And The Bubble Bursts…(major 3/18 update)

One of the entries that I’ve enjoyed most over the years is dissecting the talking heads and their inane “analyses” of teams that were wronged by the Selection Committee.    But even Dickie V couldn’t find a mid-major to champion this year.    Everyone was so upset over Louisville and Kentucky’s seeds that they apparently had no energy left for anything else.    So since I don’t have anyone to make fun of, let’s get down to the analysis.

Assuming that CBS got the first four out correct, here are summaries of their resumes along with the last four teams in and The Dance Card’s lone miss.

Table 1

As you would expect, everyone has some warts and we are going to have to pick through the garbage to find a few diamonds.    Let’s start with a few teams that are easy for me to eliminate.

Team “I”

  • Terrible RPI
  • Losing conference record
  • Poor performance in conference tournament

I guess that their Top-25 and Top-50 wins got them on the list, but those three negatives are virtually impossible to overcome.    (Georgetown, welcome to the NIT.)

 Team “C”

This team is like the question on a college exam that isn’t in the book, but was specifically covered in class.   This is an easy problem to solve as long as you didn’t skip class that day.

OOC SOS ~300 + Poor conference tourney = NIT.

It’s not that their Top-25 wins are exactly ignored (though their AP ranking is ignored).   This is strictly a punitive measure that we’ve seen levied against VT, Penn St, and Arizona St in recent years and now… SMU.

 Team “G”

Good OOC SOS and dramatically weaker overall SOS means that this team came from one of the low major conferences.   The 7-3 record over the last 10 games looks good, but this is simply a red herring.   1-1 against Top 25 and 0-1 against 26-50 means that they played virtually no one during the year and they also tanked in their own conference tournament.     This is the prototypical mid or low major resume that lands in the NIT…and usually ends up on Vitale’s whine list.    But I only saw one idiot (on CBS) that thought that Green Bay deserved consideration.

 Quick Review

Eliminating three teams means that four of the six teams left were selected.   Here’s an updated table:

Table 2

So where do we go from here?    Strangely enough, the two teams with the highest RPI ranking also have the most bad losses (ie against RPI 100+).   So do bad losses really matter?

 BAD LOSSES

The only bracketologist posted at SFN yesterday predicting a bid for State said something along the lines that they had fewer embarrassing losses than some of the other candidates.     He was obviously (and surprisingly) right about State, but was he correct about bad losses?    Specifically, does the presence or absence of bad losses mean anything significant?

I’ve always felt that the “bad loss” argument was over-blown though I’ve never taken the time to build an argument to support my feelings.   But it occurred to me last night that I was ignoring a huge piece of statistical evidence against the bad-loss theory because The Dance Card doesn’t include anything in their calculations for bad losses.   While not an absolute proof, the accuracy of the Dance Card’s predictions shows that bad losses don’t play a noticeable role in the selection process.

Further evidence against the bad loss theory is that teams A and B were both given at-large bids via the First Four.   At worst, the bad losses moved Tenn and Xavier (A&B respectively) to the Tue/Wed games, but they are still in.

So that leaves us with four teams to evaluate.  Two got in and two were left out:

Table 3

So what stands out?    Let’s pick out the best things that could be said about each team in this four-team group.

Team “D”

  • Tied for most Top-25 wins
  • Best RPI (probably insignificant)
  • Least bad losses (if you still believe in that)

Team “E”

Best performance in conference tournament (their only Top-25 win)

 Team “F”

  • Tied for most Top-25 wins
  • Most Top 50 wins

 Team “G”

Second most Top-50 wins

 

I put a lot more value into RPI than a lot around here.   So when I combine the worst RPI with a poor showing in the conference tournament, I would tend to drop Team “H” from the list.

But before I voted Team “H” off, I would want a closer look at all of the top wins since all four teams have six wins against the Top-100.   I would be concerned that the categories (Top 25, Top 50, etc) might create a perceived advantage to one team over another.   For example, if one team beat RPI #48 and another beat RPI #52, the parsing would make it look like the first team had a better win, when in fact the two wins are nearly equivalent.

