Maryland has 2 road wins. And Oregon will def get in.Can Ohio St. get in? Oregon 16-4 already has 3 BT home losses! Is this league really that top heavy? Locks are Purdue, Michigan St., Michigan, Illinois, Maryland(1 road win), Wisconsin, Oregon and UCLA!
One thing that I haven't heard talked about much this year is that there's one more at-large spot because of the Pac-12 disbanding. Granted, that "extra" team will probably be one from a mega-conference, the expansion of which caused the Pac-12 to disband.A lot of basketball left to be played. I don't think there are any true locks yet, if we define "lock" as doesn't need to win another game between now and Selection Sunday to be in.
MSU, Purdue, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin and Maryland are all contenders for Top-5 seeds and should be in barring an epic collapse. Oregon and UCLA should be ok if they maintain their current pace. Ohio State has a so-so record but more attractive computer numbers.
Beneath that is a bunch of teams that have a ton of work to do: Penn State, Nebraska, Northwestern, Iowa, Indiana.
Southern Cal and Rutgers look like they're on the far side of the bubble.
Obviously what happens in other leagues will matter as well.
I've always felt there should be minimum requirements. 20 wins and .500 or better in conference.Personally I think there should be a cap on how many teams any conference can get in. 10 at most. That will never happen but if you're not in the top ten of your own conference then go play in the NIT.
Then you guarantee that the best teams don't make the tournament. You're going to take 20-12/11-7 Southern Illinois with a NET of 82 and 2 Q2 wins? Or 19-13/8-10 Georgia with a NET of 32 and 8 Q1/Q2 wins.I've always felt there should be minimum requirements. 20 wins and .500 or better in conference.
I mean that's nonsensical. I'm sorry but one could easily come up with a dozen different examples of why that's an arbitrary and bad requirement.I've always felt there should be minimum requirements. 20 wins and .500 or better in conference.
That's a powerful incentive for all high-major programs to schedule 10 or more non-conference wins.I mean that's nonsensical. I'm sorry but one could easily come up with a dozen different examples of why that's an arbitrary and bad requirement.
Yep. It would really water down the non-conference schedules for all but the teams that enter the season with a top 20 outlook.That's a powerful incentive for all high-major programs to schedule 10 or more non-conference wins.
Don't like the win requirement. Nobody would schedule good out of conference games anymore.I've always felt there should be minimum requirements. 20 wins and .500 or better in conference.
Wrong once again, Wrong Shot…I've always felt there should be minimum requirements. 20 wins and .500 or better in conference.
Sure but you'd still have to get to .500 in conference. I don't really care about non conference SOS at all. Makes for good TV but I couldn't careless about it. Most teams play about 30 games now and you could include conference tournament games as part of the overall and conference records.Don't like the win requirement. Nobody would schedule good out of conference games anymore.
I'm good on .500 conference record.
Beating the bad half of the conference and 10 nobodies out of conference doesn't make you good. I understand why an IU football fan likes that, but the playoffs showed why quality of wins matter in football and also proves why it should continue to matter in determining at large bids for the tournament. Whether or not you care about it is completely irrelevant.Sure but you'd still have to get to .500 in conference. I don't really care about non conference SOS at all. Makes for good TV but I couldn't careless about it. Most teams play about 30 games now and you could include conference tournament games as part of the overall and conference records.
Overall number of wins is irrelevant. It’s the number of quality wins that matters. Going 10-0 against Bemidji State and Eastern Illinois is 100% worthless.I've always felt there should be minimum requirements. 20 wins and .500 or better in conference.
In college basketball, it really doesn't matter. A tough SOS doesn't really help you anymore or less for March. Sure you can beat up on some teams, but seeding still exist. And going 10-10 in conference in the Big Ten with a poor out of conference SOS isn't going to get you a high seed. And if you look historically, not a lot of teams get in that are below that requirement. There have been more the last several years, but those teams just get bounced first round outside a couple outliers.Overall number of wins is irrelevant. It’s the number of quality wins that matters. Going 10-0 against Bemidji State and Eastern Illinois is 100% worthless.
I’m sure you believe that.In college basketball, it really doesn't matter. A tough SOS doesn't really help you anymore or less for March.
Well of course he does. IU hasn’t seen a strong SOS for …a decade? Or maybe more?I’m sure you believe that.
Disagree. Pretty much every year, there is at least one team that is left out of the tournament and one of the reasons mentioned is how bad their non-conference SOS was.In college basketball, it really doesn't matter. A tough SOS doesn't really help you anymore or less for March. Sure you can beat up on some teams, but seeding still exist. And going 10-10 in conference in the Big Ten with a poor out of conference SOS isn't going to get you a high seed. And if you look historically, not a lot of teams get in that are below that requirement. There have been more the last several years, but those teams just get bounced first round outside a couple outliers.
Perfect response coming from an IU football fan. Could you imagine the tv ratings (that pay big bucks to our conference) watching IU football play a bunch of nobodies get manhandled in the CFP every year.....not gonna happen.Sure but you'd still have to get to .500 in conference. I don't really care about non conference SOS at all. Makes for good TV but I couldn't careless about it. Most teams play about 30 games now and you could include conference tournament games as part of the overall and conference records.
That certainly seems to be the way IU sets their schedule, but it doesn't help them be competitive. I haven't looked at the data, but anecdotally it seems that every year FF teams play a tough schedule. I'll have to search to see if anyone has assessed the current system to see how closely the current system of seeding teams matches up with results. If the results are wildly different than seedings, it suggests changes should be made.Sure but you'd still have to get to .500 in conference. I don't really care about non conference SOS at all. Makes for good TV but I couldn't careless about it. Most teams play about 30 games now and you could include conference tournament games as part of the overall and conference records.
That certainly seems to be the way IU sets their schedule, but it doesn't help them be competitive. I haven't looked at the data, but anecdotally it seems that every year FF teams play a tough schedule. I'll have to search to see if anyone has assessed the current system to see how closely the current system of seeding teams matches up with results. If the results are wildly different than seedings, it suggests changes should be made.
UCONN and NS State both had KenPom non-con schedules 280+ last year.
3 of the 4 FF participants had KenPom non-con schedules 200+ in 2023