I can't argue with his WSU - WVU example but the Utah State - Mich State comparison was weak.
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Let's do away with conference affiliation (at least for scheduling purposes) and go with a tiered system instead. The tiers change each year based on your prior year performance in the regular season and ncaa tournament. Each team plays a certain number of teams from each tier so that everyone gets a chance for good wins and bad losses.
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Since my name came up, I'll just mention that I think Katz blew it big time with that article. How he decided to do an article about how "Mid majors have had their chance" and then reference Utah State, the perfect example of a team that hasn't had their chance, is beyond me.
Utah State is going to be nearly impossible to seed this year. 8? 12? Who knows? That said, as of today they deserve to be in the tournament by any respectable standard.
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Originally posted by Jamar Howard 4 PresidentSince my name came up, I'll just mention that I think Katz blew it big time with that article. How he decided to do an article about how "Mid majors have had their chance" and then reference Utah State, the perfect example of a team that hasn't had their chance, is beyond me.
Utah State is going to be nearly impossible to seed this year. 8? 12? Who knows? That said, as of today they deserve to be in the tournament by any respectable standard.
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Leave WSU out of the discussion altogether. The system is rigged and everyone knows it.
The addition of four teams stacks it even more. If a mid major gets even one of the additional 4 spots, I will be flabbergasted...
:-x
When you hear discussions about whether the Big East could get 10 or 11 teams in, that's all you need to know....Kansas is Flat. The Earth is Not!!
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The comparison might be valid if they were "chances for good wins," as these things are consistently referred to. But that is intellectually dishonest. What guys like Katz are saying is that when given the opportunity, a mid-major can and should get an upset over a higher-ranked team in order to justify even getting a chance to play in the tournament. But if a "middling" team loses to a higher ranked team within the conference, it is somehow no punishment because it just plays in a really tough conference. It is a painful double standard. If you play a team with a higher rank than you, the loss should be expected. If you play a team with a lower rank than you, the win should be expected. Justifying placement at all on the ability to beat those teams that are judged better than you makes no sense at all.
Taking this tortured logic to its certainly illogical conclusion, there would be four #1 seeds and no others. After all, you have to justify being placed in the tournament by proving you can beat a higher ranked team when you have the opportunity.
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Re: ESPN Bubble columns
Originally posted by tw805Originally posted by XManComethOriginally posted by MaggieOriginally posted by XManComethOriginally posted by MaggieOriginally posted by Anthroshock
For example, he wrote this before Maui:
Wichita State is the Missouri Valley favorite and a top-30 team.
By all means we should let in "big conference" teams that are mediocre at best. After all, they play lots of sub-50 RPI teams over the course of the year. Sure, those games are compelled by forces greater than the teams themselves, and they managed to lose about half of them, and they provide a disincentive to scheduling top-50 teams outside the realm of that compulsion, but they're top 50 games for crying out loud! You have to reward that by letting them into the tournament, thereby perpetuating the system that makes it impossible for "mid-majors" to schedule top-50 games at all. Who could see a flaw in that logic?
There are 19 of what I consider "mid major" teams in the top 52 of the RPI. That's nearly 37%. Two of them in the Top 5. TOP 5. Face it, your argument is a mid-major crutch that isn't needed.
Major conference teams, small conferences (that don't deserve more than one team in anyway) and bad mid major teams that aren't going to win more than they lose take up probably 75% of college basketball... Just a rough guess. Tthat leaves, what, probably 10-12 good mid major teams that might deserve an at large spot in the tournament? Maybe not even that many. Not this year anyway. You can't possibly sit there and tell me that New Mexico or Northern Iowa deserve a spot in the tournament over someone like West Virginia or even Missouri. I hate to say it, but if a team goes 19-9 and doesn't beat anyone over the course of the season, then a team that's 16-11 who beat a few top 25 teams along the way is getting in. Why? Because they actually beat someone. I'm not a BCS homer, but I'm getting tired of people who want to hand out bids to teams that don't deserve it.
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Originally posted by tw805The comparison might be valid if they were "chances for good wins," as these things are consistently referred to. But that is intellectually dishonest. What guys like Katz are saying is that when given the opportunity, a mid-major can and should get an upset over a higher-ranked team in order to justify even getting a chance to play in the tournament. But if a "middling" team loses to a higher ranked team within the conference, it is somehow no punishment because it just plays in a really tough conference. It is a painful double standard. If you play a team with a higher rank than you, the loss should be expected. If you play a team with a lower rank than you, the win should be expected. Justifying placement at all on the ability to beat those teams that are judged better than you makes no sense at all.
Taking this tortured logic to its certainly illogical conclusion, there would be four #1 seeds and no others. After all, you have to justify being placed in the tournament by proving you can beat a higher ranked team when you have the opportunity.
