• nit final 4 vs. sweet 16

    From JGibson@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 25 07:28:00 2022
    Based on the KenPom ratings, the NIT semifinal between Washington State (#35) and Texas A&M (#41) has a lower summation of total ordinal rankings (76) than the sweet 16 game between Iowa State (#38) and Miami (#44) (82).

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  • From Johnny RSFCootball@21:1/5 to JGibson on Fri Mar 25 08:15:51 2022
    On Friday, March 25, 2022 at 9:28:03 AM UTC-5, JGibson wrote:
    Based on the KenPom ratings, the NIT semifinal between Washington State (#35) and Texas A&M (#41) has a lower summation of total ordinal rankings (76) than the sweet 16 game between Iowa State (#38) and Miami (#44) (82).

    This is a good example of why people should focus on the rating more so than the ranking when viewing kenpom/sagarin/bpi type ratings. According to kenpom, if any two of these teams played each other on a neutral court, then the predicted MOV would be <1
    point.

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  • From xyzzy@21:1/5 to JGibson on Fri Mar 25 18:41:59 2022
    JGibson <james.m.gibson@gmail.com> wrote:
    Based on the KenPom ratings, the NIT semifinal between Washington State
    (#35) and Texas A&M (#41) has a lower summation of total ordinal rankings (76) than the sweet 16 game between Iowa State (#38) and Miami (#44) (82).


    It’s to be expected that the top teams in the NIT could have been NCAA-worthy. It’s just a question of how many small conference auto-bids
    you want to take away to rectify this. Heck the whole reason we have a
    first four is to try squeeze in more at-large teams as the number of conferences entitled to auto-bids increased.

    --
    “I usually skip over your posts because of your disguistng, contrarian, liberal personality.” — Altie

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  • From The NOTBCS Guy@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 25 13:44:59 2022
    It’s to be expected that the top teams in the NIT could have been NCAA-worthy. It’s just a question of how many small conference auto-bids you want to take away to rectify this. Heck the whole reason we have a
    first four is to try squeeze in more at-large teams as the number of conferences entitled to auto-bids increased.

    Actually, that's the reason they created the "first one" (i.e. the one Dayton game, always between two 16-seeds, and somebody probably still has to explain to Jim Rome that yes, it did count as a tournament game). The NCAA added three more mainly because
    it got tired of listening to too many people whine about the teams that got left out. I am all for additional expansion to 80 - why not have a separate "first four" city in each region - but there will still be whining from some of the teams left out; at
    what point do you say, "Sorry, but we think that the at-large teams in the tournament have a legitimate shot at winning, and you don't"?

    How about this: every conference gets 1; every team that got into the second round the previous year earns its conference another team - that's 64.

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  • From JGibson@21:1/5 to xyzzy on Mon Mar 28 07:02:07 2022
    On Friday, March 25, 2022 at 2:42:03 PM UTC-4, xyzzy wrote:
    JGibson <james.m...@gmail.com> wrote:
    Based on the KenPom ratings, the NIT semifinal between Washington State (#35) and Texas A&M (#41) has a lower summation of total ordinal rankings (76) than the sweet 16 game between Iowa State (#38) and Miami (#44) (82).

    It’s to be expected that the top teams in the NIT could have been NCAA-worthy. It’s just a question of how many small conference auto-bids you want to take away to rectify this. Heck the whole reason we have a
    first four is to try squeeze in more at-large teams as the number of conferences entitled to auto-bids increased.

    Nothing really to rectify. A run by St. Peter's, who would have been excluded if there were no auto-bids, is actually more fun than a run by Washington State or A&M. It was more just an amusing note. Note that the other NIT semifinal between Xavier (#
    56 kenpom) and St. Bonaventure (#73 kenpom) does not have the sam effect. In fact, even after NIT and NCAA games have been played, St. Bonaventure is still only above 1 NCAA at-large team - Rutgers (#77), while Xavier adds the other play-in game loser
    in Wyoming (#65).

    Watching the changes of the teams as the tournament goes on always amuses me. Using, kenpom, North Carolina was seeded correctly as a #8 seed (30th) going into the tournament, but if we reseeded the entire tournament now, they should be a #4 seed.
    Washington State was 55th when the tournament was selected but their NIT run has them up to 37th (was 35th when I posted my post above).

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