I would like to get an honest, non-PC explanation on these four teams…but I’m not going to hold my breath.   In any case, I think that any honest evaluation would conclude that the Selection Committee had an extremely tough job coming up with the last four in.    So here is the last table repeated with the names of the last four teams that we are evaluating:

Table 4

With Ron Wellman as chairman of the Selection Committee, it would be easy to claim that politics played a role in getting State into the NCAAT.   However, with such slight differences between FSU and State, I don’t know of any reason for Wellman to favor one “State” over the other.    As I mentioned earlier, let’s look at the Top 100 wins for these last four schools that we’ve been discussing.

Last Four Details

The only thing that I see that favors State is that they did better in the conference tournament than any of the other three teams.     That seems to contradict statements made by earlier Selection Committees that all wins were treated equal and even Wellman kept talking on CBS last night about looking at each team’s entire resume.    So,  I don’t know exactly what tipped the scales in State’s favor.   But I’m certainly happy with the outcome.

3/18 ADDITIONS

My thanks to all of the useful comments and especially to the links as the various postmortems on the Selection Process are completed.   These links and quotes are extremely useful to me and I frequently review past entries to see if there is anything that I should do differently as I prepare similar entries for the current season.    While I almost never make major edits/additions once I get an entry up, there are several points to this year’s NCAAT selections that are important enough to document in the body of the main entry and not leave buried in the comments.

BYU and Bad Losses

One of the teams often portrayed as not deserving a bid is BYU.   The Selection Committee obviously disagreed and gave the Cougars a 10 seed.    So while some bozos in the media obviously disagree, BYU was clearly not a tough decision for the Selection Committee.    Here are a few tables to summarize BYU’s resume:

BYU BreakdownBYU Bad Losses

Looking at their W/L record broken down into various categories, anyone familiar with Herb’s NC State bubble teams would not be surprised that BYU got in and the seeding is quite familiar as well.   BYU’s wins against Gonzaga (20), Texas (36), and Stanford (41) clearly meet the minimum standard that Herb so thoroughly explored in Raleigh.

If the Selection Committee is going to penalize a team for a weak schedule, then they obviously should reward a team for playing a tough schedule.   While I frequently throw snide comments at Herb’s OOC scheduling, it is actually difficult to compare a mid-major resume to a team from one of the power conferences.   BYU’s schedule (especially the OOC schedule) is clearly tougher than Herb has EVER played.    But the conference schedule is weaker and it’s hard to tell exactly how all of those pieces fit together in the Selection Committee’s analysis.

But the key points are that BYU:

  • Clearly got enough top wins to earn a selection
  • Played a really tough OOC schedule and deserves some credit for that

BYU’s second table goes well with the earlier discussion of bad losses.    The Cougars provide another data point illustrating that while bad-losses often lead to meltdowns among the fan base, they are not significant to the Selection Committee.

IOWA and Stumbling Down the Stretch

In the past, stumbling down the stretch is one of the qualitative measures that I used to identify bubble teams that were in trouble.   However, the committee has recently stressed that they consider the whole body of work and don’t pay special attention to performance at the end of the season….which is a clear change from the past (especially with Herb’s NCSU teams).    Iowa was one of the last-four IN and illustrates that the simple fact of stumbling down the stretch no longer leads to the NIT.

Iowas StumbleThe fact of whether or not a team stumbled down the stretch is not a key point.   The point to pay close attention to is where did the stumble end.

 

NCSU vs SMU

Brett Friedlander had some good quotes from Ron Wellman (WF AD and Selection Committee Chairman) about the NC State selection that explain the Committee’s thought process:

“We tried to identify differentiators, things that are either very positive or negative about certain teams,” Wellman said “The positive factor for N.C. State was that they had three wins against top 50 teams away from home.

“Not only did they beat those top 50 teams (Tennessee, Pittsburgh and Syracuse), but they did it on the road. Road wins against top 50 teams are really, really impressive to the committee. That probably was the one factor that was most prominent.”

Another factor was nonconference strength of the schedule…According to Wellman, scheduling was the deciding factor between State as the last team in at 21-13 and SMU as the [first] team out at 23-9.

 

Louisville with a #4 Seed and UVA with a #1 seed

Once upon a time, I spent too much time creating a graph correlating RPI ranking with NCAAT seed to see how strong a correlation there was.      I was surprised at the strong correlation and decided that I would update the graph every year.     But some time later I was reading Jerry Palm’s old blog (collegerpi.com) and he said that 75% of the seeding decisions were within one seed of what you would calculate based solely on RPI.     (There is nothing quite as depressing as discovering something that turns out to be old news).   So while I didn’t bother with updating the graph, I have always used RPI as my starting (and frequently ending) point when it comes to seeding.

