stever20 wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:So two away games at Monmouth and St Francis would be better than SJU scheduling Duke and Gonzaga? Well that certainly is not what the Committee usually rewards. That sums up the difference between Tulsa winnin 21 and SJU winning 19.
Maybe having more than 2 games away from home would be something smart that St John's could do. At least Tulsa OOC played @ Wichita and a neutral site vs Oklahoma St.
You can do what St John's did, but you better be ready to face the consequences if you lose games at home like St John's has done. They changed the RPI to reward teams more for going on the road.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:stever20 wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:So two away games at Monmouth and St Francis would be better than SJU scheduling Duke and Gonzaga? Well that certainly is not what the Committee usually rewards. That sums up the difference between Tulsa winnin 21 and SJU winning 19.
Maybe having more than 2 games away from home would be something smart that St John's could do. At least Tulsa OOC played @ Wichita and a neutral site vs Oklahoma St.
You can do what St John's did, but you better be ready to face the consequences if you lose games at home like St John's has done. They changed the RPI to reward teams more for going on the road.
I see that Bill beat me to it on this point. Would you like to reconsider or edit this before embarrassing yourself further? You keep harping on these OOC road games. Here's the problem... teams like Tulsa need to beef up their OOC schedule because they are in a weak league. SJU with Duke and Gonzaga, Nova-Butler-Gtwn-PC x 2 won't stand before the committee with a questionable SOS. Tulsa will. So if you are going to say that SJU needs to schedule more like Tulsa, you might want to take a closer look at the actual facts. Really ridiculous argument you are trying to make.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:ENOUGH with the RPI forecast. It means absolutely nothing. A week ago Cincy was supposed to beat both Tulane and XU at home. They lost both. SJU was supposed to lose away at X. It didn't. RPI forecast is completely useless. Why are people Zombies to RPI forecast sites?
Remember two weeks ago Stever was sure SJU was dead and both FL and UCONN were primed to make their big surge, based on RPI forecast. NO ONE, including a computer, can predict what's going to happen. Right now 6 BE teams are safe in the tourney. If the do what's needed, they are in. If they don't then everyone directly ahead of them has to not lose as well, or teams behind them need to win their games. It's really that simple. To try and predict today that SJU is out based on RPI forecast is utterly stupid.
Bill Marsh wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:ENOUGH with the RPI forecast. It means absolutely nothing. A week ago Cincy was supposed to beat both Tulane and XU at home. They lost both. SJU was supposed to lose away at X. It didn't. RPI forecast is completely useless. Why are people Zombies to RPI forecast sites?
Remember two weeks ago Stever was sure SJU was dead and both FL and UCONN were primed to make their big surge, based on RPI forecast. NO ONE, including a computer, can predict what's going to happen. Right now 6 BE teams are safe in the tourney. If the do what's needed, they are in. If they don't then everyone directly ahead of them has to not lose as well, or teams behind them need to win their games. It's really that simple. To try and predict today that SJU is out based on RPI forecast is utterly stupid.
Gumby, you've been reading too much of Stever's stuff. RPI Forevast picked Xavier to beat Cincinnati.
As for the value of RPI Forecast, it's not an attempt to predict future games, it's an attempt to compensate for the weaknesses of RPI, which is a horrible measure for comparing the relative strength of different teams. They rocofnize that we're stuck with RPI, so they've taken a legitimate power rating system (Sagarin) and have applied it to each team's schedule.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:ENOUGH with the RPI forecast. It means absolutely nothing. A week ago Cincy was supposed to beat both Tulane and XU at home. They lost both. SJU was supposed to lose away at X. It didn't. RPI forecast is completely useless. Why are people Zombies to RPI forecast sites?
Remember two weeks ago Stever was sure SJU was dead and both FL and UCONN were primed to make their big surge, based on RPI forecast. NO ONE, including a computer, can predict what's going to happen. Right now 6 BE teams are safe in the tourney. If the do what's needed, they are in. If they don't then everyone directly ahead of them has to not lose as well, or teams behind them need to win their games. It's really that simple. To try and predict today that SJU is out based on RPI forecast is utterly stupid.
