VUGrad1314 wrote:Drakey wrote:VUGrad1314 wrote:We need to challenge ourselves more in the non-con get our numbers up. Have teams that have 2-3 Q1 and 5-6 total Q1 Q2 wins to play each other and make this league depth count for something! That's the answer! That's the way forward!
That is also impossible. The Power 5 don't want multiple teams from the Valley. They changed the rules to make it impossible.
The OHIO VALLEY got two teams into the dance last year. The SOCON will likely get two if ETSU loses in the final. UNI was probably in if they made the final. Don't tell me it's impossible. That's defeatist and by the OVC example alone patently false. If you believe that you're doing exactly what the P5 wants you to do. Accept their arbitrary BS standards and move on. Like I said Do what you have to do. Uneven trades buy games but GET THOSE GAMES. Then WIN THEM. And the Committee has no choice but to let us in.
The NET has changed scheduling requirements and there is even less reason for major conferences to schedule mid majors, especially anyone who can beat them. The first part of the formula is the team value index, and second is offensive/defensive efficiency.
You mentioned the OVC getting two bids last year and Belmont getting an at large. There was an article that stated Belmont knew how to schedule for the NET, AND how to play the statistics game. Like I said before, the computer isn’t taking into account you shot 35% against Kansas and 65% against SE North West State University, they just calculate the team shooting percentage at 50%. So as an example, IU has 31 games scheduled, 20 of which are Big Ten games, 1 ACC challenge, and one Hoosier Classic against either Notre Dame or Butler. That leaves 9 total games in the out of conference schedule. Some of those games need to be stat padders to increase your offensive and defensive efficiency. If you want more proof, go take a good look at Belmont’s in 18-19 schedule and see who they beat. Hardly anyone. They only PLAYED 2 power 5 teams and beat a bad UCLA team. That’s it.
Schedule “better” sounds great, schedule smarter is the reality.