When the players and coaches of Miami (OH) began their season, they had the schedule in front of them ... and they've won every single time they took the court. I understand you guys' points, but it's needless to say that this cold, analytical approach using things like KenPom and Quad classifications completely discounts the "romance" of NEVER losing a game. And that's my point. I don't think a lot of people are saying Miami (OH) is better than Indiana or even Minnesota ... they're wanting to hang on to the parts of college hoops that don't immediately and totally defer to analytics ... we want the pageantry of rewarding ANY undefeated team with some actual recognition, not immediately discounting them because their schedule sucked.
If the response is to point out that the computers think Miami (OH) is mediocre or that they haven't played quality opponents ... we are talking past each other. Those of us sticking up for Miami (OH) are taking a stance that "Undefeated is undefeated, period." No argument using metrics or stats is going to really counter that.
But that's not the genuine question ... the question is how should Miami (OH) be rewarded for the season they've had, which currently is that of an undefeated team? Some of us want a more romantic and mystical element retained in college hoops that rewards an undefeated team with recognition and a better spot in NCAAT seeding than the computers would suggest. If they get blown out, fine ... give them that shot.
If our goal is to ONLY put the best teams, in order, in the NCAA Tournament ... then stop giving auto bids to conference tournament champions. Indiana and Minnesota would beat a lot of those teams. If someone doesn't think that would be a massive mistake as far as maintaining the mystique and uniqueness of March Madness, I really don't know what to tell them.