https://twitter.com/CornellSports/status/829742370841358338
Quote from: Beeeejhttps://twitter.com/CornellSports/status/829742370841358338
UGH. Guess we'll view it as silver lining to get an extra day's rest during a busy stretch of games.
that storm down by the city is far worse then they thought even yesterday. yale/brown under blizzard warnings now.
Quote from: upprdeckthat storm down by the city is far worse then they thought even yesterday. yale/brown under blizzard warnings now.
Blizzard it is here south of Boston. More than a foot in central Massachusetts already.
Why wouldnt you leave the Sat game as is and just move the Friday games? seems like less work for people
Well, that sucks. I was looking forward to coming up.
Fortunately they switched my tickets to Senior Weekend (RPI/Union).
Quote from: upprdeckWhy wouldnt you leave the Sat game as is and just move the Friday games? seems like less work for people
The league tries to alternate which team first plays the home team. So if we play Brown first away, then we play Yale first at home. Next year it switches. Presumably it's done to even everything out.
For example if Yale was great this year and Brown their usual +/-, then it would not be fair to have Colgate play them first each time and we get them after they have been "beaten up" by 'gate each time. This year it's not that important, but could be.
but had they had a issue on friday they would have no problem moving it to sat. seems like a minor concern in the bigger picture compared to people who might have been traveling for the game and now have to change hotels,
but who knows maybe cornell or some school requested that it not change
One good thing about the change- if you have ILDN you can see Union @ Harvard Friday night. A big game for all three teams. Might be a trap game for Harvard looking forward to Beanpot final. ::banana::
Quote from: TimVOne good thing about the change- if you have ILDN you can see Union @ Harvard Friday night. A big game for all three teams. Might be a trap game for Harvard looking forward to Beanpot final. ::banana::
Well, not if you're a cheap ILDN subscriber like me, and only pay for Cornell games. :( Also even if I could watch that game, and assuming I'd be willing to root for Harvard if Harvard winning helped Cornell, I wouldn't know who to root for. We might have a better chance of passing Union than of passing Harvard since we still have a game left against Union, and we lose the first tie-breaker with Harvard.
I take the perspective that there is no outcome of that game that doesnt help us in some way. its really unclear which one helps us the most. my head says a harvard win does, since we still play union again, but my heart has a hard time with that thought.
Quote from: upprdeckI take the perspective that there is no outcome of that game that doesnt help us in some way. its really unclear which one helps us the most. my head says a harvard win does, since we still play union again, but my heart has a hard time with that thought.
Also depends on what you view as the ideal outcome. I would imagine there's an outcome that makes us more likely to finish third, but that it might be different from what would make it more likely we get all the way to first (which I think would be a tie? maybe?)
I think tie is the best outcome to root for to.
Quote from: upprdeckI take the perspective that there is no outcome of that game that doesnt help us in some way. its really unclear which one helps us the most. my head says a harvard win does, since we still play union again, but my heart has a hard time with that thought.
A Union win can help our quality win points, since the higher they finish the more quality win points we get. And we also have a second shot at getting more.
Quote from: jkahnQuote from: upprdeckI take the perspective that there is no outcome of that game that doesnt help us in some way. its really unclear which one helps us the most. my head says a harvard win does, since we still play union again, but my heart has a hard time with that thought.
A Union win can help our quality win points, since the higher they finish the more quality win points we get. And we also have a second shot at getting more.
I thought quality win bonus was based solely on their Pairwise position at the time of the game, not where they end up.
Quote from: andyw2100Well, not if you're a cheap ILDN subscriber like me, and only pay for Cornell games.
And me.
I may finally take the big plunge next year, but I do most of my non-Cornell watching during the playoffs which, IIRC, aren't on ILDN.
What we need is a fucking ECACDN.
Quote from: TrotskyQuote from: andyw2100Well, not if you're a cheap ILDN subscriber like me, and only pay for Cornell games.
And me.
I may finally take the big plunge next year, but I do most of my non-Cornell watching during the playoffs which, IIRC, aren't on ILDN.
What we need is a fucking ECACDN.
I'd settle for a "by sport" instead of "by school" option. I'd be more likely to watch other Ivy League hockey games than I am to watch other Cornell sports during the four months of the year I subscribe.
Quote from: andyw2100Quote from: TrotskyQuote from: andyw2100Well, not if you're a cheap ILDN subscriber like me, and only pay for Cornell games.
And me.
I may finally take the big plunge next year, but I do most of my non-Cornell watching during the playoffs which, IIRC, aren't on ILDN.
What we need is a fucking ECACDN.
I'd settle for a "by sport" instead of "by school" option. I'd be more likely to watch other Ivy League hockey games than I am to watch other Cornell sports during the four months of the year I subscribe.
You know the problem with that. Not a lot of interest/traffic for the Field Hockey package. Though maybe if they bring back the skirts (http://www.chicagonow.com/cheaper-than-therapy/files/2012/11/4813001954_1ef932f037.jpeg)...
