Thank you, trephine & gtmoBlue.
I’m also keeping this topic in this thread and not spamming OTHER threads, by dropping a “you’d get more bids with more teams!” in your discussion of projected NCAA bids for the league. (It would be nice to not need my posts approved, though. I have to repeat myself a lot because a few posts will go by before my posts show up backdated)
scoscox wrote:I do kind of agree with the logic that we'd probably be able to get a few more teams to the dance, but I'm not convinced there are any teams consistently good enough to make the cut. Wichita State maybe if Marshall is there long term, VCU will fade I think, and Dayton is always too up and down. With Archie they've improved, but who knows if he's there to stay. I could end up being wrong and those programs stick around and continue to improve, but that's how I see it right now.
This is the “checkers vs chess” thing to me. You list teams that have made NCAA Tournaments and advanced to Elite Eights/Final Fours as almost “good enough enough to make the cut.” But you should deconstruct what the ideal addition would be.
Bringing OOC wins into conference play is what makes your league strong. The better the league does overall, the stronger your SOS from conference games. Your 7th place team was 11-2 OOC last season, making them 19-13 on everyone’s SOS entering the BET. Marquette had six conference games vs teams worse than 19-13. My Bonnies played ELEVEN GAMES against conference teams with worse overall records, because the A-10 wasn’t as strong OOC (And we were still #27 in the RPI somehow!). That means Bona had SEVEN games vs teams better than 19-13 and Marquette had TWELVE.
I’m willing to bet you that most of this board thinks last year’s Marquette team could/would beat St. Bonaventure. And that’s my point here:
When people talk about a team being “good,” there’s two separate things working and they are frequently confused: “Quality/Talent of Roster” and “Performance in the season.” Performance is HEAVILY DICTATED by your schedule.
Last year’s Marquette & Creighton talent would be the same roster talent no matter who they play in conference:
If they played 18 games against the top nine teams in the nation, they’d have a terrible record.
If they played 14 games against the worst seven teams in the WCC, they’d have at least 13 conference wins, like Gonaga/BYU/Saint Mary’s does each year.
If they played in the Southland, they’d probably be 18-0 or 17-1.
The question of expansion for the Big East is not “who’s good enough” because THAT is a zero-sum game. The question is “Where’s the sweet spot for the max amount of NCAA bids/NCAA units earned, highest possible OOC win percentage (aka RPI/SOS) and not spreading the payouts from TV/NCAA money thin?”
Edrick wrote:This is an honest question because it's always intrigued me, why do people think it makes sense to add teams to simply get (hypothetically) more teams in the tournament? (A flawed ascertain BTW)
It doesn't make any sense. If you increase your numerator and denominator proportionately, you don't gain, you just stay the same. It's an absurd premise.
The Big East will likely get 6 of 10 this season and has averaged 50% in its existence, there are no combination of teams that would make that percentage higher and 100% of the combinations screws up the harmony of the double-round-robin.
In the conventional way people think about conference expansion, you’re totally right. That’s because conventional wisdom is “who’s good enough? If there’s another XAVIER out there…”
Because I don’t want to get into debates about the strength of non-Big East programs compared to Big East programs, I’m just going to use 2015-16 Big East teams as examples, because the NAMES don’t matter, only the principles.
Let’s say you cloned 2015-16 Xavier and had an 11-team (20-game DRR) Big East. Even though you’re adding an NCAA program that got a 2-seed last year (I believe, I kinda blacked out with rage when Bona was snubbed), are you really better off? You’d get Xavier2 into the dance, but they’d go 15-5 against the Big East, so the the non-clones would be 85-105. Would Butler still get into the dance at 10-10 in Big East play? Probably because they had a lot of room.
Same hypothetical 11-team, 20-game DRR. This time your 11th team is a clone of DePaul. DePaul2 is 4-16 in Big East, the non-clones are 106-94. Creighton is 11-9 in Big East play, sixth place. They play the 11 seed in the First Round of the Big East Tournament, get an extra win before losing to the 3 seed. On Selection Sunday, Creighton is 21-14 instead of 18-14. And based on the strength of the Big East, and their increased RPI, they probably get in:
Their win pct would go up with 3 more wins.
Their SOS would GO UP because the losses of DePaul2 count against Creighton’s SOS twice, but everyone’s WINS vs DePaul2 count on their SOS 18 other times.
Their Opponents SOS would go up because everyone else’s SOS went up, just like Creighton’s did.
Now, that hypothetical doesn’t “work” because the NCAA won’t let you add two games to everyone’s schedule. I just did it to illustrate a point and have less “what ifs.”
You’d have to abandoned the DRR with more teams, but that allows you to manipulate the imbalance of the schedule: your projected “middle third” teams always somehow miss having TWO games against all the top third teams, and seemingly always have “easier schedules” so that the entire middle third is around .500 in conference play.
You have EIGHT TEAMS now who should be in the top two “thirds” of your league. But with only 10 teams, it’s forcing teams like last year’s Creighton and Marquette to appear worse than their talent level. There’s only 90 Big East Wins to go around, the top three have to take a ton of those wins, and your 4-5-6-7-8 are dividing up about 40 to 45 Big East wins a year. So Creighton and Marquette couldn’t win enough to get an NCAA bid.
Like I said: Find the sweet spot. If on average, the Big East is going 9-3 each OOC, how many “bottom teams” and “middle teams” would you need to add to get 7 of 12, 8 of 12, 8 of 13 or 9 of 13 into the NCAA tournament frequently?
7 of 13 is 53.8% of the league. Which is higher than your average thus far (50%) and what it will be after you get six this year (52.5%). Because of the rate that 10 and 11 seeds pull upsets, getting two more bids (6th and 7th bids) in every year is basically 8 units every three years.
With 10 teams, 3 seasons, 23 units, you have averaged .767 units earned per team, per season.
With 13 teams, 3 seasons, 31 units, you’d have .795 units earned per team, per season. Which is more money for everyone.
And of course, you’re taking bids from someone else, increasing your standing compared to other leagues.
THAT’S why I think the way I do. And I’d think that way about you guys even if I went somewhere else, and not a school that happens to be perfect for that “bottom third” role.