GumbyDamnit! wrote:But Forecast told you that FL would win those games but THEY DIDN'T. And Cincy certainly was supposed to beat Tulane. My point has always been Stever that you get so caught up in what's going to happen instead of just recognizing who deserves to be in at a point in time. At this point in time it is my opinion that SJU and X deserve to be in and UCONN, FL and Tulsa don't. You keep holding out hope that those other 3 will go on runs and SJU and X will falter. From what I'm seeing I don't think either will happen.
GumbyDamnit! wrote:But Forecast told you that FL would win those games but THEY DIDN'T. And Cincy certainly was supposed to beat Tulane. My point has always been Stever that you get so caught up in what's going to happen instead of just recognizing who deserves to be in at a point in time. At this point in time it is my opinion that SJU and X deserve to be in and UCONN, FL and Tulsa don't. You keep holding out hope that those other 3 will go on runs and SJU and X will falter. From what I'm seeing I don't think either will happen.
Bill Marsh wrote:When Steve comes up with his hypotheticals and says "I could easily see Team X doing the following", he's doing exactly the opposite of what RPI Forecast is doing. He's contriving a situation to make a certain point. He's taking one possibility out of a range of possibilities. RPI Forecast is including the full range of possibilities when they make their projections.
The point of RPI Forecast once again is to measure each team's performance to date. As with any other piece of information, fans can use it however they want to predict future results, but that's not what RPI Forecast itself is doing. They don't predict any individual game results at all.
Bill Marsh wrote:GumbyDamnit! wrote:But Forecast told you that FL would win those games but THEY DIDN'T. And Cincy certainly was supposed to beat Tulane. My point has always been Stever that you get so caught up in what's going to happen instead of just recognizing who deserves to be in at a point in time. At this point in time it is my opinion that SJU and X deserve to be in and UCONN, FL and Tulsa don't. You keep holding out hope that those other 3 will go on runs and SJU and X will falter. From what I'm seeing I don't think either will happen.
Actually Gumby, RPI Forecast didn't say that Florida would win those 2 games. Steve did.
RPI forecast simply plays the odds. They don't pick games. They look at the Sagarin projections for the games and then assign a percent to a teams chances of winning. For example, if a team is favored in back-to-back games by 1 point, they will say that the team has a 49% chance of winning each game - or some similar percent. When they do their projections, they then say that statistically the odds are that a team in 2 games that are essentially 50/50 will split those 2 games. They don't say which one. Similarly, if a team's odds are 75% in 4 straight games, they will project a 3-1 record in those 4 games because the odds are that they will lose 1/4 even though they are a heavy favorite in each game.
We certainly know that teams can go on runs in which they win every close game or lose every close game. That's why we watch the games. But that's the exception. The norm is that you win some and lose some.
When Steve comes up with his hypotheticals and says "I could easily see Team X doing the following", he's doing exactly the opposite of what RPI Forecast is doing. He's contriving a situation to make a certain point. He's taking one possibility out of a range of possibilities. RPI Forecast is including the full range of possibilities when they make their projections.
Despite the name of the metric, RPI Forecast is not in the business of predicting anything. The creator of the site recognizes the deficiencies of RPI but he also understands that it's the too that gets the most attention since it was specifically created by the NCAA for use by its committee. He has tried to create a tool in "RPI terms" that will utilize the benefits of more sophisticated power rating systems to show a teams strength right now - not in the future. He projects the schedule because RPI is at it's strongest over a full schedule and at its weakest when fewer games have been played. It also provides the best comparison of how teams look to be shaping up for the tournament, but based on the quality that they've demonstrated to date in the schedule.
The major weakness of RPI Is that a win is a win and a loss is a loss. No powerRating system takes that approach. The NCAA wanted such a metric because they didn't want to give teams an incentive to run up the score. But the fact is that a 1 point win is not the same as a 20 point win and the same for close losses vs blow outs. Power ratings calculate in margin of victory. By using Sagarin to project future results, RPI Forecast developed a creative way to marry a powerRating system with RPI to make the (projected) RPI a more valid measure of a team's performance.
The point of RPI Forecast once again is to measure each team's performance to date. As with any other piece of information, fans can use it however they want to predict future results, but that's not what RPI Forecast itself is doing. They don't predict any individual game results at all.
stever20 wrote:the thing that is also amazing is Xavier fans on here have said themselves they are very nervous at 18-14. But you don't want to acknowledge that at all...
GumbyDamnit! wrote:stever20 wrote:the thing that is also amazing is Xavier fans on here have said themselves they are very nervous at 18-14. But you don't want to acknowledge that at all...
Of course they are going to say that. They badly want their team to be in the tourney but are nervous because they still had work to do. Many if our XU brethren thought they were going to lose at Cincy considering that hostile environment. So what? An observer from the outside (like me) predicted that X is clearly worthy of a bid and they are proving it on the court. Now that Butler lost to X I guess they are now a double digit seed in your eyes?
GumbyDamnit! wrote:Stever, it doesn't matter what should have happened or could have happened but what actually happened. XU beat Cincy and Butler so they are in great shape. Who cares about what you expected to happen two games ago. They won't end up 18-14 so why bother trying to still harp on it? It was a good day for the BE and stop it with BU dropping to 8/9. Cherbacz is hurt and he'll be back and the committee knows that.
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