The one piece of “new” data that I discovered when doing the graph was that a top finish (first or second) in a power conference’s regular season standings would lead to a better seed than RPI would predict.   Teams often get a slight bump as well for winning the conference tournament, but not always as much as winning the regular season (based on relatively few data points).

So let’s look at UVA and Lousville.

UVA_LousivilleThe Selection Committee selects and seeds based only on this year’s resume.   The fact that Louisville won the NCAAT last year never entered into this year’s decision-making process.    I don’t know why it is so hard for people to figure out that the NCAA Selection Committee devised and have revised the RPI calculation to aid in selection and seeding of the NCAAT.   They don’t care about Sagarin, Pomerory, AP Polls, or least of all ESPN’s BPI.   They care about what teams have proven versus the their criteria.

It wouldn’t shock me if Louisville won a head-to-head matchup against UVA.    But looking at this year’s resume, I would be shocked if Louisville had been awarded the two-seed that so many of the talking heads think that they deserve.    Bottom line….Louisville got a small bump over what RPI would predict and their relatively weak schedule hurt them in both RPI and seeding.     Other teams (including UVA) proved that they deserved their seeding by playing and beating other good teams.   Louisville was 5-5 against the RPI Top-50 and that doesn’t impress me.

About VaWolf82

Engineer living in Central Va. and senior curmudgeon amongst SFN authors One wife, two kids, one dog, four vehicles on insurance, and four phones on cell plan...looking forward to empty nest status. Graduated 1982

13-14 Basketball College Basketball Stat of the Day

Home Forums And The Bubble Bursts…(Major 3/18 Update)

Viewing 25 posts - 51 through 75 (of 99 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #47331
    VaWolf82
    Keymaster

    Bill’s EPI is BS. There are too many people examining the selection results to be able to pull that trick off.

    Statistics wizards behind the Dance Card show that decisions can be predicted based on only 6 factors.

    Most of the WTF decisions that we’ve looked at over the years that I’ve been doing these go to mid-majors, not the big schools.

    #47332
    hpack
    Participant

    Couple of thoughts…

    1. No real meaningful differences between last 4-6 under consideration
    2. Selection committee definitely takes punitive measures against horrible schedules. Saw Seth’s VT team get hosed after season much like ours and a late Duke win in the ACC T a few years ago. Fair or not, its the way things are.
    3. Count me as one who feels Vitale and K’s support mattered.
    4. TJW mattered. Best offensive player in the country. Potential “Danny Manning” type story line.
    5. I also think SFN’s tweets and Pack fan interest matters. We are a very vocal fanbase (and it matters).
    6. True case to me made that not for 3 heartbreaking 1 point losses, each with questionable calls going against in the the last minutes, we would have had 11 ACC wins and already been a lock.

    #47341
    PackFamily
    Participant

    Cowdog, where did watch racing growing up? Finger Lakes, Fort Erie, Belmont? I knew we both grew up in Upstate NY but we have the horse racing thing too. My dad trained horses for a while, as did my brother. I worked around quite a bit, and was an assistant trainer to Nick Zito in ’98-’99 (right after graduating from State). That year we had a record 5 horses run in the Derby (none came close).

    #47342
    Alpha Wolf
    Keymaster

    The fact that SMU was ranked not only meant nil to the committee, it also shows that writers and team trainers know eff-all about how to effectively rank the teams.

    There will ALWAYS be a B1G bias, as the midwestern sportswriters apparently only fap to their own teams while they are writing their stories and making their votes. Yes, Michigan, Mich State and Wiscy are very good. A lot of those other teams in the B1G are not quite as impressive as they are made out to be IMO.

    Same for the SEC in football. Reall, the dominance of the SEC’s middle tier in the top 20 would not be quite as impressive if they played meaningful OOC schedules.

    The basketball selection committee, however, uses a much more analytical and objective approach and it leads to this, albeit with the addition of people who have learned about 97.5% of how things are done by inference. Lunardi, Pomeroy and others think their formula is foolproof, and when they are made to look like fools, they act like children.

    Goodman is a special case of overall dumbassery and willful ignorance that makes me wonder how anyone takes him seriously. Somehow he has ingratiated himself into a media cicle-jerk where he appears to be an expert but is in fact only a provocateur…at best.

    #47346
    wilmwolf80
    Participant

    ^Yup Alpha, agreed on all points.

