How far does UConn fall if they lose at St Johns tonight?
How far does UConn fall if they lose at St Johns tonight?
Still on the 1 line for the time being.How far does UConn fall if they lose at St Johns tonight?
True, but I think a UConn loss tonight gives us some MUCH needed hope that we could pass them up as the third #1 seed (and thus get Chicago) in the event that we both win out after that. Fingers crossed for the Johnnies!Still on the 1 line for the time being.
This is why Ken Pom turns that chart 45 degrees. It tells the story much more obviouslyBoy, the scale and divisions in that chart are completely arbitrary and nonsensically rectangular when the chart is demonstrating diagonal advancement.
Such that a team with a historically great offense and very good defense is considered "solid", and effectively the same defense and average offense is also considered "solid".
Odds of us winning out (11 more consecutive wins) seem really, really low.True, but I think a UConn loss tonight gives us some MUCH needed hope that we could pass them up as the third #1 seed (and thus get Chicago) in the event that we both win out after that. Fingers crossed for the Johnnies!
Hence "pseudo"?What is this "pseudo-tie breaker"? Tournament pairings are based upon a complete body of work, not on a single head-to-head meeting. If we beat them but they have a better body of work, they still get the 1 seed. As of right now, at least, they are quite a ways ahead of us. Beating would definitely lessen the gap, but it would not, by itself, guarantee a 1 seed.
Looking at the schedules of the top teams, Illinois has a pretty easy schedule comparatively with the exception of UConn and Duke. Arizona and Michigan both have 5 or 6 tough games remaining that could easily result in 2 losses. Houston and Iowa State's schedule is not much better. We beat Michigan State and we are set up to have a very realistic chance at a 1 seed.
Arizona has Kansas twice, Texas Tech, BYU, Houston (A) and Iowa State.
Houston has BYU (A), Iowa State (A), Arizona and Kansas (A).
Iowa State still needs to play Kansas, Texas Tech, Arizona (A), BYU (A) and Houston
Duke has North Carolina twice, Michigan (N) and NC State (A)
Michigan has Ohio State (A), Duke, Purdue (A), Illinois (A) Iowa (A) and Michigan State.
UConn has Villanova (A) and St. Johns.
Illinois has Michigan State (A) and Michigan.
Pretty good:Defense up to 19th as of this morning
Was so good yesterday it kept going up overnight lol![]()
I don't think that is at all clear. If we win out, we finish the regular season 29-3. If Michigan wins out, including their Duke game, they finish the regular season 30-2. Our Quad 1 record would be 10-3 and theirs would be 12-1. I don't have the Quad 1A numbers readily available, so I am just going to ignore them (probably not a good idea, I admit). Is 10-3 with no Quad 2 losses better than 12-1 with one Quad 2 loss? I don't think that is clear at all.Hence "pseudo"?
Now, I will say I did not mean they wouldn't be a one seed, rather, they would not be ranked ahead of us. If we win out, meaning we beat Michigan, our overall resume would by nature be better than Michigan's...
We can't both win out...I don't think that is at all clear. If we win out, we finish the regular season 29-3. If Michigan wins out, including their Duke game, they finish the regular season 30-2. Our Quad 1 record would be 10-3 and theirs would be 12-1. I don't have the Quad 1A numbers readily available, so I am just going to ignore them (probably not a good idea, I admit). Is 10-3 with no Quad 2 losses better than 12-1 with one Quad 2 loss? I don't think that is clear at all.
But what about the B1G tournament? Under the scenario above, if we both keep winning, we'd reach the final with at best a 12-3 Quad 1 record and they would have at best a 14-1 Quad 1 record. If we win the final, it would be 13-3 vs 14-2. In that scenario, I could imagine the tournament committee taking our TWO wins over a Michigan team with a Quad 2 loss.
But the problem with that idea is that we are told the Committee never considers the result of the B1G final. It is an interesting problem. Could the Committee refuse to say "never" and create two brackets, one assuming a Michigan win and one assuming an Illinois win? How complicated would that be? I am starting to feel a bit over my head here...
Sorry, an exceedingly poor choice of words on my part. I should have said "If Michigan wins out against everyone but Illinois..." The rest of my post was based on that assumption. We'd be 29-3, they'd be 30-2, etc. I do not think it would be clear that the Committee would seed us ahead of them.We can't both win out...
We would still have to face them a second time with the B1G tournament. So they would also have 3 losses in that scenario.Sorry, an exceedingly poor choice of words on my part. I should have said "If Michigan wins out against everyone but Illinois..." The rest of my post was based on that assumption. We'd be 29-3, they'd be 30-2, etc. I do not think it would be clear that the Committee would seed us ahead of them.
There isn't a scenario in the world this season where if we win out, and Michigan only loses to us the rest of the way (meaning we would have two wins against them), we would not be seeded higher than them in the tournament. I will bet anything on that.Sorry, an exceedingly poor choice of words on my part. I should have said "If Michigan wins out against everyone but Illinois..." The rest of my post was based on that assumption. We'd be 29-3, they'd be 30-2, etc. I do not think it would be clear that the Committee would seed us ahead of them.
In this scenario we’d be outright BIG champs and I’d be surprised if we weren’t a 1 over Michigan.Sorry, an exceedingly poor choice of words on my part. I should have said "If Michigan wins out against everyone but Illinois..." The rest of my post was based on that assumption. We'd be 29-3, they'd be 30-2, etc. I do not think it would be clear that the Committee would seed us ahead of them.