ahead of UConn at that point? And what if UConn upsets SMU tonight? That happens, UConn probably on Tuesday night would be ahead of St John's.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:Stever, I think you picked the wrong day to stick to your guns that SJU is in worse shape than UCONN. They are now 7-5 vs the RPI Top 100. UCONN is 3-8. They are 30 spots higher in RPI. They play in a tougher league. Do you want to try to run that argument by me again how UCONN is a bigger lock? As Bill and Inpointednout so clearly, let the games play out before you make your definitive RPI projection predictions.
If they win tonight is that a bigger indication of them being a valid tournament candidate or an indictment of SMU? It would be really bad for them to lose to an 80+ RPI team at home on the day College Gameday visits.
BTW that AAC "lock" down in Cincy scored 13 pts in the first half at HOME against a team with an RPI over 150. That league deserves its spot as the 9th best conference.
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