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Originally posted by XManComethOriginally posted by tw805The comparison might be valid if they were "chances for good wins," as these things are consistently referred to. But that is intellectually dishonest. What guys like Katz are saying is that when given the opportunity, a mid-major can and should get an upset over a higher-ranked team in order to justify even getting a chance to play in the tournament. But if a "middling" team loses to a higher ranked team within the conference, it is somehow no punishment because it just plays in a really tough conference. It is a painful double standard. If you play a team with a higher rank than you, the loss should be expected. If you play a team with a lower rank than you, the win should be expected. Justifying placement at all on the ability to beat those teams that are judged better than you makes no sense at all.
Taking this tortured logic to its certainly illogical conclusion, there would be four #1 seeds and no others. After all, you have to justify being placed in the tournament by proving you can beat a higher ranked team when you have the opportunity.
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is not impressive. And Lunardi has them in at 11.
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Originally posted by tw805Originally posted by XManComethOriginally posted by tw805The comparison might be valid if they were "chances for good wins," as these things are consistently referred to. But that is intellectually dishonest. What guys like Katz are saying is that when given the opportunity, a mid-major can and should get an upset over a higher-ranked team in order to justify even getting a chance to play in the tournament. But if a "middling" team loses to a higher ranked team within the conference, it is somehow no punishment because it just plays in a really tough conference. It is a painful double standard. If you play a team with a higher rank than you, the loss should be expected. If you play a team with a lower rank than you, the win should be expected. Justifying placement at all on the ability to beat those teams that are judged better than you makes no sense at all.
Taking this tortured logic to its certainly illogical conclusion, there would be four #1 seeds and no others. After all, you have to justify being placed in the tournament by proving you can beat a higher ranked team when you have the opportunity.
Visit ESPN for Baylor Bears live scores, video highlights, and latest news. Find standings and the full 2024-25 season schedule.
is not impressive. And Lunardi has them in at 11.Where oh where is our T. Boone Pickens.
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Yes the NCAA should step in on the scheduling and make Duke play AT Utah State and AT Alcorn State at least their fair share of the time in the nonconference so that it is FAIR. Katz said a mouthfull "Fair or not" that is the way it is. If the NCAA doesn't even want to set up its competition to be fair then it is really not hard to see why things are screwed up and why there will always be bitching about it. So when things are not fair that means they are unfair and if that is the way they want it then fine but the high majors should derive less satisfaction since they have stacked the deck in their favor.
The reality is that money governs everything and if Duke or Carolina or UCONN will only schedule what will preserve their place in the Heirarchy and ESPN will not pay as much for Duke vs. Missouri State in Springfield instead of Duke vs. Illinois in Madison Square Garden. The NCAA as an organization derives financial benefit from the stacked deck so they are not about to change it. The biggest TV markets and the schools whose teams have fans in those markets will always control.
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*****, *****, *****, *****, *****.
We know (and certainly our AD and head coach knows) what the system is and in general what the unwritten rules are to qualify for an at-large bid.
Until things change, which is very unlikely to ever happen as long as the BCS schools dictate the policy, we can either try and qualify by their rules or stand on the sidelines bitching that it is unfair. But nothing is going to change and as long as we keep our heads buried in the sand, we likely will rarely be granted an at-large bid.
So what do we do? Continue our fallacy of scheduling and beating up on cream puffs to balloon our won/loss record hoping that our quantity of weak wins will win out over other schools quality wins when we know going in, this will not be the case.
The situation is only going to get worse as the BCS conferences get larger and larger and today's top mid-majors get swallowed up.
HMMMMMMMMM. But that is another topic for another day.
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Originally posted by 60Shock*****, *****, *****, *****, *****.
We know (and certainly our AD and head coach knows) what the system is and in general what the unwritten rules are to qualify for an at-large bid.
Until things change, which is very unlikely to ever happen as long as the BCS schools dictate the policy, we can either try and qualify by their rules or stand on the sidelines bitching that it is unfair. But nothing is going to change and as long as we keep our heads buried in the sand, we likely will rarely be granted an at-large bid.
So what do we do? Continue our fallacy of scheduling and beating up on cream puffs to balloon our won/loss record hoping that our quantity of weak wins will win out over other schools quality wins when we know going in, this will not be the case.
The situation is only going to get worse as the BCS conferences get larger and larger and today's top mid-majors get swallowed up.
HMMMMMMMMM. But that is another topic for another day.
When that is the case, I frankly do not understand the attitude that suggests everyone sit on the sidelines and refuse to speak, on the basis that while a blatant inequity exists, the power structure that keeps the inequity in place seems insurmountable.
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