Posted by seble on 12/4/2011 9:45:00 AM (view original):
I'll take a closer look at the logic using the Naismith data. The move away from just using RPI was intentional though. It's a limited metric of how good a team really is, and can be very misleading. To me there's a big difference between winning/losing by 20+ points vs. winning/losing by 3 or 4 points. Maybe there's a little too much weight on opponent strength.
I'll also see what I can do about spreading out teams from the same conference, but that's not easy to do when some conferences have 7 or 8 teams in.
seble, I agree that RPI isn't by far a perfect metric, but I think the early returns are that there is
significantly too much emphasis being put on who you play rather than how you actually do. A 7-20 Florida State team made the PIT, basically just as a result of getting beat up all season by their ACC brethren. That's not good and really can't happen.
Right now it seems that you've replaced one issue (over reliance on RPI) with another (over reliance on SOS, and perhaps other things, like "good" losses). And so far, the new issue seems worse than the old one -- at least that one was something that people could understand and jibed semi-reasonably with real life. But in real life, a 7-20 team would be thinking about firing their coach, not about the postseason. Ever.
As far as spreading conference teams out within a bracket, can be challenging, but no conference mates should ever be meeting up in the 2nd round. That never happened before, either.