Figured after this morning's happenings it would be a good time for a metrics bracket analysis.
First, the current auto bids (highest NET as of this morning for any team still eligible in that conference, locked auto bids in bold). Lot of upsets here, so things moved around quite a bit at the bottom of the bracket:
ACC - Duke (1)
B1G - Michigan (2)
B12 - Arizona (3)
SEC - Florida (4)
WCC - Gonzaga (6)
BE - UConn (9)
A10 - Saint Louis (28)
MW - Utah State (29)
American - South Florida (47)
MAC - Akron (53)
SLnd - McNeese (57)
Ivy - Yale (65)
MVC - Northern Iowa (71)
BSth - High Point (74)
WAC - Utah Valley (83)
CAA - Hofstra (87)
CUSA - Sam Houston (100)
BW - Hawaii (111)
Summit - North Dakota State (115)
SB - Troy (126)
Horz - Wright St. (127)
BSky - Idaho (142)
OVC - Tennessee State (173)
MAAC - Siena (182)
SoCon - Furman (186)
ASun - Queens (190)
NEC - LIU (196)
MEAC - Howard (200)
AEast - UMBC (202)
Pat - Lehigh (275)
SWAC - Southern (278)
For selecting the rest of the at-large field, I'm looking at results-based metrics. The three that the committee uses are Strength of Record (SOR), Wins Above Bubble (WAB) and KPI. Using an average of those 3 metrics, here are the top 37 at large teams (not including the surrogate auto bids above). Remember this has nothing to do with seeding, just getting into the tournament:
1. Houston
2. Michigan State
3. Alabama
4. Virginia
5. Nebraska
6. Illinois
7. Iowa State
8. Purdue
9. Kansas
10. Vanderbilt
11. Arkansas
12. North Carolina
13. Texas Tech
14. St. John's
15. BYU
16. Villanova
17. Wisconsin
18. Louisville
19. Tennessee
20. Saint Mary's
21. Georgia
22. Miami FL
23. Kentucky
24. Clemson
25. TCU
26. UCF
27. Miami OH
28. UCLA
29. Ohio State
30. VCU
31. NC State
32. Santa Clara
33. Iowa
34. Missouri
35. Auburn
36. Texas A&M
37. SMU
Just missed:
38. New Mexico
39. South Florida
40. Texas
41. San Diego State
42. Seton Hall
43. Belmont
44. Tulsa
45. Oklahoma State
46. Stanford
47. Cal
48. Indiana
Indiana really screwed themselves yesterday, wasted a big opportunity. SMU can't help themselves any more, just waiting and hoping that nobody below them wins and no other bids are stolen (I have a feeling both things will happen). Texas is below the cut line and can't help themselves. Seton Hall can make a run yet, and the MWC teams can make runs (or just win their auto bid to be sure). If South Florida-Tulsa is the American final, that could be interesting for both teams. I have a hard time seeing bids come from outside this group, though (sorry, Virginia Tech and Oklahoma).
As for seeding, I like to do that strictly based off efficiency ratings (a more effective measure as to the quality of a team). Here's the seeding right now (based on efficiency average, auto bids in bold, change from last week in parenthesis):
1 (1). Duke (+0)
1 (1). Michigan (+0)
3 (1). Arizona (-0)
5 (1). Florida (+0)
4 (2). Illinois (+0)
6 (2). Houston (+0)
7 (2). Iowa State (+0)
8 (2). Purdue (+0)
9 (3). UConn (+1)
10 (3). Gonzaga (-1)
11 (3). Michigan State (+0)
12 (3). Nebraska (+2)
13 (4). Texas Tech (-1)
14 (4). Vanderbilt (+1)
15 (4). Louisville (-2)
16 (4). Alabama (+1)
17 (5). Tennessee (-1)
18 (5). Virginia (+0)
19 (5). Arkansas (+0)
20 (5). Kansas (+0)
21 (6). St. John's (+0)
22 (6). Saint Mary's (+0)
23 (6). Wisconsin (+0)
24 (6). Iowa (+0)
25 (7). Ohio State (+1)
26 (7). North Carolina (-1)
26 (7). BYU (+0)
28 (7). Kentucky (+0)
29 (8). UCLA (+0)
30 (8). Villanova (+0)
31 (8). Miami FL (+0)
32 (8). Georgia (+0)
33 (9). Utah State (+0)
34 (9). Clemson (+2)
35 (9). Santa Clara (+0)
36 (9). Texas A&M (+2)
37 (10). NC State (+0)
38 (10). Saint Louis (-4)
39 (10). Auburn (+1)
40 (10). SMU (NEW)
41 (11). TCU (+0)
42 (11*). VCU (+0)
43 (11). South Florida (NEW)
44 (11*). Missouri (-1)
45 (11*). UCF (+0)
46 (11*). Miami OH (+0)
47 (12). Akron (+0)
48 (12). McNeese (+0)
47 (12). Northern Iowa (+0)
50 (12). Yale (+0)
51 (13). Utah Valley (+0)
52 (13). High Point (+0)
53 (13). Hofstra (+0)
54 (13). Sam Houston (NEW)
55 (14). Hawaii (+0)
56 (14). North Dakota State (+0)
57 (14). Troy (+4)
58 (14). Wright State (+2)
59 (15). Idaho (NEW)
60 (15). Tennessee State (+3)
61 (15). Siena (NEW)
62 (15). Furman (NEW)
63 (16). Queens (NEW)
64 (16). LIU (+1)
65 (16*). Howard (+1)
66 (16*). UMBC (+1)
67 (16*). Lehigh (NEW)
68 (16*). Southern (NEW)
Some teams that had worthy efficiency metrics but didn't have the results to make the field (aka they were above some of these teams in efficiency but not results): Cincinnati, Indiana, Texas, San Diego State, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Baylor
Notes:
- The bunches of conference upsets made for 6 new teams at the bottom of the bracket, and the 15 and 16 seeds will be abnormally weak this year as a result. The 5th seed in the Big Sky (Idaho) is suddenly just the 10th worst team in the field.
- Take a look at the 15 seeds, because Illinois is probably getting one of them as a first round opponent in St. Louis. Closest geographically is Tennessee State, but that's the closest for all of the 2 seeds, so someone is getting Idaho and liking it.
- There are still some teams out of the field that can play their way in, and there is a definite possibility of more bid thieving in the A10 or MWC, as neither Saint Louis nor Utah State finished the year especially strong.