BCPanther wrote:I, for one, am shocked they got rid of the metric that mids could take advantage of in favor of one that's secret and seems to overly reward teams blowing out games they can buy and play at home.
Not sure that is all true. Margin of victory doesn’t seem to impact NET. Instead it seems to take efficiency on the offensive and defensive end. Basically, it’s an attempt to base it on how well you play. It’s a predictive metric. It’s an attempt at a predictive index.
And so far it doesn’t seem to harm MMs. Currently, Bracketologists.com has set the NCAA line at 50. Better than 50, there are two teams from the OVC, four from the Mountain West, four West Coast teams, one from the SoCon, one from CUSA, one from the MVC, and an A10 team. That’s 14 out of 50 or 28% of the top 50. That’s what the NET rankings say.
Where it gets screwed up is when you look at NET ranking, AND THEN LOOK AT A PART OF THE NET RANKING to justify inclusion or exclusion. If you do that, you are double dipping a data point. For example, a NET ranking should be used by itself, compared only to itself. By then looking at Q1/Q2 wins, you are skewing the data. After all the Quadrant system is based on NET rankings, and are included in the NET itself. Same for strength of schedule. If you hear members of selection committee talking about those things as reasons to include/exclude teams, that’s them putting their finger in the scale.