Gumby, you've been reading too much of Stever's stuff. RPI Forevast picked Xavier to beat Cincinnati.
As for the value of RPI Forecast, it's not an attempt to predict future games, it's an attempt to compensate for the weaknesses of RPI, which is a horrible measure for comparing the relative strength of different teams. They rocofnize that we're stuck with RPI, so they've taken a legitimate power rating system (Sagarin) and have applied it to each team's schedule.
Bill, therein lies the heart of the problem. Let's use X and Cincy as examples. If RPI forecast applies any predictive factor whatsoever (strength of remainng schedule, H vs Away games, games vs higher RPI teams, past results, etc) as a way of measuring future probability, then I have less than a casual interest in what it spits out. It is no different than Kramer telling me which stocks to buy on nightly TV. Sure there's some logic to it but there are so many factors at play that it's near impossible to say with any confidence what's really going to happen.
In the case of X and Cincy it literally came down to one team making a play and the other not. When you multiply those scenarios x 1000, with 350 other teams involved, you start to recognize the flaw.
I am very much a believer in recognizing which teams are better suited to win their remaining games by where they sit today (hot vs cold, tested vs untested, etc). SHU and SJU two weeks ago sat next to each other in the RPI and league standings. But everyone could begin to clearly see that one was a potential tourney team and the other wasn't. RPI Forecast would probably tell you that they both had an equal chance of getting there, but we could all see the SHU implosion with our own eyes. Stever was looking at predictive analysis with FL and surmised that they had a shot at going 7-1 down the stretch. Looking at that team though, they had done nothing to suggest they were capable of such.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:ENOUGH with the RPI forecast. It means absolutely nothing. A week ago Cincy was supposed to beat both Tulane and XU at home. They lost both. SJU was supposed to lose away at X. It didn't. RPI forecast is completely useless. Why are people Zombies to RPI forecast sites?
Remember two weeks ago Stever was sure SJU was dead and both FL and UCONN were primed to make their big surge, based on RPI forecast. NO ONE, including a computer, can predict what's going to happen. Right now 6 BE teams are safe in the tourney. If the do what's needed, they are in. If they don't then everyone directly ahead of them has to not lose as well, or teams behind them need to win their games. It's really that simple. To try and predict today that SJU is out based on RPI forecast is utterly stupid.
Gumby, you've been reading too much of Stever's stuff. RPI Forevast picked Xavier to beat Cincinnati.
As for the value of RPI Forecast, it's not an attempt to predict future games, it's an attempt to compensate for the weaknesses of RPI, which is a horrible measure for comparing the relative strength of different teams. They rocofnize that we're stuck with RPI, so they've taken a legitimate power rating system (Sagarin) and have applied it to each team's schedule.
Bill, therein lies the heart of the problem. Let's use X and Cincy as examples. If RPI forecast applies any predictive factor whatsoever (strength of remainng schedule, H vs Away games, games vs higher RPI teams, past results, etc) as a way of measuring future probability, then I have less than a casual interest in what it spits out. It is no different than Kramer telling me which stocks to buy on nightly TV. Sure there's some logic to it but there are so many factors at play that it's near impossible to say with any confidence what's really going to happen.
In the case of X and Cincy it literally came down to one team making a play and the other not. When you multiply those scenarios x 1000, with 350 other teams involved, you start to recognize the flaw.
I am very much a believer in recognizing which teams are better suited to win their remaining games by where they sit today (hot vs cold, tested vs untested, etc). SHU and SJU two weeks ago sat next to each other in the RPI and league standings. But everyone could begin to clearly see that one was a potential tourney team and the other wasn't. RPI Forecast would probably tell you that they both had an equal chance of getting there, but we could all see the SHU implosion with our own eyes. Stever was looking at predictive analysis with FL and surmised that they had a shot at going 7-1 down the stretch. Looking at that team though, they had done nothing to suggest they were capable of such.
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