Quote from: BeeeejQuote from: jkahnQuote from: upprdeckI take the perspective that there is no outcome of that game that doesnt help us in some way. its really unclear which one helps us the most. my head says a harvard win does, since we still play union again, but my heart has a hard time with that thought.
A Union win can help our quality win points, since the higher they finish the more quality win points we get. And we also have a second shot at getting more.
I thought quality win bonus was based solely on their Pairwise position at the time of the game, not where they end up.
It's got to be based on where they end up. First of all, it wouldn't make sense to give a team credit for beating a highly positioned team two weeks into the season, when that team is ultimately mediocre. And, what would you do with wins in the first game of the season. Plus, I just checked a couple of examples, including Cornell, it it seems to agree with where Union and St. Lawrence are now positioned.
Quote from: jkahnQuote from: BeeeejQuote from: jkahnQuote from: upprdeckI take the perspective that there is no outcome of that game that doesnt help us in some way. its really unclear which one helps us the most. my head says a harvard win does, since we still play union again, but my heart has a hard time with that thought.
A Union win can help our quality win points, since the higher they finish the more quality win points we get. And we also have a second shot at getting more.
I thought quality win bonus was based solely on their Pairwise position at the time of the game, not where they end up.
It's got to be based on where they end up. First of all, it wouldn't make sense to give a team credit for beating a highly positioned team two weeks into the season, when that team is ultimately mediocre. And, what would you do with wins in the first game of the season. Plus, I just checked a couple of examples, including Cornell, it it seems to agree with where Union and St. Lawrence are now positioned.
You make a compelling argument, and I'm sure you're right about how it
does work, but that system still values "quality wins" differently at different times of the season. Let's say Penn State's decline wasn't just a regression to the mean, but they lost half their players to injury, and lost the rest of their games. Team X, who beat them early in the season when they were in the top few slots in the Pairwise, really did get a quality win over a strong team, but if Penn State ends up #25, Team X gets screwed out of that bonus regardless of the reason for the decline.
I guess no system is perfect, but I wonder if there's a mathematical way to find a middle-ground solution.
Quote from: BeeeejYou make a compelling argument, and I'm sure you're right about how it does work, but that system still values "quality wins" differently at different times of the season. Let's say Penn State's decline wasn't just a regression to the mean, but they lost half their players to injury, and lost the rest of their games. Team X, who beat them early in the season when they were in the top few slots in the Pairwise, really did get a quality win over a strong team, but if Penn State ends up #25, Team X gets screwed out of that bonus regardless of the reason for the decline.
I guess no system is perfect, but I wonder if there's a mathematical way to find a middle-ground solution.
You could wait until the end of the season, then retroactively go back and calculate every opponent's strength at the time of your game against them based on their results to that point against
their opponents
end-season SOS.
Very simple example:
Let's say Penn State goes 13-2 losing games 5 and 15, then has a Horrible Zamboni Accident, and goes 2-13 winning games 20 and 30. You step through the schedule day by day adjusting opponent strength to what it is at the moment the puck drops on each game, so the teams who beat PSU on games 5 and 15 get a VERY sweet boost. The teams that start beating them on game 21 still get a good boost for a while, but it sinks until the win against PSU on game 29 and the loss against them on game 30 are +/- virtually the same amount, since at that point they are effectively a .500 team.
It would be a weird hybrid with basically no higher theoretical statistical justification. But it would try to capture both concerns.
it might be better to front-load the schedule with say 4 dummy results of .500 ties to wash out the unduly high or low effects of the very low denominators early in the season.
Anyway, it could be done, but it winds up looking like those 11th grade Coronet films of spiders spinning their webs on acid.
Quote from: TrotskyQuote from: BeeeejYou make a compelling argument, and I'm sure you're right about how it does work, but that system still values "quality wins" differently at different times of the season. Let's say Penn State's decline wasn't just a regression to the mean, but they lost half their players to injury, and lost the rest of their games. Team X, who beat them early in the season when they were in the top few slots in the Pairwise, really did get a quality win over a strong team, but if Penn State ends up #25, Team X gets screwed out of that bonus regardless of the reason for the decline.
I guess no system is perfect, but I wonder if there's a mathematical way to find a middle-ground solution.
You could wait until the end of the season, then retroactively go back and calculate every opponent's strength at the time of your game against them based on their results to that point against their opponents end-season SOS.
Very simple example:
Let's say Penn State goes 13-2 losing games 5 and 15, then has a Horrible Zamboni Accident, and goes 2-13 winning games 20 and 30. You step through the schedule day by day adjusting opponent strength to what it is at the moment the puck drops on each game, so the teams who beat PSU on games 5 and 15 get a VERY sweet boost. The teams that start beating them on game 21 still get a good boost for a while, but it sinks until the win against PSU on game 29 and the loss against them on game 30 are +/- virtually the same amount, since at that point they are effectively a .500 team.
It would be a weird hybrid with basically no higher theoretical statistical justification. But it would try to capture both concerns.
it might be better to front-load the schedule with say 4 dummy results of .500 ties to wash out the unduly high or low effects of the very low denominators early in the season.
