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Originally posted by wichshock65 View PostOk, just to better understand all this, if KU loses tonight at OU, how many spots should Newell increase his ballot for KU based on known metrics?
Asking for a friend. I'll hang up and listen.
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Originally posted by ShockCrazy View PostLots of talk about metrics being excuses for losers. Boy were we losers in 2016 then. It's fascinating.
Metrics are great for trying to understand which team is better than another IF THEY HAVEN"T PLAYED each other. Using metrics to justify a losing team as better than the winning team when the metrics are super close is using metrics as an excuse for losers.
In 2016, we weren't getting the opportunity to play the games. KU/Baylor happened this year. Baylor won, Baylor is the better team ... period.
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Originally posted by ShockCrazy View PostLots of talk about metrics being excuses for losers. Boy were we losers in 2016 then. It's fascinating.
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Originally posted by Cdizzle View Post
Disagree. Coaching and strategies exist for some reason. Is it to win, or to improve metrics? I believe they are linked. I guarantee you Marshall wanted to do what would most help his ranking last week. He has talked about it for a couple of weeks.
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Originally posted by Kel Varnsen View Post
Again, it depends. If you're talking about rating teams' quality, it could mean the team that has more losses is the better team. They would not have a better resume, though.
Would I rather lose than win? Heck no. But I'm not talking about what I would rather do. I'm talking about how we evaluate teams, a completely different aspect. That keeps getting lost in this discussion.Deuces Valley.
... No really, deuces.
________________
"Enjoy the ride."
- a smart man
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Originally posted by Jhook89 View Post
Exactly. I find it a ridiculous that the same people that were yelling to look at the metrics when we were in the valley and our resume was essentially us beating up on terrible teams are now arguing the opposite because that argument doesn’t benefit the team any more.
And besides, we’re talking about poll rankings, not NCAA selection criteria.
Stop assuming ****.
Deuces Valley.
... No really, deuces.
________________
"Enjoy the ride."
- a smart man
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For those hating on my take on metric use, I would point out that I also called Palm an idiot and terrible at his job for having WSU a 2 seed a week ago, when the NCAA Selection Committee's own metric supported his position. It's OK to have nuance. Metrics can be really useful for comparing unknowns over significant gaps, and for evaluating HOW a team is doing things.
Since 2016 keeps being brought up, that's a good example where we're not talking about flip-flopping #2 and #3 in a poll. We're talking about a team rated as roughly the 10th best being treated as roughly the 45th best. That kind of disparity is also difficult to reconcile.
I find it interesting that some folks are against a FAN of a team wanting to have it both ways, but are for supposedly impartial evaluators having it both ways. Fans are irrational. It's in the name. When 'impartial' people are also irrational, don't hate the fan for calling them on it.
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Originally posted by ShockerFever View Post
Not sure I’d want any metrics out there rewarding pretty losing over ugly winning.
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Originally posted by Jhook89 View Post
How narrow-minded of you, but then again that is your MO. I think most would agree that a 1 point loss at a team such as Duke would be more indicative of that team being a quality basketball team over a 1 point win against Prairie View A&M.
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Originally posted by ShockerFever View Post
Not sure I’d want any metrics out there rewarding pretty losing over ugly winning."In God we trust, all others must bring data." - W. Edwards Deming
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