There is a 0+ chance of making the championship finals.Illini fans, will we be competing in the finals of the national championship this year or next year or both?
There is a 0+ chance of making the championship finals.Illini fans, will we be competing in the finals of the national championship this year or next year or both?
Illini fans, will we be competing in the finals of the national championship this year or next year or both?
Stole it from Bruce “Bam” Weber as a kid growing up in Champaign ??? Bruce All MightyDoes anyone know how Bam got his nickname?
Not as much as me. Only by grace.I’m so happy that ThaKid found Jesus.
Just for clarification, is that 0 to Infinity?There is a 0+ chance of making the championship finals.
I think a lot of people, given what we know right now, would take our guy. The next 3 pointer Goldin makes will be the first. That alone would give him an edge in a lot of coaches eyes.Just curious on how people think Ivisic compares to Golden. In limited action he seems superior to me. Is that my orange glasses or a realistic comparison? Actually think Tomi a better shooter but equivalent defensively but need to see him against better competition.
Define "a lot". A #1 seed generally consist of one, MAYBE two non conference losses, a regular season conference championship and more than likely a conference tournament run.
You can point to multiple cases where a team lost 99% of everything from the year prior to be a #1 seed the next year?
Wow!!!! This is fantastic!!!!I took a look at continuity data (using KenPom's definition) for all data for #1 seeds.
From 2008-2024, the #1 seeds with the most continuity were 2008 Kansas (83%), 2009 UConn (83%), 2011 Pitt (80%), 2016 Kansas (77%), and 2015 Nova (77%). Of these teams, only 2008 Kansas won a championship.
Conversely, since 2008, the #1 seeds with the least continuity were 2019 Duke (22%), 2020 Zaga (23%), 2023 Bama (26%), 2017 Zaga (30%), 2023 Kansas (37%). None of these teams won championships.
Over this time frame, #1 seeds usually average between 50%-70% continuity, with the outlier being 2023 at 35%.
For D-1 Continuity overall, the average was consistently around 49%-51% from 2008-2022. Not shockingly, this dropped considerably to 42% in 2023, 39% in 2024, and 34% this season.
I think its fair to say that on average, #1 seeds tend to have a higher likelihood of having more minutes continuity, but continuity as a reliable indicator of success has changed drastically over the past two years (and hasn't ever really been a primary success indicator). If Illinois were to get a 1-seed, it would be historic any way you frame it. Putting on orange colored glasses, considering that some of our Freshmen have already been flirting with records, its not unreasonable to dream.
Great research. My point had to do with the least continuity group, however as @Second place is 1st loser brought up and you proved, in our situation that would be unprecedented success.I took a look at continuity data (using KenPom's definition) for all data for #1 seeds.
From 2008-2024, the #1 seeds with the most continuity were 2008 Kansas (83%), 2009 UConn (83%), 2011 Pitt (80%), 2016 Kansas (77%), and 2015 Nova (77%). Of these teams, only 2008 Kansas won a championship.
Conversely, since 2008, the #1 seeds with the least continuity were 2019 Duke (22%), 2020 Zaga (23%), 2023 Bama (26%), 2017 Zaga (30%), 2023 Kansas (37%). None of these teams won championships.
Over this time frame, #1 seeds usually average between 50%-70% continuity, with the outlier being 2023 at 35%.
For D-1 Continuity overall, the average was consistently around 49%-51% from 2008-2022. Not shockingly, this dropped considerably to 42% in 2023, 39% in 2024, and 34% this season.
I think its fair to say that on average, #1 seeds tend to have a higher likelihood of having more minutes continuity, but continuity as a reliable indicator of success has changed drastically over the past two years (and hasn't ever really been a primary success indicator). If Illinois were to get a 1-seed, it would be historic any way you frame it. Putting on orange colored glasses, considering that some of our Freshmen have already been flirting with records, its not unreasonable to dream.
And gosh darn it people like him.I think a lot of people, given what we know right now, would take our guy. The next 3 pointer Goldin makes will be the first. That alone would give him an edge in a lot of coaches eyes.
We will know more next week, but Tomi is big enough, fast enough, and smart enough to go head to head with anyone in college basketball and hold his own. Dude looks like a pro.
Only thing I would challenge is this. I guess it depends on what you're defining as "success" but there is a clear positive correlation between continuity and efficiency metrics. Any specific data point you to this conclusion?I think its fair to say that on average, #1 seeds tend to have a higher likelihood of having more minutes continuity, but continuity as a reliable indicator of success has changed drastically over the past two years (and hasn't ever really been a primary success indicator). If Illinois were to get a 1-seed, it would be historic any way you frame it. Putting on orange colored glasses, considering that some of our Freshmen have already been flirting with records, its not unreasonable to dream.
And gosh darn it people like him.
That Saturday's gonna be fun. Basically 6 straight hours of Illini sports!3:00pm tipoff for Maryland Eastern Shore on Saturday, November 23rd (B1G+)
Only thing I would challenge is this. I guess it depends on what you're defining as "success" but there is a clear positive correlation between continuity and efficiency metrics. Any specific data point you to this conclusion?
No such thing. Good stuff.Sure, the data point I was referring to is the overall decline in continuity due to transfer portal mobility, and that there isn't a p-value of 1 between continuity & success which may have gotten less correlated since the transfer movement began in 2022. That said, to your point, you can reasonably assume that a championship caliber team will have higher continuity than D-1 average (see 2024: UConn (42.4%), 1-seed (48.8%), D-1 average (38.2%)).
My glasses maybe got a little too orange haha.
Isn't this the team that broke Deron's jaw his soph year?3:00pm tipoff for Maryland Eastern Shore on Saturday, November 23rd (B1G+)
I'm actually surprised tomi isn't on the list considering his size and ability to shoot from 3. I think he eventually will be on NBA radar