Snaggle, all you are really telling us is that the BCS conferences get a ton of bids. In other news, the sun came up this morning.
By the way, our conference RPI is up to #13.
cpacmel wrote:Snaggle, all you are really telling us is that the BCS conferences get a ton of bids. In other news, the sun came up this morning.
By the way, our conference RPI is up to #13.
jayball wrote:Snaggle,
There is no magic number. Conference RPI doesn't automatically get you anything. inidivual teams resumes get them into the dance. Not their conference RPI.
We have have been in the top ten for many years now. It hasn't helped us get mutliple bids the past two years when the conference and tourney titles were won by the same school.
cpacmel wrote:jayball wrote:Snaggle,
There is no magic number. Conference RPI doesn't automatically get you anything. inidivual teams resumes get them into the dance. Not their conference RPI.
We have have been in the top ten for many years now. It hasn't helped us get mutliple bids the past two years when the conference and tourney titles were won by the same school.
Thanks Jayball. That has been what I have been trying to say. One doesn't need a t square or slide ruler to figure that out either.
jayball wrote:Yeah Tyler we all get that.
I don't know what tsquares or slide rulers are but if you can honestly look at the figures below and tell me how conference RPI makes a significant difference to help a nonBCS team get a bid, then you should talk to Matt Damon about doing Good Will Hunting II.
Otherwise from what I can tell....no one gives a sh!t. Ideally, the top 2-3 teams in the Valley have to schedule tough and win to get at large consideration. Then they have to win in conference. Otherwise we have to have one dominant program that is a lock for at large status and then have them be uspet in St Louis. No one cares how good the MVC is overall. Really they don't care. Would WSU have gotten in last year with the #8 conference RPI? Would CU have gotten in 2009? No. For our conference, it is all about your individual resume. You have to be almost perfect.
year - Conf RPI - bids
2010 – 9 - 1 bid (second place WSU RPI 43 24-9)
2009 - 9 - 1 bid - (second place CU RPI 40 26-7)
2008 – 8 - 1 bid – (second place IlSU RPI 37 24-10)
2007 – 6 - 2 bids (SIU and CU)
2006 – 6 - 4 bids (WSU, BU, SIU, UNI)
2005 - 8 - 3 bids (UNI, CU, SIU)
TylerDurden wrote:jayball wrote:Yeah Tyler we all get that.
I don't know what tsquares or slide rulers are but if you can honestly look at the figures below and tell me how conference RPI makes a significant difference to help a nonBCS team get a bid, then you should talk to Matt Damon about doing Good Will Hunting II.
Otherwise from what I can tell....no one gives a sh!t. Ideally, the top 2-3 teams in the Valley have to schedule tough and win to get at large consideration. Then they have to win in conference. Otherwise we have to have one dominant program that is a lock for at large status and then have them be uspet in St Louis. No one cares how good the MVC is overall. Really they don't care. Would WSU have gotten in last year with the #8 conference RPI? Would CU have gotten in 2009? No. For our conference, it is all about your individual resume. You have to be almost perfect.
year - Conf RPI - bids
2010 – 9 - 1 bid (second place WSU RPI 43 24-9)
2009 - 9 - 1 bid - (second place CU RPI 40 26-7)
2008 – 8 - 1 bid – (second place IlSU RPI 37 24-10)
2007 – 6 - 2 bids (SIU and CU)
2006 – 6 - 4 bids (WSU, BU, SIU, UNI)
2005 - 8 - 3 bids (UNI, CU, SIU)
The graphs posted show the correlation. It's not 100 percent, but its not arbitrary either and the numbers you posted are pretty incomplete to draw any sort of conclusion about why teams were left out, especially since RPI cannot be compared from year to year. Each season is its own data set.
I think our failure in communication is that you're assuming I'm saying that a conference RPI of X leads to Y number of bids.
I'm not saying that.
I'm saying it's important to care about the league RPI because it means MVC teams are winning and thus improving everyone's future opponents. The actual number doesn't mean a ton, but it reflects the strength of the league, which is important - especially to a non-BCS league.
We agree that individual teams need to build their own resumes - and the conference is vital to that.
Conference RPI is a dependent number. If the MVC has a high RPI, that makes everyone's resume better because it means they beat a bunch of teams.
So it absolutely matters.
Hell, you said as much in your post...which is why I'm confused as to why you think the conference RPI is irrelevant.
If you acknowledge that individual schools need to build a worthy resume, and that the strength of the conference RPIs has an impact, then why do you say it doesn't matter?
That's illogical.
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