Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 13

WELCOME SELECTION COMMITTEE MEMBERS!!  It’s the eve of Selection Sunday, we’ve all been working a lot and sleeping a little, we understand that you’re tired, and we are here to help make sure that you’re selecting the right teams!!

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE SURVIVAL BOARD

CLICK HERE for the Hoops HD Mock Selection Committee Update

There were fourteen conference championship games today, and we run through all of them.  UMBC won in a thrilling upset over Vermont to win the America East Championship and clinch there bid, San Diego State took home the automatic bid in the Mountain West and will likely be a dangerous team in the Round of 64, and Villanova won an overtime thriller over Providence to win the Big East again.  We discuss that, Virginia’s win in the ACC, Kansas’s win in the Big 12, and all the other action.  We also preview the six championship games taking place this Sunday, update our Survival Board, review the results of our Hoops HD Mock Selection Committee, and close with our nightly Championship Week Trivia Question.

And for all you radio lovers, below is an audio file of the show..

CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT BRACKETS FOR ALL OF TODAY’S ACTION

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The Hoops HD Selection Committee – Saturday, March 10th

Tonight was the third and busiest day of the Hoops HD Selection Committee meetings (via Skype conference call). Our first major task was selecting the final at-large and contingency spots for the field. We actually began this task with a motion from our chairman Chad Sherwood where the Bonnies were removed from the at-large board and placed back Under Consideration. This vote received the necessary 8 votes from our committee to pass. Given that Cincinnati beat Memphis earlier today, this assured an at-large spot opening up in the field. However, Davidson’s win over St. Bonaventure meant that a contingency bid would be required in the Atlantic 10.

Once Oregon was motioned off the Under Consideration board, there was a long debate among the remaining teams Under Consideration. Each committee member ended up voting for 5 teams via secret ballot and the top 5 vote-getters were added to remaining carryover teams from Friday (i.e. Louisville, Saint Mary’s, and Marquette). We then ranked the group of 8 teams from one through eight. The top 4 teams voted in order were Oklahoma State, Louisville, St. Bonaventure (contingent upon Arizona winning the Pac-12 title) and Marquette (contingent upon Rhode Island winning the A-10 title). The first four teams out were USC (assuming a loss to Arizona, which ultimately did happen), Saint Mary’s, Baylor and Arizona State.

Our next major task was to begin seeding the remaining teams into the field – this included teams that were still playing as of Saturday night. Teams like Western Kentucky, Eastern Washington, Southeastern Louisiana, Grand Canyon and the Big West runner-up were removed after their losses on Saturday night. We ended up with a seed list that includes 71 teams to account for Davidson as well as both Ivy and Sun Belt teams that have their championship games tomorrow.

Our final task for the night was to do an initial scrubbing of the master seed list. Motions needed to be seconded by at least one member to be considered and required a simple majority vote to pass. One of the motions that was passed was to swap Marquette and St. Bonaventure – we named St. Bonaventure as the A-10 contingency team in place of Marquette. This means that the Bonnies will be the last at-large team in the field if Rhode Island wins tomorrow, but it means they will be the first team out if Davidson wins the A-10 title tomorrow.

Below is our selection board as of Saturday night:

Tomorrow will be the final day of our selection meetings – we will scrub the master seed list one more time to account for championship games in the Ivy, Sun Belt, A-10 and SEC Tournaments. There may be contingency brackets to account for A-10 and American results, but we will keep you posted if that does happen.

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Survive and advanced metrics: HoopsHD interviews KPI creator Kevin Pauga

CLICK HERE for Jon Teitel’s latest Bracket Projections

CLICK HERE for the latest Championship Week Video Notebook

Last year the NCAA held a meeting with some of the best analytics minds in the college basketball business, and after decades of relying on data like the RPI the Selection Committee finally decided to tweak its terrific team sheets to add some advanced metrics to the mix. 1 of those beautiful minds belongs to Kevin Pauga, Michigan State’s Assistant Athletic Director for Administration and founder of analytics website www.kpisports.net. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Kevin about the KPI, advanced metrics, and the evolution of the Selection Committee.

What exactly is the KPI, and how does it calculate the value of each game throughout the entire season? KPI is a results-based metric that ranks team resumes by assigning a value to each game played. The best win possible is worth about +1.0, the worst loss about -1.0, and a virtual tie at 0.0. Adjustments are made to each game’s value based on location of the game, opponent quality, and percentage of total points scored. Game values are averaged for a team’s KPI ranking (meaning each game counts the same, unlike the current RPI).

During the past year you and others from the world of analytics have attended meetings with the Selection Committee: how did the meetings go, and what changes have they instituted so far? The discussions have produced positive dialogue. More than anything, it has reinforced how complicated it can be to find a simple solution that is easy for everyone (coaches, fans, etc.) to understand.

