stever20 wrote:Tulsa still has enough good games left to elevate their RPI. Also, Jerry Palm was asked about it- and he said that the loss would be a small part to a huge cake.
Bill Marsh wrote:stever20 wrote:Tulsa still has enough good games left to elevate their RPI. Also, Jerry Palm was asked about it- and he said that the loss would be a small part to a huge cake.
I refer you to http://www.bracketmatrix.com. Of the 96 forecaster on that spread sheet, only 19 agree with you. So, you're in a distinct minority in thinking they're a candidate for serious consideration.
Of course they have some good teams left on their schedule. Sure, it's possible that they could win them all and impress the heck out of the committee. Anything's "possible" but based on the way they've played so far this year, that's not the kind of team they are. Do you really think they'll elevate their game to become something they haven't been all year?
I don't think you appreciate just how bad that SEOS loss is. Southeast Oklahoma State isn't just a D-II team; they're a bad D-II team with a sub-.500 record vs D-II competition. If a home loss to Houston were added to Tulsa's record, it would drop their RPI to 67. SEOS is at least as bad a blight on their record as a home loss to Houston would be. Are there any other 67 RPI teams that we're talking about as candidates to make the tournament?
While we're at it, look at the rest of their record. 0-4 vs the top 25. Against 26-50, they're .500 (2-2). Nothing to brag about there. Only 3-2 vs 51-100. Not much better. Meanwhile their record is padded with 10 wins vs teams at 200+. Without those 10 absolutely meaningless wins, they're 8-7. Is that really the record of a tournament team?
stever20 wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:stever20 wrote:Tulsa still has enough good games left to elevate their RPI. Also, Jerry Palm was asked about it- and he said that the loss would be a small part to a huge cake.
I refer you to http://www.bracketmatrix.com. Of the 96 forecaster on that spread sheet, only 19 agree with you. So, you're in a distinct minority in thinking they're a candidate for serious consideration.
Of course they have some good teams left on their schedule. Sure, it's possible that they could win them all and impress the heck out of the committee. Anything's "possible" but based on the way they've played so far this year, that's not the kind of team they are. Do you really think they'll elevate their game to become something they haven't been all year?
I don't think you appreciate just how bad that SEOS loss is. Southeast Oklahoma State isn't just a D-II team; they're a bad D-II team with a sub-.500 record vs D-II competition. If a home loss to Houston were added to Tulsa's record, it would drop their RPI to 67. SEOS is at least as bad a blight on their record as a home loss to Houston would be. Are there any other 67 RPI teams that we're talking about as candidates to make the tournament?
While we're at it, look at the rest of their record. 0-4 vs the top 25. Against 26-50, they're .500 (2-2). Nothing to brag about there. Only 3-2 vs 51-100. Not much better. Meanwhile their record is padded with 10 wins vs teams at 200+. Without those 10 absolutely meaningless wins, they're 8-7. Is that really the record of a tournament team?
The issue with that site is that they don't show the sites 1st 4 out. Several of those have Tulsa as one of the 1st 4 teams out. So to say they aren't in serious consideration is frankly a joke.
Bill Marsh wrote:Teams working to defend their position:
UMass
NC State
LSU
St. John's
Boise State
Stanford
BYU
Georgia
Teams on the outside working to get in:
St. Mary's
UCLA
Illinois
Pitt
Conference Leaders who are vulnerable in a conference tournament where a loss would throw them into the at-large bubble mix:
Stephen F. Austin (Southland)
Old Dominion (CUSA)
Buffalo (MAC)
X-Factor: Wins conference tournament & bumps bubble team, not the conference leader or runners up:
UConn
Bill Marsh wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:Teams working to defend their position:
UMass
NC State
LSU
St. John's
Boise State
Stanford
BYU
Georgia
Teams on the outside working to get in:
St. Mary's
UCLA
Illinois
Pitt
Conference Leaders who are vulnerable in a conference tournament where a loss would throw them into the at-large bubble mix:
Stephen F. Austin (Southland)
Old Dominion (CUSA)
Buffalo (MAC)
X-Factor: Wins conference tournament & bumps bubble team, not the conference leader or runners up:
UConn
Big Ten action had some interesting results. Illinois' home loss to Michigan State took them out of the conversation while Iowa's road win over Nebraska moved them up into the knocking-on-the-door category.
Tulsa's rout of Temple gave a much needed boost to their stock.
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