CaseyGarrisonforPrez wrote:Snaggletooth wrote:CaseyGarrisonforPrez wrote:If you cherry pick a year then sure. We were bad in 2005 but that was just one season. Overall, we have had some really fine teams in recent years
I don't know what your definition of "fine" is but these RPI are not fine unless you relish mediocrity
2011 - 64 RPI
2010 - 175 RPI
2009 - 151 RPI
2008 - 53 RPI
2007 - 115 RPI
2006 - 59 RPI
2005 - 92 RPI
2004 - 108 RPI
I appreciate your knowledge of statistics and what you are trying to say. I think it has been proven that in baseball and softball that RPI is unfair to schools that aren't in the Southeast or West Coast.
cite your reference that RPI is unherently unfair? RPI is a formula. It doesn't change by geography. I assume you might be talking about the advantage that team in the south have over northern team due to weather - which is true and DBU will have that advantage. They will be able to practice all winter and be prepared for opening day. They will be able to host team at home in the early season and rack up wins in non-conference (and how is that bad for the conference).
If you want alternative formula I guess you could go to ISR, but they will show you the same.
Dallas Baptist can hop in a bus and travel midweek to TCU, Texas, Texas A&M, Rice, Houston, LSU, etc. Plus they can play their early season games at home which is a huge advantage. Missouri State does not have the advantage of good weekday opponents or getting our feet wet at home early in the year either.
Yeah, make you wonder what they are thinking about trying to get into the MVC. They will have to travel north in the tundra.
Not making excuses, Keith Guttin can and will do better but it is unfair.
It sure does sound like your making excuses. Baseball is inherently stacked to the southern teams since forever. It is what it is. Whether DBU is in the conference isn't going to change that. But it sure can't hurt to add a team to the conference who will play a decent non-conference schedule and actually have success.