Swami's seeding prediction

Started by scoop85, May 03, 2007, 04:39:20 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

scoop85

Swami (I'm sure reluctantly) has Cornell #1, but says that strength of schedule will probably knock us down to the #2 seed.  Thoughts?

Jacob '06

On laxpower a bunch of people were discussing Duke potentially sneaking ahead of us. Apparently head to head is way down their list of criteria, but I still think it would be ridiculous to seed a team that lost to us ahead of us based on SOS.

Al DeFlorio

As I posted a week or so ago, it wouldn't surprise me at all if we aren't seeded #1.  The same criteria sent us to Towson two or three years ago and knocked our seeding down from where it should have been last year.  Why should this year be different?::innocent::

There's an interesting thread on Laxpower where someone is proposing changes to the NCAA criteria in an attempt to deemphasize somewhat the effect of strength of schedule.  To me it's nuts if one team can go 5-0 against the top 20 (however you choose to measure that, and I don't think it should be RPI) and another team that's 6-3 scores higher because it played four more games against the top 20, even though it lost three of them.

http://network.laxpower.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=25117

I don't know how close Jim Wobus comes to calculating KRACH as we've seen it done for hockey (note the "fictitious tie" he assigns every team) but here's how his numbers come out:

http://www.vaporia.com/sports/collegelacrossekrach.html

This list comes close to most of the polls, and, with the possible exception of Albany being a spot or two too high, is pretty much in line with my view of things.
Al DeFlorio '65

DeltaOne81

Probably. Duke has a higher RPI than us, and a higher SoS, and more quality wins (4-3-1-0 vs. 1-1-2-2).

As to Al's point, the criteria does say "record" against top teams, not just wins, so then we're 1-0, 1-0, 2-0, 2-0, and Duke is 4-1, 3-0, 0-1, 1-0. By pure percentage we win, but more subjectively, I'm not sure 7-1 against top 10 isn't more impressive than 2-0.

Anyway, it would be perfectly reasonable, by the criteria, to put as #2, and may give the boys some motivation anyway.

You could object to the system not including H2H as a primary criteria, but, since it doesn't, it would bother me more if they did consider something they're not supposed to.

Josh '99

Duke hasn't even played a stronger schedule than Cornell; LaxPower has them 6th.*  And, I'm sorry, any set of selection criteria that might seed a two-loss team ahead of an undefeated (hypothetically, at this point, of course) team that *beat* the two-loss team is stupid.  It's not even like they're dealing with a situation like they had in football last fall where Michigan's only loss was to Ohio State, Duke also lost to a decent-but-not-great Loyola team.

* Edit:  Yes, I know that's not how the selection criteria evaluate SOS, but still.
"They do all kind of just blend together into one giant dildo."
-Ben Rocky 04

DeltaOne81

[quote Josh '99]Duke hasn't even played a stronger schedule than Cornell; LaxPower has them 6th.*  And, I'm sorry, any set of selection criteria that might seed a two-loss team ahead of an undefeated (hypothetically, at this point, of course) team that *beat* the two-loss team is stupid.  It's not even like they're dealing with a situation like they had in football last fall where Michigan's only loss was to Ohio State, Duke also lost to a decent-but-not-great Loyola team.

* Edit:  Yes, I know that's not how the selection criteria evaluate SOS, but still.[/quote]

It seems to me there are two separate issues here. First is if the selection criteria should be changed. On that you'll have no problem convincing me they should be revised, not to mention made more objective.

The second is where Cornell should be given the current set of criteria. On this, your use of the LaxPower SoS is irrelevant. That's based on their Power Rankings, which are also irrelevant. They are as meaningful to the NCAA as KRACH or pure win % or alphabetical.

Unfortunately, we don't have any top-10 SoS I consider to be fully accurate. But the closest (since Hymie hasn't fixed his bug) is probably LaxPower: http://www.laxpower.com/update07/binmen/rpis01.php

The story is a little different there, huh?


