I posted this on MVCFans, but many here don't go there, so I'll duplicate it here.
I think Valley fans pay too much attention to RPI. RPI is nothing more than an indicator and it can get way out of whack. I think the Selection Committee has recognized this problem many years ago and the Committee has probably been using RPI appropriately by mostly ignoring it.
Let's say that a team played half their season against end-of-the-season top-50 teams and went 8-8 in 16 games. That would establish them as probably the 20th-30th best team in the country. Their RPI would probably be below 10. There's the first problem.
Now, have that same team play another 16 games against bottom-50 teams and win all the games. The cupcakes kill the team's RPI. The team, that is now 24-8 in March, probably has an RPI around 70 or 80.
The team is established as a top-25 type team, yet they have an RPI that would lead to automatic elimination by the Committee if you just looked at RPI.
WSU's game against ChiSt demonstrates this. Compared to all other teams, WSU had been 28th based on their performance to this point. After playing ChiSt, WSU dropped to 50th because the SoS component was affected. WSU didn't actually get worse in comparison to other teams, but the RPI indicates they did.
This is probably what affected MSU a couple of times under Hinson. Other schools had played more games against higher-level competition (and won enough of those games), but also played more games against lower-level competition. MSU had a great W/L record and a solid SoS component, but beating RPI 100-150 teams bumped MSU's SoS higher than some other schools with a bunch of W's over RPI 250+ teams.
If Team A beats an RPI 100-150 opponent and Team B beats an RPI 250 opponent, that does nothing to indicate which team is better, but Team A will have a much higher RPI than Team B.
I think Valley fans pay too much attention to RPI. RPI is nothing more than an indicator and it can get way out of whack. I think the Selection Committee has recognized this problem many years ago and the Committee has probably been using RPI appropriately by mostly ignoring it.
Let's say that a team played half their season against end-of-the-season top-50 teams and went 8-8 in 16 games. That would establish them as probably the 20th-30th best team in the country. Their RPI would probably be below 10. There's the first problem.
Now, have that same team play another 16 games against bottom-50 teams and win all the games. The cupcakes kill the team's RPI. The team, that is now 24-8 in March, probably has an RPI around 70 or 80.
The team is established as a top-25 type team, yet they have an RPI that would lead to automatic elimination by the Committee if you just looked at RPI.
WSU's game against ChiSt demonstrates this. Compared to all other teams, WSU had been 28th based on their performance to this point. After playing ChiSt, WSU dropped to 50th because the SoS component was affected. WSU didn't actually get worse in comparison to other teams, but the RPI indicates they did.
This is probably what affected MSU a couple of times under Hinson. Other schools had played more games against higher-level competition (and won enough of those games), but also played more games against lower-level competition. MSU had a great W/L record and a solid SoS component, but beating RPI 100-150 teams bumped MSU's SoS higher than some other schools with a bunch of W's over RPI 250+ teams.
If Team A beats an RPI 100-150 opponent and Team B beats an RPI 250 opponent, that does nothing to indicate which team is better, but Team A will have a much higher RPI than Team B.
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