Anyway, it could be done, but it winds up looking like those 11th grade Coronet films of spiders spinning their webs on acid.
Somehow I knew you'd be the first to submit a proposal.
Quote from: BeeeejSomehow I knew you'd be the first to submit a proposal.
"I GOT NOWHERE ELSE TO GO!!!!" :`-(
Quote from: TrotskyQuote from: BeeeejYou make a compelling argument, and I'm sure you're right about how it does work, but that system still values "quality wins" differently at different times of the season. Let's say Penn State's decline wasn't just a regression to the mean, but they lost half their players to injury, and lost the rest of their games. Team X, who beat them early in the season when they were in the top few slots in the Pairwise, really did get a quality win over a strong team, but if Penn State ends up #25, Team X gets screwed out of that bonus regardless of the reason for the decline.
I guess no system is perfect, but I wonder if there's a mathematical way to find a middle-ground solution.
You could wait until the end of the season, then retroactively go back and calculate every opponent's strength at the time of your game against them based on their results to that point against their opponents end-season SOS.
Very simple example:
Let's say Penn State goes 13-2 losing games 5 and 15, then has a Horrible Zamboni Accident, and goes 2-13 winning games 20 and 30. You step through the schedule day by day adjusting opponent strength to what it is at the moment the puck drops on each game, so the teams who beat PSU on games 5 and 15 get a VERY sweet boost. The teams that start beating them on game 21 still get a good boost for a while, but it sinks until the win against PSU on game 29 and the loss against them on game 30 are +/- virtually the same amount, since at that point they are effectively a .500 team.
It would be a weird hybrid with basically no higher theoretical statistical justification. But it would try to capture both concerns.
it might be better to front-load the schedule with say 4 dummy results of .500 ties to wash out the unduly high or low effects of the very low denominators early in the season.
Anyway, it could be done, but it winds up looking like those 11th grade Coronet films of spiders spinning their webs on acid.
NCAA: We need a simple way to reward quality wins.
Beeeej: How about a complicated way?
Trotsky: Always here for you, man.
Quote from: ugarteNCAA: We need a simple way to reward quality wins.
Beeeej: How about a complicated way?
Trotsky: Always here for you, man.
It's actually no more complicated because once it's coded you press one fucking button. ::banana::
Quote from: TrotskyQuote from: ugarteNCAA: We need a simple way to reward quality wins.
Beeeej: How about a complicated way?
Trotsky: Always here for you, man.
It's actually no more complicated because once it's coded you press one fucking button. ::banana::
There is only one more change worth making to the selection process - KRACH
Quote from: nshapiroThere is only one more change worth making to the selection process - KRACH
Agreed. No, wait.
(confirms Cornell is higher in KRACH than PWR)
Agreed.
The PlayoffStatus.com "Pairwise (http://www.playoffstatus.com/ncaahockey/ncaahockeyrankings.html)" seems to actually be KRACH.
Quote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Well, that sucks. I was looking forward to coming up.
Fortunately they switched my tickets to Senior Weekend (RPI/Union).
"Senior" as in "about to graduate" or "senior" as in "can't remember when or even if I graduated?"
Quote from: TimVOne good thing about the change- if you have ILDN you can see Union @ Harvard Friday night. A big game for all three teams. Might be a trap game for Harvard looking forward to Beanpot final. ::banana::
All three teams? Am I missing something?
I was thinking the miserable bus rides on Friday to Colgate and Cornell would add some home-ice advantage.
Quote from: billhowardQuote from: TimVOne good thing about the change- if you have ILDN you can see Union @ Harvard Friday night. A big game for all three teams. Might be a trap game for Harvard looking forward to Beanpot final. ::banana::
All three teams? Am I missing something?
Union, Harvard, and Cornell.
Quote from: billhowardQuote from: TimVOne good thing about the change- if you have ILDN you can see Union @ Harvard Friday night. A big game for all three teams. Might be a trap game for Harvard looking forward to Beanpot final. ::banana::
All three teams? Am I missing something?
They're trying 3-way hockey to keep Millennials interested. There will also be full frontal nudity.
And chimps.
Quote from: TrotskyQuote from: andyw2100Well, not if you're a cheap ILDN subscriber like me, and only pay for Cornell games.
And me.
For cheap guys like us, the Quinnipiac vs. Clarkson game is available for free:
http://quinnipiacbobcats.com/watch/?Live=232
Edit: Bonus for watching this game--Quinnipiac is wearing perhaps the ugliest jerseys I've ever seen. They are some sort of camouflage jersey. I have not heard why they are wearing them. Since they are playing on white ice, the camouflage really isn't going to work very well.
Quote from: SwampyQuote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Well, that sucks. I was looking forward to coming up.
Fortunately they switched my tickets to Senior Weekend (RPI/Union).
"Senior" as in "about to graduate" or "senior" as in "can't remember when or even if I graduated?"
Why do you think I have my graduation year in my log-in name? ::flipa:: :-D