I'd like to see Indiana State play Ohio State. I think I'd take the trees on a neutral court. But that will never happen because Ohio State only plays lesser competition at home like the Delaware Fightin Blue Hens and the Bryant Bulldogs. 11 of those such games at home to start the season. So out of 22 wins just throw out 11 right off the top.
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Originally posted by Capitol Shock II View PostWell since WSU last season and Ohio state this season are rated roughly the same by your analysis why don't we make a friendly wager. I bet that Ohio state doesn't make it to this years final four like WSU did last year. Since the teams have an equal rpi roughly you take Ohio state getting to the final four. Obviously this is for flip or shocktalk
The difference, Our Shockers Did It!!! Few others have or will.
Of course, this has absolutely nothing to do with your post or my comment to it. The point is, if Ohio State's record, wins, and losses are not good enough to make the Dance, neither should any other teams that are very comparable or slightly worse. That would have included WSU last year.
As @HernyMuto said, they still have to take 68. With rare exception, if you have a 50 RPI or better (maybe even worse) this year, you will have a good shot at making the field. Ohio St is no where near that rare exception.
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Originally posted by Capitol Shock II View PostI guess that's a "No"?
Ohio State has a similar resume to us last year. That's where the comparisons begin and end, and the only comparison that was made.Originally posted by BleacherReportFred VanVleet on Shockers' 3-Pt Shooting Confidence -- ' Honestly, I just tell these guys to let their nuts hang.'
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Originally posted by Play Angry View PostThis was a really, really terrible year for mid majors.
They beat Virginia and lost to Wisconsin by 3 pts. Two huge positives.
They lost to Harvard which was a big loss because that could have given them another quality win vs a likely tourney team.
They have 2 star players in Sykes and Alec Brown and Brown did not play at Valpo 1 of their 2 league losses. If the big name teams get to write off their losses missing star players then so should all teams. The Committee should but likely won't take that into account. Their loss at home to Milwaukee is just unexplainable except that it was a rivalry game. That was a really bad loss but guess who else has some really horrible home losses ? Syracuse so I don't think you throw a team out based on 1 bad home loss. It happens to the best teams too.
Their RPI would take a hit with a home loss probably would be around 60ish by selection Sunday and that might be the killer.
They would finish at 22-6
1-1 vs top 50
3-3 vs 51-100
18-2 vs 101+
It's a tough case to make to get in but that Virginia wins looks great and the Wisky tough loss too.
All in all though we have very few mid major chances for at larges.2014 RTS Fantasy Championship National Champion $200,000 (2460 teams)
2012 NFFC Online National Champion $100,000 (1872 teams)
2014 DFWC National Champion $9,250 (288 teams)
2015 RTS Fantasy Championship 2nd Place $25,000 (3120 teams)
2015 NCAA Bracketology (351 pts more than all 136 at the bracket matrix)
Kentucky Wildcats National Champions 2012 1998 1996 1978 1958 1951 1949 1948
The Ohio State Buckeyes National Champions 2014 2002 1970 1968 1961 1957 1954 1942
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Originally posted by Play Angry View PostThis was a really, really terrible year for mid majors.
WSU, Saint Louis, SDSU, and Creighton ALL spent a good part of the year in the Top15. That doesn't sound terrible. All are locks for the tourney as favored seeds, as are Gonzaga, Memphis, and SMU. By most previous definitions these are "mid-majors." The narrative is being changed because of conference realignment and because so many "mid-majors" are now household names. So they are redefining the term, so as to still make mid-majors look like they aren't any good.
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Originally posted by Cdizzle View PostSort of. It depends who you ask what defines a mid-major. Is the A-10 mid-major? Is the MWC mid-major? The WCC? The AAC? The nBE?
WSU, Saint Louis, SDSU, and Creighton ALL spent a good part of the year in the Top15. That doesn't sound terrible. All are locks for the tourney as favored seeds, as are Gonzaga, Memphis, and SMU. By most previous definitions these are "mid-majors." The narrative is being changed because of conference realignment and because so many "mid-majors" are now household names. So they are redefining the term, so as to still make mid-majors look like they aren't any good.
If "non-BCS" is the preferred method, then it certainly was a strong year thanks mostly to the A-10's depth. I don't really ever remember the A-10, MWC/pre-breakup WAC, pre-meltdown CUSA, etc. being included in the term though- squads like Temple, Memphis, Louisville, Utah, New Mexico, etc. avoided the moniker. Those leagues always occupied some sort of nebulous middle ground.
Aside from the WCC (2 bids), there just isn't much at-large representation from the traditional "mid major" leagues this season.
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Originally posted by Play Angry View PostAside from the WCC (2 bids), there just isn't much at-large representation from the traditional "mid major" leagues this season.
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