Quote: Originally posted by professor17 on 9/23/2009As far as I'm concerned, scheduling is nearly as important as recruiting. And outside of recruiting, I probably spend more time on scheduling than any other aspect of the game.
I've had teams with Sweet 16 or better talent not even make the PIT because of bad scheduling. Conversely, I've had teams that had no business making the post-season get high seeds in the NT thanks to crafty scheduling (or gaming the system, depending how you look at it).
So I am very picky about scheduling games. It can make or break a season. Based on my evaluation of how my team looks for the upcoming season, there's a certain profile opponent I'm looking for and will stick to that as much as I can.
Because of that, I've never really gotten into the habit of playing the same teams every season. I'm sure it would be fun to do that, but at the same time, it takes an element of strategy away from the game for me.
Aside from that, I tend to schedule on the road as much as possible, even at D1. And if I'm in a very tough conference, I probably won't schedule games where I have a good chance of losing. It's not worth the risk/reward from an RPI standpoint. If I'm in a weaker conference, then I'll take some more chances.
I have to admit I'm sometimes guilty of not promptly responding to game requests (probably because I tend to wait until very late in the season to schedule, and it really isn't on my mind until then), and will have to make a point of doing a better job at that!
i agree that scheduling can make a huge impact, but i think you are a bit extreme calling it as important as recruiting. other than that, i think you have a good view point, i used to approach scheduling very similarly.
one thing that i disagree on is, your approach is focused around 1 objective, NT seeding. what about preparation for the actual NT? if you play an "optimal" schedule in terms of rpi/wins you are not getting as good practice for the tourney as you could. i think the ideal schedule works to balance those factors. i generally play in very strong conferences, so in most other cases, it just makes the practice aspect all the more important. with this in mind, i like to have a handful of home and home series with the perennial greats of the division (plus, it saves time, and, it makes non conf play more interesting when you have some friendly rivalries sprinkled throughout).
also, when your view point breaks down IMO is for top 5 ish teams. for the 15-100 range i pretty much agree with you. but when you are a really good team i don't think it matters a whole lot if you are the #1 overall seed or the #5 overall seed. the most important thing is being 100% ready. i think one of the reasons so many 8 and 9 seeds upset 1 seeds is, the 1 seed was content playing an easy schedule, and never had a real challenge... and thus, never saw the weaknesses in their setup. meanwhile, the 8/9 seed has played a rough schedule and knows how to hedge their bets against a markedly better team. so the 8/9 will pull the upset a lot more than you would expect based on talent alone.