Quit crying. It's been used for years and nobody complains until it hurts us.
Quit crying. It's been used for years and nobody complains until it hurts us.
Watching the bubble drama unfold made me wonder what the rationale is for continuing to stick with the RPI as a primary measure for how good a team is by the NCAA committee. Why not Ken Pom, Saragin, or another system that gives more depth to team analysis? Anyone?
I think this year more than any in the past, it has become clear that schools have figured out how to game the system as far as RPI goes. It is time to change.
So why didn't Fran figure it out?
So why didn't Fran figure it out?
I think this year more than any in the past, it has become clear that schools have figured out how to game the system as far as RPI goes. It is time to change.
I would have to say its kind of a crapshoot to guess what teams are gonna suck the least. Yes you can generally gauge a team by what they return and clearly if they will be around the top 100. Guessing whether a team will finish from 250-350 prolly not so much. More 250 and less 300 and we may have had a different story...
Outside the ACC/B1G challenge and the intrastate games, the non-conference teams we played had an RPI last year of 15 (WSU), 189 (WKU), 279, 280, 285, 291, 293, 315, and 343. I think he had an idea that these teams were going to suck royally.
If we would have scheduled tough this year with three frosh, just would of had more losses. I don't have a problem with what farking frannie did schedule wise. We were young, inexperienced, and needed some wins to rebuild this program.
^^Not a good rationale for defending the RPI.
While true and I understand why Fran did what he did. The point remains a 50 point loss to a top 50 rpi team on the road is better than a 50 point win at home against a scrub. Iowa could have afforded a few more losses this year if it was New Mexico and duke they lost to.