Originally posted by WuDrWu
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Breaking Down WSU's Resume
Collapse
X
-
-
Originally posted by Jamar Howard 4 President View PostAfter looking into Florida State some more, I went ahead and flipped WSU ahead of them. All other changes are due to last night's games. As of today:
3 seeds:
Georgetown, Marquette, Baylor, Michigan
4 seeds:
Indiana, Wisconsin, Louisville, Wichita State
5 seeds:
Florida State, Florida, UNLV, Temple
Surprised to see UNLV that high, and especially over Temple, though. That's probably a gut feeling on the two being very similar, but Temple playing far better down the stretch. UNLV is on a terrible road streak, dropping four of their last six, with wins of two and five points against bad teams. I think there is a decent chance Colorado State upsets them tonight, but either way I think Temple is better. I think UNLV has benefited from their schedule ... They're 1-6 on the road against Top 100 RPI teams, three of those losses blow outs. That looks terrible to me.
I think UNLV is significantly overrated. But that helps WSU's RPI, so whatever.
If I remember right, Temple's two January losses occurred while they were playing through significant injuries, while they're back to full strength now.Last edited by Rlh04d; February 29, 2012, 01:30 PM.Originally posted by BleacherReportFred VanVleet on Shockers' 3-Pt Shooting Confidence -- ' Honestly, I just tell these guys to let their nuts hang.'
Comment
-
Jamar, love what you do with the blog. Going a bit off topic here, but I have always been a strong believer in teams shouldn't get an At-Large if they have a losing conference record. You did a great job last year in explaining the "perfect storm" that was the Big East. The Big East is a different this year, but could you explain the rankings and likelyhood for at large for St. Louis, UConn, and Colorado St. Why they are in, or why they are out.
Comment
-
Originally posted by rialaigh View PostI dislike people talking about injuries and suspensions when seeding for the NCAA (however I am fine considering that when ranking). If you take into account individual game preformances and injuries and suspensions and who played and who didn't in the conference tournies than it rewards teams like UNC. Roy Williams will sit most of his starters the first or second game of the ACC Tourny and UNC may go out 2nd round. However the committee will look at that and say...oh, we was just resting his starters, he deserves an even better seed because they are ready to play...and I think rewarding that kind of behavior is bogus. Now I think you can account for that in the rankings but in the seedings I hate seeing that kind of behavior rewarded. It once again is Biased towards BCS teams because if a team like Wichita State were to rest their starters and lose first or second round of the tourny than it would be the end of the world, we would be looking at a 7-9 seed.Kung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
Comment
-
Originally posted by AG1219 View PostJamar, love what you do with the blog. Going a bit off topic here, but I have always been a strong believer in teams shouldn't get an At-Large if they have a losing conference record. You did a great job last year in explaining the "perfect storm" that was the Big East. The Big East is a different this year, but could you explain the rankings and likelyhood for at large for St. Louis, UConn, and Colorado St. Why they are in, or why they are out.
RPI - 30, will probaby finish 2nd in A-10, similar to WSU only without any top 50 wins, a couple more losses than WSU including an awful loss to Rhode Island. Will likely play in the 8/9 game first round.
UConn
RPI - 37, will probably finish 8-10 in Big East, only 5-11 in 2012. They do have 8 top 100 wins and a good RPI for a bubble team. Need to win on Senior night at home against Pitt and then win 1 game in the Big East Tourney in order to feel safe.
Colorado State
RPI - 24, Will finish no better than 8-6 in MWC. Like UConn, they also have 8 top 100 wins and a very nice RPI for a bubble team. Need to beat UNLV tonight at home or to win a couple games in their conference tourney. They will be an interesting case to analyize since they have a poor league record with a lot of losses down the stretch but a very nice RPI.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jamar Howard 4 President View PostSt. Louis
RPI - 30, will probaby finish 2nd in A-10, similar to WSU only without any top 50 wins, a couple more losses than WSU including an awful loss to Rhode Island. Will likely play in the 8/9 game first round.
UConn
RPI - 37, will probably finish 8-10 in Big East, only 5-11 in 2012. They do have 8 top 100 wins and a good RPI for a bubble team. Need to win on Senior night at home against Pitt and then win 1 game in the Big East Tourney in order to feel safe.
Colorado State
RPI - 24, Will finish no better than 8-6 in MWC. Like UConn, they also have 8 top 100 wins and a very nice RPI for a bubble team. Need to beat UNLV tonight at home or to win a couple games in their conference tourney. They will be an interesting case to analyize since they have a poor league record with a lot of losses down the stretch but a very nice RPI.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Downtown Shocker Brown View PostOk, so I am wondering why UCONN should feel safe and Colorado State should not? CSU has a winning record, same number of top 100 wins, and a better record down the stretch than UCONN?Originally posted by BleacherReportFred VanVleet on Shockers' 3-Pt Shooting Confidence -- ' Honestly, I just tell these guys to let their nuts hang.'
Comment
-
Originally posted by Downtown Shocker Brown View PostOk, so I am wondering why UCONN should feel safe and Colorado State should not? CSU has a winning record, same number of top 100 wins, and a better record down the stretch than UCONN?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Rlh04d View PostI'm confused as to why UConn seems to be safer than USF, when USF has an insanely better conference record in the supposedly top conference in the land.
UConn played Syracuse (1 RPI), Seton Hall (44), and ND (47) twice, going 2-4.
USF played Pitt (94), Villanova (119), and Providence (150) twice, going 6-0.
Also USF lost to UConn at home and also had a lower OOC SoS going 6-6, UConn went 10-2.
Comment
-
Originally posted by ShockTalk View PostI'll give it a shot. UConn played a tougher conference schedule. Each team in the Big East plays everyone once and 3 teams twice.
UConn played Syracuse (1 RPI), Seton Hall (44), and ND (47) twice, going 2-4.
USF played Pitt (94), Villanova (119), and Providence (150) twice, going 6-0.
Also USF lost to UConn at home and also had a lower OOC SoS going 6-6, UConn went 10-2.Originally posted by BleacherReportFred VanVleet on Shockers' 3-Pt Shooting Confidence -- ' Honestly, I just tell these guys to let their nuts hang.'
Comment
-
Originally posted by ShockTalk View PostI'll give it a shot. UConn played a tougher conference schedule. Each team in the Big East plays everyone once and 3 teams twice.
UConn played Syracuse (1 RPI), Seton Hall (44), and ND (47) twice, going 2-4.
USF played Pitt (94), Villanova (119), and Providence (150) twice, going 6-0.
Also USF lost to UConn at home and also had a lower OOC SoS going 6-6, UConn went 10-2.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Downtown Shocker Brown View PostOk, so I am wondering why UCONN should feel safe and Colorado State should not? CSU has a winning record, same number of top 100 wins, and a better record down the stretch than UCONN?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jamar Howard 4 President View PostShockTalk nailed it. The Big East is weird, unbalanced, and generally anoying to me. They play most teams only once per year. Who you get matched up with to place twice any given year makes a huge difference.
You can see what a mess this all becomes anytime a conference doesn't play everyone twice. Conference scheduling may help one team into the dance, while bursting the bubble of another, equally deserving team.
Comment
Comment