Far be it from me to pump sunshine, even though WSU got exactly the RPI boost I expected from splitting the last two games at IndSt and is now inside Boyd's magic RPI top 45, at least according to Warren Nolan (.5596, which is 44th, projected by Nolan to inch up to 41st by the end of the regular season). That's nice, but at some point they really need to start actually winning games instead of gaining ground by losing two of three to good opponents whom they should beat two of three but don't. Now would be an excellent time to start, in fact, especially when you consider that four of their remaining eight games are against sub .500 teams, and only one is against a team currently playing as much as .600 ball (at Nebraska, which is historically a tough win for them). WSU's remaining regular season schedule is an RPI accident waiting to happen if they don't play well.
Still, who would have thought, especially among the doomsters, that this 29-22 Shocker team would rank (in the RPI, at least) ahead of Texas? Or Texas State, for that matter -- but most of all, the legends in their fans' own minds from Austin? Yet there are the struggling Horns behind the Shocks, ranked 47th at .5563 despite having a better mediocre (27-18) record than WSU does. Of course, that probably says more about the flaws of the RPI than it does about the teams' positions, because being tied for second in the Big XII (the Roman numeral for nine, apparently, at least in baseball) at 13-8 in league play puts you a heck of a lot closer to an at-large spot if you need one than does being fifth in the Valley at 7-8, RPI be damned.
So, yes, it's silly -- but still: who could have imagined looking at Warren Nolan's RPI at this point in THIS season and seeing WSU listed ahead of Texas? No wonder KC sees good things on the horizon -- Hell really IS freezing over.
Still, who would have thought, especially among the doomsters, that this 29-22 Shocker team would rank (in the RPI, at least) ahead of Texas? Or Texas State, for that matter -- but most of all, the legends in their fans' own minds from Austin? Yet there are the struggling Horns behind the Shocks, ranked 47th at .5563 despite having a better mediocre (27-18) record than WSU does. Of course, that probably says more about the flaws of the RPI than it does about the teams' positions, because being tied for second in the Big XII (the Roman numeral for nine, apparently, at least in baseball) at 13-8 in league play puts you a heck of a lot closer to an at-large spot if you need one than does being fifth in the Valley at 7-8, RPI be damned.
So, yes, it's silly -- but still: who could have imagined looking at Warren Nolan's RPI at this point in THIS season and seeing WSU listed ahead of Texas? No wonder KC sees good things on the horizon -- Hell really IS freezing over.
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