    #47358
    lawful
    Participant

    Excuse me but does anyone else not see us winning a couple of games and making the selection committee look good? We just finished among the final 4 of the ACC. Call us a 12 if you want but we’re playing better than that…at the moment.

    #47359
    Texpack
    Participant

    How many TA&M, or Texas fans gonna watch One SMU basketball game…
    ( compared to how many Dookies and TarHoles will watch most ALL of our games )…

    The real question is how many A&M or Texas fans are gonna watch an A&M or Texas basketball game? Unless you’ve lived here you have no clue. There will be a lot of people in Dallas who will drive by Jerry World during the Final Four and wonder what the Cowboys have going on to put so many cars in the parking lot.

    As for the post, it confirmed my much less in depth analysis on Saturday that said none of the bubble teams were anybetter or worse than we were. We are lucky the committee wanted Anya on the 4 X 100 relay anchor leg.

    #47363
    packalum44
    Participant

    There were qualitative factors involved that are unexplained. Residuals for you statisticians.

    We are better to watch, have ACC POY, had coaching support, and most importantly played extremely well in the tourney. Your job is in part to promote the tourney after all….so uh, get the hottest teams in.

    State plays 4 freshman and 2 sophomore which explains some of the earlier close losses. They are much improved and were the best remaining team to play well in the dance.

    Or not. Seriously doubt Herb or Sid would have received the bid in the same situation.

    #47364
    JeremyH
    Participant

    Here’s another theory, Gottfried’s broadcast of our case went viral. Coach K, an utterly nice guy or whatever, rebroadcasted it. That coupled with clear, public shafting by officials in the UNC and Syracuse games, sealed the deal on interpreting the close finish. I did say it was a theory (albeit a social one).

    And another thing, you guys think that we need to break free of the ACC? Well, every time we make the NCAA-T, we *do*.

    #47366
    bill.onthebeach
    Participant

    There were qualitative factors involved that are unexplained. Residuals for you statisticians.

    … “unexplained” by the algorithms…

    but easily explained by…

    EPI !

    And as long as people sit on the Committee and make selections instead of letting the computer just crunch the numbers and then letting the numbers fall where they may… the will always be some version of an EPI.

    #NCSU-North Carolina's #1 FOOTBALL school!
    #47368
    JeremyH
    Participant
    #47379
    Wulfpack
    Participant

    Interesting comments from Shaka Smart and Cronin:

    “You kind of want to stand up for your league,” he said, “… a lot of this league solidarity, like a Duke guy standing up for N.C. State, that’s all self-serving too. Let’s be honest. ‘Our league is great because it’s our league.’ It’s a lot of that. Let’s just have a level of respect for each other and let’s respect the nine people on the selection committee and the work they put into to picking the 68 teams.”

    “The American conference was grossly disrespected by the committee,” Cronin said. “It’s not personal. I’m not mad. It’s just a fact.

    “I mean, Louisville’s a 4 seed?” Cronin added before laughing. “Are you kidding me? Is that a joke? Did anybody watch them play? They’re the defending national champs.”

    http://m.espn.go.com/ncb/story?storyId=10625052

    #47381
    1.21 Jigawatts
    Keymaster

    Some things to file away for comparing future bubble teams…

    Brett Friedlander
    Embattled Wake Forest AD Wellman makes some new friends at N.C. State

    Sunday night, in a conference call about an hour after the announcement of the field, Wellman explained the committee’s reasoning behind State’s selection over several other bubble teams – including SMU and its media darling of a coach, Larry Brown.

    “We tried to identify differentiators, things that are either very positive or negative about certain teams,” Wellman said “The positive factor for N.C. State was that they had three wins against top 50 teams away from home.

    “Not only did they beat those top 50 teams (Tennessee, Pittsburgh and Syracuse), but they did it on the road. Road wins against top 50 teams are really, really impressive to the committee. That probably was the one factor that was most prominent.”

    According to Wellman, scheduling was the deciding factor between State as the last team in at 21-13 and SMU as the last team out at 23-9.

    “In SMU’s case, their downfall, their weakness, was their schedule,” Wellman said. “Their non-conference strength of schedule was ranked 302nd. It was one of the worst non-conference strength of schedules. Their overall strength of schedule ranked 129. That would have been, by far, the worst at-large strength of schedule going into the tournament. The next worst at large strength of schedule was 91.”

