Originally posted by 7hottamales
Originally posted by ShockRef
Originally posted by RoyalShock
Drake's seed isn't that difficult to figure out, really.
How many teams that are in the tournament did they beat? One. Show me a 4-seed that Drake should replace? I don't see one. Every 4-seed has more impressive wins than Drake. Look at 6-seed Marquette. Yes, they had nine losses, but only one was outside the RPI top-30, and that was to #55. Drake had two losses outside the top-100.
I'm trying to figure out how Oklahoma gets a 6-seed with 11 losses, two of them being to Colorado (161) and Nebraska (95).
Barring a truly magical season (such as an awesome OOC and only 1 or 2 losses in conference), a 4-5 seed is about the best an MVC team can expect. That's why the non-conference is so important in the Valley.
BCS teams are always going to have a seeding advantage. They get plenty of games to play against tournament-caliber competition so their resumes will look better. That's one of the reasons ISU probably didn't get in. They didn't have ample opportunity to make up for their loss to E. Michigan or their four losses outside the top 100. They also had no wins against at-large teams. At least Baylor only had one loss outside the top 100 and three wins against tournament teams. In looking at good wins vs. bad losses, I don't see where ISU has a case against the teams that got in ahead of them. Don't fall into the RPI trap!
And that leads into my annual RPI perspective lecture: The RPI has nothing to do with seeding. The committee does not look at it for that purpose. They only use it to evaluate good wins and bad losses.
How many teams that are in the tournament did they beat? One. Show me a 4-seed that Drake should replace? I don't see one. Every 4-seed has more impressive wins than Drake. Look at 6-seed Marquette. Yes, they had nine losses, but only one was outside the RPI top-30, and that was to #55. Drake had two losses outside the top-100.
I'm trying to figure out how Oklahoma gets a 6-seed with 11 losses, two of them being to Colorado (161) and Nebraska (95).
Barring a truly magical season (such as an awesome OOC and only 1 or 2 losses in conference), a 4-5 seed is about the best an MVC team can expect. That's why the non-conference is so important in the Valley.
BCS teams are always going to have a seeding advantage. They get plenty of games to play against tournament-caliber competition so their resumes will look better. That's one of the reasons ISU probably didn't get in. They didn't have ample opportunity to make up for their loss to E. Michigan or their four losses outside the top 100. They also had no wins against at-large teams. At least Baylor only had one loss outside the top 100 and three wins against tournament teams. In looking at good wins vs. bad losses, I don't see where ISU has a case against the teams that got in ahead of them. Don't fall into the RPI trap!
And that leads into my annual RPI perspective lecture: The RPI has nothing to do with seeding. The committee does not look at it for that purpose. They only use it to evaluate good wins and bad losses.
The OU 11 seed also mystifies yours truly, along with Arizona even getting a bid.
If you watched OU get blasted Saturday, you know they are not a very good team.
When the selection committee implements certain criteria that teams must meet, the process will be based on facts, instead of gut feelings.
Point being: No team should be considered if they don't have a winning conference record. I don't care if they were 'close loses' or a certain player didn't play. This isn't horse shoes and a loss is a loss.
If you lose, you don't get invited - you stay home. 8)
The Zona bid follows the same logic as the OU seed. Zona was 16-6 when healthy...and Bayless is the heart and soul of that team. I think the question of how heavily injuries should be weighed is a very valid one.
According to this logic, a team starts 6-0 and then loses a player or two and ends up say, 8-20. However, the players came back for the last couple of games and presto, it's time to give them a bid. Sorry, not buying. 8)
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