GoShockers89 wrote:
Here is the thing. Yes, if SDSU somehow squeaks into the RPI top 50 by Selection Sunday, I will be glad we played them because that is the only way the Committee will view the win as a positive. If they don't, then this win will be viewed just like our win at Davidson last year (did not make one iota of difference, just another of many wins over RPI 50-100 teams). If we somehow lose the game, it will be viewed disastrously.
How do you really know what effect the Win over Davidson had last year though? I know, I am not going to change your opinion on this event, and I do like a good, friendly debate.....but even if we take it down to just looking at wins from 51-100, doesn't 6-1, look better than 5-1 to the selection committee? And even if you peel the onion back one layer further...doesn't 8 top 100 wins look better than 7 top 100 wins?
The problem is that this event has a bajillion teams in it and we are the very, very best home team in the whole thing.
Technically, if you go RPI wise, the very, very best home team in the whole thing today is Belmont. But I would agree with ya, that you guys are.
Our prize: a game against a team with a projected RPI around 60 that offers us an "everything to lose and nothing to win" scenario.
Yes you have stuff to lose, as in any game. Say ESPN made an announcement that Belmont (14) was being flipped to a home team, and you would were matched up with them instead. A loss to them still gives you stuff to lose (a seed / line or 2 in the Big Dance perhaps).
But yeah, I do know where you are coming from here.
We basically need SDSU to go undefeated for this to be a winning situation. That is not what the best team in the entire event should have to hope for. They should be guaranteed an opponent that is at least solid on paper (top 50). If this is what we get, what about teams like Indiana State who are truly on the bubble and need a quality opponent to bolster their resume? That is what the event was originally designed for. Now even the rare team that's a lock still can't get a good opponent.
To be fair though, Indy State will probably get a team that is within 10-15 of it's RPI (52).
And I do think you are overstating how impressively SDSU will fit into our non-conference schedule.
We have played teams with RPIs of:
39, 40, 71, 79, 84
Tossing in another team with an RPI in the 60s or 70s will help our raw numbers a little, but really doesn't do a whole heckuva lot. It's not like the schedule fell off a cliff after the first two opponents you listed and we are starving for average wins.
Again, I wasn't trying to say that the BB is a scheduling coup for you guys or anyone else. Just pointing out that in the end it will probably give you your best non-conference game and your 3rd best too. That's all I said. And all of these #'s are bound to change too. And it will be fun to re-visit this come March.
Overall, this event served its purpose for a few years but now it offers nothing to participants looking to improve their at-large profile. It is ending at its absolute lowest point.
I guess it's all in the mindset. We can certainly agree to disagree on it man.
Even at the event's lowest point, as you claim, if nothing else, it gave you VCU this year. Which is a top 50 win, and your best non-conference win. Sometimes the value lies in the return game.
I do know where you guys are coming from here. In a perfect world, a team with an RPI of 18 should get a game against a like foe (say within 10-15 spots). I just try and look for the positives man. I am off my soapbox.