Stickboy46 wrote:Cdizzle wrote:For the record, I think this crappy argument gets used all the time, even among basketball 'analysts', talking heads, and supposed bracketology gurus. So many of them, the only thing they want to talk about is record vs. RPI Top 50. Which I've ranted on as asinine in nature before. If the only metric one is going to use (and you'll see this on TV a lot), is record vs. RPI Top 50 (which is a completely arbitrary distinction btw, as if beating RPI 51 on the road is better than beating RPI 50 at home), then it is ridiculous to not just use the RPI rankings themselves as your rating system.
I agree. They use it because its the most slanted way to help out the power conferences. They have the most opportunities to get "good" wins. It makes it self fulfilling.
Which ultimately means bad losses should be held equally accountable. If some scrub team like Clemson wins a couple Top 50 games and then has a few 200+ bombs on their resume, the focus shouldn't just be on the Top 50 wins. Losses count too. And yes, it's a P5/ESPN slant. Big time.
Back to cdizzle's point, when said team like Clemson goes something like 2-9 against the top 50 and a mid team goes 1-0 against the Top 50, but then Clemson is looked more favorably because they have more Top 50 wins than said mid-team, that's absolute P5 slant at its worst. Clemson got 10 more chances at Top 50 wins (with a fair amount likely at home) and they get more praise than a middy who can't play Top 50 teams without getting bought out on the road but cashed in on its 1 opportunity made available to them. And that's supposed to be fair? Gross logic used by the NCAA, ESPN, and other talking heads who are always slanting things towards the $$$$.