cpacmel wrote:http://www.kentucky.com/2009/02/11/690551/slive-says-ncaa-wont-consider.htmlThe Southeastern Conference's modest Ratings Percentage Index should not adversely affect individual teams' chances of receiving an NCAA Tournament bid.
That was SEC Commissioner Mike Slive's stated view on a teleconference on Tuesday. And his view counts for a lot, considering he will serve as chairman of the tournament's selection committee this year.
SEC at the time had a "Modest" conference RPI of 6.
"The committee is not going to consider Conference RPI," Slive said. "It will not be a factor. It will not be part of the nitty-gritty, not on the cheat sheet and not available in the room."
Irrelevant whether they consider the conference rpi as a discrete metric or not. It still matter, and has affect. There is a direct correlation between Conference RPI and at-large bids.
And Snaggletooth, I think most people know at the non-BCS level's resume's are built in non-conference play, not during conference play.
Yeah, and that is why people are worried. Because if a league has a good non-conference season the league then can feed off of it. If you have a bunch of sub-par 175 to 200 RPI teams it won't matter how well a team does, their RPI will suffer.
And some teams have played 5-6 games. As I have pointed out before, if you talking about individual RPI yes, it is to early. But for conference RPI a third of that portion of the season has been finish and the number are more meaningful and trends are developing.And it's very very earlier to talk about this stuff. Heck some teams have only played 1 or 2 games.