and yes..William seems to have some of the same viewpoint that I have about conference tourneys.
The conference races are great for entertainment..and yes, I understand that the reward is the regional....but we pretend that we have all apples..when you have apples and kumquats.
It is much like the football BCS Bowl controversy...we really have 119 teams pretending to be all in the same "category".
There's little to suggest, to me, that the mid-majors can compete with teams from the major conferences. While some mid-majors run through a weak schedule undefeated, they might get left out of the BCS and justifiably so. Here are a few facts to indicate this:
Since the BCS started in 1998, mid-majors have won less then 20% of the games they've played overall when playing major conference teams.
Even at home, these mid-majors have won less then 1 in three of games played against major teams, but on the road have won less than 1 in 7.
Even the better mid-majors, ones with a winning conference record don't win a majority of the games in which the play the weaker majors, ones with a losing conference record and teams that have won mid-major championships win barely 1 in 3 games in which they play major teams.
From 1998-2005, Mid-majors that finished undefeated in their conference lost a majority of the games they played against major conference teams. These teams, in fact, lost over 1 in 3 games they played against major conference teams that finished with a .333 or less conference record.
Mid-majors that have finished ranked in the AP poll have even lost over 1/3 of their games against major teams that finished unranked or lower ranked then them. Also, mid-majors that finished ranked have only won 1 in 3 games they played against majors that finished ranked, indicating that mid-majors tend to have to do less to get ranked.
Of the mid-majors that finished undefeated since 1998, only Utah and Boise St. gave any indication they could beat the better major conference teams, and they deservedly got a BCS bid.
The conference races are great for entertainment..and yes, I understand that the reward is the regional....but we pretend that we have all apples..when you have apples and kumquats.
It is much like the football BCS Bowl controversy...we really have 119 teams pretending to be all in the same "category".
There's little to suggest, to me, that the mid-majors can compete with teams from the major conferences. While some mid-majors run through a weak schedule undefeated, they might get left out of the BCS and justifiably so. Here are a few facts to indicate this:
Since the BCS started in 1998, mid-majors have won less then 20% of the games they've played overall when playing major conference teams.
Even at home, these mid-majors have won less then 1 in three of games played against major teams, but on the road have won less than 1 in 7.
Even the better mid-majors, ones with a winning conference record don't win a majority of the games in which the play the weaker majors, ones with a losing conference record and teams that have won mid-major championships win barely 1 in 3 games in which they play major teams.
From 1998-2005, Mid-majors that finished undefeated in their conference lost a majority of the games they played against major conference teams. These teams, in fact, lost over 1 in 3 games they played against major conference teams that finished with a .333 or less conference record.
Mid-majors that have finished ranked in the AP poll have even lost over 1/3 of their games against major teams that finished unranked or lower ranked then them. Also, mid-majors that finished ranked have only won 1 in 3 games they played against majors that finished ranked, indicating that mid-majors tend to have to do less to get ranked.
Of the mid-majors that finished undefeated since 1998, only Utah and Boise St. gave any indication they could beat the better major conference teams, and they deservedly got a BCS bid.
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