Mike DeCourcy at the Sporting News calls bull on the bemoaning of Mid-Major bubble teams getting the shaft this year, and especially the way CBS presented the issue.CBS presented an absolute whopper when it aired a graphic stating the number of "mid-major at-large bids" to the NCAA Tournament had declined from 12 in 2004 to 6 in 2007. This was up on the screen while announcer Seth Davis declared this trend to be "bad for college basketball" because mid-major schools add charm to the event.He makes a good point. If mid-major is being used as shorthand for teams in non-BCS conferences then a lot of the shift can simply be attributed to ACC and Big East expansion. The main programs that were supplying at-large teams were coming from C-USA with Memphis, Louisville, Cinci, Marquette and DePaul. The latter four are now in the Big East. Until that point, Conference USA was a legitimate basketball power conference. They contended regularly for top seeds in the brackets, and no one was calling them a mid-major. There is a certain revisionism to now go back and declare that they were really mid majors.
Yeah, well, maybe if this trend weren't manufactured, this problem would be a problem.
Let's travel back in time, shall we? We'll go back to the days CBS determined to be the golden days of mid-major basketball: 2003-04. It was a grand time, indeed, when Louisville was a mid-major power.
He also notes that the A-10 was the other conference getting a lot of at-large bids in the 90s and at the start of the 21st century -- UMass, Temple, St. Joe's, Xavier and George Washington late. That's part of the equation for the decline as only Xavier and GW have remained consistently good enough to make the field. In that year, the only at-large bid from a mid-major not in C-USA, A-10 or MWC was Southern Illinois of the MVC.
This year, the 6 mid-major at-large bids came from 6 conferences: Horizon, Colonial, MVC, MWC, WAC and A-10. By the numbers, that makes more sense and "spreads the wealth." I think going by numbers in or out, though, is nothing more then easy shorthand that DeCourcy rightly decried.
I still disagree with DeCourcy's overall conclusion because, as I have written previously, the Selection Committee has made it more difficult for mid-majors to get into the Tournament, because they are changing and shifting standards. This means more favoritism to the BCS conference teams, that have the consistency of stronger conferences to buoy them. It preserves more of a status quo and keeps the other conferences below the majors.
It also means that it is that much harder for the A-10, MVC or MWC to build their overall conference strength when it is being discounted by the NCAA Selection Committee. It means less national exposure and chances to sell the schools and conference to the recruits. And it is still the players that matter for success.
I know you are probably sick of reading about the selection committee and their mistakes and everything else. I understand. I don't blame you. That said, I'm going to take one more run at them.
Teams that slid off the bubble (or had their bubbles aggressively violated by an incompetent selection committee, as some would have you believe) spent much of today bitching and crying about being excluded from the tournament. And that's fine ... it's to be expected, it happens every year, and yes, it's true that some teams did get unfairly railroaded.
Does CBS have any say on Selection Sunday? Does the network that televises the NCAA Tournament and puts hundreds of millions of dollars into the schools' pockets expect to be compensated for that investment with TV-friendly matchups?
Andy Rooney is more important to college basketball than Kevin Durant. At least, that's the inference you'd have to draw from the comments of NCAA Selection Committee Chairman Gary Walters.
As we
Look, the NCAA Selection Committee Chairman, Gary Walters, is a smart guy. He played basketball at Princeton, he actually was a basketball coach before eventually becoming
Syracuse, to the surprise of many, was excluded from the NCAA Tournament. The level of outrage on the ESPN Tournament Selection Show was highest on the exclusion of Syracuse. As the
Though it'll never happen, it'd be really nice to know sometime exactly what criteria the Tournament Selection Committee uses for selection and seeding. A popular topic is always how much value they put on a team's RPI ranking (which I hope is low, but more on that in a little bit). With that in mind, check out some of these statistical oddities as they relate to the RPI and the tournament seeding.
I don't know what happened in that committee room, but it looks like one person stood up and screamed, "Hey, the Big East sucks," and everyone else just believed him. 
























