ecasadoSBU wrote:Anything to make things more complicated and thus make it harder for the average person to determine why a team is in or out. Eventually the goal is to benefit the top conferences. Not surprised.
What is good about the RPI is that is a known formula that WORKS! Everyone knows it, everyone can calculate it, and everyone knows why you were in or left out.
Now they going to add KP, Sagarin, KPI and a bunch of index that will probably benefit the Football schools.
DudeAnon wrote:Can someone give me an actual reason to dislike the RPI? It accounts place of game and goes only off of who won.
Bill Marsh wrote:DudeAnon wrote:Can someone give me an actual reason to dislike the RPI? It accounts place of game and goes only off of who won.
It's based entirely on a combination of a team's winning % and their opponents' W% and their opponents' opponents' W%. In other words, the only metric involved is W%, which is about as primitive a measure as anyone could use to compare teams who haven't played the same schedule. There are simply more sophisticated approaches to measuring teams' performances in a way that makes valid comparisons.
RPI was first introduced back in 1981. We simply didn't have the computer power then that we do now, which is why they contrived such a simplistic formula. This is the digital age. We can surely do better than they did 35 years ago.
ecasadoSBU wrote:Bill Marsh wrote:DudeAnon wrote:Can someone give me an actual reason to dislike the RPI? It accounts place of game and goes only off of who won.
It's based entirely on a combination of a team's winning % and their opponents' W% and their opponents' opponents' W%. In other words, the only metric involved is W%, which is about as primitive a measure as anyone could use to compare teams who haven't played the same schedule. There are simply more sophisticated approaches to measuring teams' performances in a way that makes valid comparisons.
RPI was first introduced back in 1981. We simply didn't have the computer power then that we do now, which is why they contrived such a simplistic formula. This is the digital age. We can surely do better than they did 35 years ago.
Listen. There is always going to be flaws with the metrics. But the concern shouldn't be whether the RPI can ALWAYS get the best 68 teams. The concern should be whether the metric is consistent and easy for the public to understand and hard to be manipulated by committees. RPI meets both. . My biggest concern here is predictability and that the decision makers cannot pick and choose which metric to use to give certain teams an advantage. We are already seeing a larger share of Power-5 schools getting at-large bids than ever before. That's largely in a way due to the committee picking-and-choosing when to use RPI and when to use something else (KP, S, Etc).
I wouldn't be opposed against using other metrics if the committee precisely indicated how much of each metric is going to be used to decide who is in and who is out. A composite based on 25/25/25/25 weights wouldn't be a problem. The problem I see here is that the committee does 25/5/70/0 for one team and then does 50/10/15/25 for another for the convenience of the power-5 teams
Bill Marsh wrote:DudeAnon wrote:Can someone give me an actual reason to dislike the RPI? It accounts place of game and goes only off of who won.
It's based entirely on a combination of a team's winning % and their opponents' W% and their opponents' opponents' W%. In other words, the only metric involved is W%, which is about as primitive a measure as anyone could use to compare teams who haven't played the same schedule. There are simply more sophisticated approaches to measuring teams' performances in a way that makes valid comparisons.
RPI was first introduced back in 1981. We simply didn't have the computer power then that we do now, which is why they contrived such a simplistic formula. This is the digital age. We can surely do better than they did 35 years ago.
Bill Marsh wrote:It's been shocking to see teams ranked as high as 32 in RPI passed over for a bid as we've seen even within the past decade. That needs to change.
sciencejay wrote:I don't love the RPI, but unless they transition to a meta-rankings system where they take multiple, independent systems (RPI, Sagarin, KP, BPI, etc), I fear that the Football 5 will figure out how to use a newer, single system to keep the rest of us out. And yes, I include the BEast in that group of 'those left out'. We can likely agree that there is so much money in the system (BB, Football), that everyone wants to control/obtain as much money/power as possible. And while BB is significant, it pales in comparison to football, so the football 5 remain at the top of the food chain.
Here's where I think they can 'game' the system (if a single metrics is settled upon): each of the rankings systems has its own biases. If they are all sufficiently different (obviously, there is a lot of overlap with SOS, W-L %, etc), then averaging multiple systems in a meta-system should prevent conferences/teams from gaming the system. However, if the F5 decide that they will only play each other in the non-con, everyone else gets screwed. One of the inherent problems with all of the computer systems is that they all start off with a guesstimation of who is good and who isn't before the season even starts. You beat Duke and that's a 'great' win because Duke is good. So if the F5 don't play anyone outsiders in the non-con, they insulate themselves from interlopers who might steal 'good' wins. I can't remember the exact year, but around 2005 (maybe it was 2006 the year Missouri St got screwed), MVC teams had a huge number of great non-con wins. So then all their conference games came with higher RPI considerations (much like it is for the BEast this year--not comparing actual talent/competitiveness nationally between the two situations, just the quality non-con wins and the RPI benefit), and more teams went into selection Sunday with high RPIs. Jay Bilas even said something like MVC teams were 'gaming' the RPI like the whiny biatch that he is. Point being, that year the MVC went on the road in the non-con and earned good wins (seems like WSU winning at Syracuse was one of them). After that, I think it was even harder for MVC teams to schedule games with the big boys. Unless they play them in a tourney, they don't get to play them.
I'm not saying that the BEast will get locked out in the cold, but you can't deny that big money will make people do less than honest things. The way the NCAA tourney money is paid out, they could ensure themselves more money by simply locking everyone else out of the party. Winning a non-F5 conference may then be the only way to get into the big dance. Is this apocalyptic sounding, yes, but not that far-fetched in my mind.
I am totally in favor of taking multiple systems and coming up with an averaging equation that everyone could see clearly and understand what the committee is using for metrics input during the decision-making process. There will still be human bias--committee member X overvalues a win at Kentucky (in a year when UK is good, but not great), just because of the name, and undervalues a win over someone else who is typically mediocre, but it really good that year. But if we fans have a clearer idea of what metrics are used and how they are used, we would all be happier.
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