The committee currently uses many different criteria to set the field every March: which of the old data points do you like and which ones do you think require further revision?
While criteria and analytics are important, there are subjective criteria that allow committee members to further study why a team may be ranked where they are in a given match-up. Context is important. The committee is working to evolve beyond the RPI, which has been used as a sorting mechanism for many years.

This season the committee has implemented a new 4-tier system that redefines “quality wins” to place more emphasis on road wins: are you happy with the new cut-off points, and why are they better than the previous ones? The quadrant system is not perfect (no system is) but it allows the committee to visualize the difference between road/home/neutral site wins and losses. The cut-off points were determined based on historical data and have rewarded teams for key road wins throughout their season.

If a team wants to make the NCAA tourney are they better off scheduling decent teams who they think they can beat, or great teams who they can only hope to upset, or a nice mix of both, or other? I like to say that you need to typically schedule the best teams possible that you think you have a realistic chance of beating. By definition, if you do not think that your team is good enough to beat an NCAA Tournament-quality team, then you likely do not think your team is postseason-worthy and are scheduling differently for other reasons. There is always room for bold risks and depending on your conference affiliation you may have quality games already built into your schedule. 30+ games provide a lot of opportunities to take risks.

How much importance do you place on margin of victory (MOV), and do you think that a team be rewarded for running up the score for 40 minutes rather than giving their bench players a chance for some quality playing time? Margin of victory does provide context, but any circumstance where a team is rewarded for running up a score late in a game is counterproductive to the spirit of sportsmanship. Predictive metrics prove that scoring margin leads to more accurate power rankings of team quality. I include a derivative of MOV in KPI that works to mitigate these very points and depreciates based on current criteria. A 1-point road win at Team A vs. a 20-point road win at that same Team A are different…but not dramatically.

Where does the human element fit into the whole equation, and why is it impossible for a computer to replicate it? The human element provides the art and context of the process. How do you measure why a result happened? An injury? Another factor that influenced an outcome? Computers could determine a field, but the human element is critical in correcting any outliers that may exist.

If I want to predict who is going to win the title, am I better off looking at the quality of a team’s wins, or its power ranking, or something else? If you’re looking at games moving forward, you are better served to look at predictive rankings. Beyond that, it is important to contextualize style of play tendencies that may make for a good or bad match-up for a certain team.

What kind of outliers do you take note of, and how do you place them into the correct context? The team who is “supposed to” win a game emerges victorious just under 80% of the time, so what a team does with the other 20% of their schedule often dictates the success of their season. Often times, outliers or upsets are easy to identify. Remember though: your biggest outliers are often times some of your highest quality wins and losses and make for the difference between the results-based and predictive-based metrics.

Assuming the committee incorporates all of the helpful information that is out there, how do you expect the selection process to change in the years ahead? I think it is too soon to know how the committee will evolve. The committee continues to improve year after year as more data is available to them. It is important that changes not be made quickly, but be made accurately so they can withstand the test of time.

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Bracketology 2018: March Madness Predictions (Version 10.6)

CLICK HERE for the latest Championship Week Video Notebook

We are only 1 day away from Selection Sunday as we continue to make our NCAA tourney predictions. Last March HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel correctly picked every single 1 of the 68 teams that made the tourney, 63 of which were within 1 spot of their actual seed, including 43 right on the money. He will spend the rest of this weekend predicting which 68 teams will hear their names called tomorrow. See below for his list of who would make the cut if they picked the field today and if you agree or disagree then feel free to tweet us. To see how we stack up with other websites (ranked 4th out of 113 entries over the past 5 years), check out: www.bracketmatrix.com

SEED: TEAM (CONFERENCE)
1: Virginia (ACC)
1: Villanova (Big East)
1: Xavier (Big East)
1: Kansas (Big 12)

2: Duke (ACC)
2: North Carolina (ACC)
2: Purdue (Big 10)
2: Cincinnati (AAC)

3: Auburn (SEC)
3: Michigan State (Big 10)
3: Tennessee (SEC)
3: Michigan (Big 10): AUTO-BID

4: Texas Tech (Big 12)
4: Wichita State (AAC)
4: West Virginia (Big 12)
4: Arizona (Pac-12)

5: Clemson (ACC)
5: Gonzaga (WCC): AUTO-BID
5: Kentucky (SEC)
5: Ohio State (Big 10)

6: Florida (SEC)
6: Houston (AAC)
6: Miami FL (ACC)
6: TCU (Big 12)

7: Arkansas (SEC)
7: Texas A&M (SEC)
7: Nevada (MWC)
7: Seton Hall (Big East)