There's a final issue, which is that lax doesn't even have a seeding criteria. Only a 'selection'. There is nothing to say what's suppose to be used to seed teams. I guess if they wanted to do it alphabetically, they could.

Al DeFlorio

[quote DeltaOne81]As to Al's point, the criteria does say "record" against top teams, not just wins, so then we're 1-0, 1-0, 2-0, 2-0, and Duke is 4-1, 3-0, 0-1, 1-0. By pure percentage we win, but more subjectively, I'm not sure 7-1 against top 10 isn't more impressive than 2-0.
[/quote]
I suspect most would say 7-1 vs. top 10 is more impressive than 2-0.  But perhaps 6-0 against top 20 is better than 8-2.  And remember who the "1" is in that 7-1 record.  Also, how are we determining the top 10?  By the--in my opinion--very flawed RPI formula?
 
It isn't clear to me why head-to-head should be ignored when the relative ranking of two teams that are otherwise close is being decided.  For example, Drexel's win over Virginia wouldn't win any argument with me to seed Drexel ahead of Virginia--given both teams' complete body of work--but Virginia's win over Hopkins might sway me if it was a toss-up otherwise as to which of those two should be seeded above the other for, say, seeds #3 and #4.
Al DeFlorio '65

KeithK

[quote DeltaOne81]
There's a final issue, which is that lax doesn't even have a seeding criteria. Only a 'selection'. There is nothing to say what's suppose to be used to seed teams. I guess if they wanted to do it alphabetically, they could.[/quote]
If lax doesn't have a seeding criteria, then we're back to Josh's point.  We're the only undefeated team at this point (pending the Hobart game, of course).  In fact every other team has at least 2 losses.  It would be ridiculous for the committee to not seed Cornell #1 (again, pending tomorrow).

schoaff

Of course it might be better to go into the tournament the #2 seed with a chip on their shoulders than the #1 with a target on their backs.

evilnaturedrobot

[quote schoaff]Of course it might be better to go into the tournament the #2 seed with a chip on their shoulders than the #1 with a target on their backs.[/quote]

Exactly.  And with the bottom 8 teams not being seeded, we'll probably get Sienna regardless of whether we're #1 or #2.

scoop85

[quote KeithK][quote DeltaOne81]
There's a final issue, which is that lax doesn't even have a seeding criteria. Only a 'selection'. There is nothing to say what's suppose to be used to seed teams. I guess if they wanted to do it alphabetically, they could.[/quote]
If lax doesn't have a seeding criteria, then we're back to Josh's point.  We're the only undefeated team at this point (pending the Hobart game, of course).  In fact every other team has at least 2 losses.  It would be ridiculous for the committee to not seed Cornell #1 (again, pending tomorrow).[/quote]

Not only that, but I keep coming back to our H2H win on their field, which has to mean something in the grand scheme of things; to hold otherwise is simply illogical.

Al DeFlorio

Interesting tidbit:  Duke has played ten of their fifteen games at home and only four on the road (plus one at a neutral site in San Diego).
Al DeFlorio '65

peterg

[quote scoop85]Not only that, but I keep coming back to our H2H win on their field, which has to mean something in the grand scheme of things; to hold otherwise is simply illogical.[/quote]

It's the NCAA.  You want logic?

BillCharlton

In contrast, after tomorrow we will have played six at home, six on the road, and one at a neutral site. Unfortunately, in its infinite wisdom the NCAA does not give extra weight to road wins. Margin of victory is another no-no, of course. We wouldn't want to encourage running up the score, as it could cause permanent psychological harm.

Jeff Hopkins '82

According to the RPI ranking on Laxpower, we're slightly higher in RPI than Duke.  I don't know if that's the actual RPI used, but it does imply that we could still wind up #1 in RPI.

But as noted, this is the NC$$.  Logic comes second.