From the Springfield News-Leader:
http://www.news-leader.com/article/20131002/SPORTS0401/310020027/Lyndal-Scranton-MVC-Insider-Missouri-State-basketball?nclick_check=1
The Valley is screwed this season in terms of RPI. With these schedules, there's little margin for error and scant hope of being a multi-bid league. Three takeaways:
1. Not only does the MVC lose the 30% of RPI games provided by Creighton, but they're being "replaced" with Loyola's #10-in-the-league schedule, Loyola's average non-con opponent having an RPI of 260. The Valley's strongest scheduling team is therefore replaced by its new weakest scheduling team. Elgin said he thinks Loyola will "grow into the Valley," scheduling-wise. He'd better hope they do so, fast. It goes to illustrate that there really was no quality team out there to replace Creighton. (In Loyola's defense, they had lined up most of this year's schedule before joining the MVC.)
2. Losing the Mountain West Challenge series and its 11% of quality RPI games will hurt, but doubly so when combined with losing the Bracketbuster in the same year. While fans loathed the Bracketbuster and it usually failed to help teams' resumé, the 15% of RPI games provided by the Bracketbuster have been replaced with games that are much worse. Teams are unable to fill the Mountain West/Bracketbuster hole with anything other than 2 patsies.
3. The only options for the MVC (outside of Wichita St.) to schedule quality games now are MTE's and laying themselves out for 1-and-done road games vs. the BCS. Credit Wichita for being able to schedule 4 OOC nationally televised games (1 of them at midnight), and getting a BCS school to come to town this year and next. But even Wichita has its difficulties. With the Final Four under their belt, they might find it easier to get into good MTE's, but the home-and-home's will be harder to come by. To get Tennessee into town, they had to play at INTRUST rather than Koch.