8: Rhode Island (A-10)
8: Butler (Big East)
8: Missouri (SEC)
8: Virginia Tech (ACC)

9: Creighton (Big East)
9: Kansas State (Big 12)
9: St. Bonaventure (A-10)
9: NC State (ACC)

10: Florida State (ACC)
10: UCLA (Pac-12)
10: Oklahoma (Big 12)
10: Providence (Big East)

11: Texas (Big 12)
11: USC (Pac-12)
11: Alabama (SEC)
11: St. Mary’s (WCC)
11: Louisville (ACC)
11: Loyola-Chicago (MVC): AUTO-BID

12: San Diego State (MWC)
12: New Mexico State (WAC)
12: Western Kentucky (CUSA)
12: South Dakota State (Summit): AUTO-BID

13: Buffalo (MAC)
13: Murray State (OVC): AUTO-BID
13: Vermont (America East)
13: Louisiana-Lafayette (Sun Belt)

14: Charleston (CAA): AUTO-BID
14: UNC Greensboro (SoCon): AUTO-BID
14: Montana (Big Sky)
14: Bucknell (Patriot): AUTO-BID

15: Wright State (Horizon): AUTO-BID
15: Fullerton (Big West)
15: Penn (Ivy)
15: Lipscomb (Atlantic Sun): AUTO-BID

16: Iona (MAAC): AUTO-BID
16: Stephen F. Austin (Southland)
16: Arkansas Pine-Bluff (SWAC)
16: Radford (Big South): AUTO-BID
16: LIU-Brooklyn (NEC): AUTO-BID
16: Hampton (MEAC)

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Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 12, Friday

WELCOME SELECTION COMMITTEE MEMBERS!!  It was a very late night, and I’m sure you’re working on selecting the field.  We are here to help make sure you do it right!!

CLICK HERE to view our Survival Board

CLICK HERE for the Hoops HD Mock Selection Committee Update

It was semifinal night in the ACC, SEC, Big Twelve, Big East, and several other conferences.  We run through all of the conference tournament action, discuss some of the upsets that occurred, and look ahead to all fourteen championship games that are taking place tomorrow.

For all you radio lovers, below is an audio file of the show..

CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT BRACKETS FOR TODAY’S ACTION

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The Hoops HD Selection Committee – Friday, March 9th

Tonight was the second day of our Hoops HD Selection Committee meetings via Skype conference call. We ended up doing 4 primary tasks tonight – we added 4 more at-large teams to our board, we scrubbed down our list of teams Under Consideration, we made a decision on the Centenary Award and began seeding the top 8 seed lines.

As for the at-large spots, we were guaranteed of 3 spots opening up at the beginning of the day because of the ACC, Big East and Big 12 being guaranteed to open up. The four teams we voted in to the field were Alabama (which also meant that a spot in the SEC was guaranteed to open up), UCLA, Oklahoma and St. Bonaventure. There is a chance that up to 3 more at-large spots could open up depending on what happens in the A-10, American and Pac-12 (note that these are listed as contingency spots on the Selection Board). However, we are guaranteed that at least one bid will be stolen thanks to Nevada’s loss against San Diego State in the Mountain West Tournament tonight.

Elsewhere, we reduced the number of teams Under Consideration to 14 teams that will be fighting for a maximum of 3 spots. We also came up with a unique compromise to settle the Delaware State/Pitt controversy – Delaware State was named the Centenary Award winner and Pitt was named the winner of the inaugural Stallings Award! The Stallings Award was christened in honor of the worst major program in Division I.

Finally, our most important task of the night was seeding the top 8 seed lines in the NCAA Tournament field. For this exercise, we began by each committee member sending 12 teams via secret ballot to our chairman Chad Sherwood. (The real committee in New York would select 8 teams and vote in teams 1 line at a time). As a time saving measure, our committee would vote 2 lines at a time. We ranked the top 12 vote-getters 1 through 12 and put the top 8 teams into the first 2 seed lines. After more debate of the teams, we voted individually on 8 more teams to add to the 4 carryover teams. Again, we would rank the teams 1 through 12 and added the top 8 teams to the next 2 seed lines. We repeated this process until we had the top 8 seed lines in place.

And here is the Selection Board as it stands right now:

Tomorrow night, our Committee will vote in the final 3 contingency spots onto the at-large board. We will then vote in the remaining seed lines that include all auto-bid winners plus any teams from the Ivy and Sun Belt that are still alive (along with any potential bid thieves) into the Master Seed List. Once the Master Seed List is complete, we will scrub the seed list to account for all results through Saturday night. Tune in again tomorrow to see where we stand!

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