    #47389
    BJD95
    Keymaster

    I don’t think we leap over SMU or Florida State if say, they were 10-15 RPI slots in front of us. But they weren’t. The overall resumes were very close, so they had to look at secondary factors, and we come out ahead on all of those.

    Plus, to the extent FSU and NC State were in the same discussion…surely Wellman would offer his opinion, having seen both this season, as to which team was better. We also would be the team more likely to do something interesting in the NCAAT (ie, higher ceiling).

    #47397
    bill.onthebeach
    Participant

    … So is Wellmans explanation…. the Committee’s plausible answer for it’s actions or the reason ?

    To put that another way…

    Did the Committee members have well formed preconceived notions about who they wanted to select and who they didn’t want to select before they sat down… and if so, to what extent was the ‘sit down’ just a matter of finding good answers to justify their prior thinkng?

    #NCSU-North Carolina's #1 FOOTBALL school!
    #47398
    VaWolf82
    Keymaster

    I really appreciate people adding links and quotes in the comments. Believe it or not, I go back to this type of entry to see if there is anything to change or some way to improve a similar entry in the future. My goal has always been to understand the philosophy/technique used by the selection committee…as opposed to the idiocy spewed by far too many in the media.

    From the Friedlander article:

    According to Wellman, scheduling was the deciding factor between State as the last team in at 21-13 and SMU as the [first] team out at 23-9.

    I find it truly amazing that the issue of OOC scheduling is still an open topic…or a revelation to some. Exactly how many times do you have to watch some team get burnt before you move away from the fire?

    Here’s my song dedication to Jay Bilas

    #47399
    Wulfpack
    Participant

    Gott gets scheduling:

    “You’ve got to choose to play a difficult nonconference schedule,” Gottfried said. “Some teams didn’t, and that’s their choice.

    “That message has been said to us, loud and clear, over and over again.”

    http://m.charlotteobserver.com/?cu=spreed%3A%2F16408957%2F29567964

    #47412
    pakfanistan
    Participant

    Tangential to the issue of SOS, might the push for higher SOS have a negative effect on overall parity?

    What’s the impetus for a player to go to a small school that none of the big boys will schedule?

    #47423
    BJD95
    Keymaster

    They take into account how much of your scheduling you can reasonably control (to protect the little guys). But there’s NO F-ING WAY you end up with a 250-300 OOC schedule by accident, or because “nobody will play you.”

    #47425
    redcanine
    Participant

    With Larry Brown’s connections, he could surely schedule a trip to the Nose Dome, Phog, PauleyP… anywhere. He didn’t want to go there this year and he paid the price. It’s as simple as picking up the phone.

    #47426
    BJD95
    Keymaster

    I really think he was trying to schedule for the NIT to build up some buzz for being a “program on the rise.” Probably never dreamed they’d be dance-worthy. And it bit him, hard.

    I still has the sads that the Fighten Sendeks weren’t similarly punished. They have NO excuse for NIT-aspiration scheduling, and he’s in what, Year Eight? He’s just a freaking wuss.

    #47431
    Rick
    Keymaster

    They take into account how much of your scheduling you can reasonably control (to protect the little guys). But there’s NO F-ING WAY you end up with a 250-300 OOC schedule by accident, or because “nobody will play you.”

    “No one would play us”
    THat was always the hue and cry of the Sendek clan. I think it is safe to say that is what he wanted.

    #47432
    VaWolf82
    Keymaster

    I made a major addition to the bottom of the blog entry to capture some of the points discussed here and in the forums. I added discussion on
    – BYU and bad losses
    – Iowa and stumbling down the stretch
    – NCSU vs UVA
    – Louisville and UVA seeding

    #47433
    Wulfpack
    Participant

    I must say I (and many others) continue to not understand why Lville is a 4 seed, whilst UVA garnered a 1. They both did nothing out of conference, but UVA was awarded.

    #47434
    BJD95
    Keymaster

    RPIs were significantly different. I also think they liked the idea of a possible Louisville/UK Sweet Sixteen matchup. Plus, Louisville would play their regionals in Indy, which is a HUGE advantage. They refer to the Louisville metro area as “Kentuckiana.”

    Yet another way Wichita State REALLY took it in the ass from the committee. Guess that’s what happens when you piss off as many ADs as Marshall does/has.

Viewing 25 posts - 51 through 75 (of 99 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.