NCAA Tourney Exposes The Big 12
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@tundrahok And people may forget that we played OU pretty close that season, both home and away.
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I was expecting Baylor to win and have a decent March run. I know Drew isn’t a great coach… but they had too much talent to sit out March early.
And I’m hoping, somehow… WVU hangs out and gets a match up with Kentucky. The game could either be an easy blow out for UK or a loss. UK hasn’t faced that kind of gritty full court pressure ever. Not sure the twins have the balls needed to maintain to victory. Those guys hit a few tough shots and all… but they still collapse and play soft at times. I would love to see Huggy hang one on Cal and blow his “striving for perfection” concept.
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March Madness… the whole thing… is the ultimate road game series. Teams need to play well on the road to win. They can have a big crowd show up and all, but unless it is in their home venue, it’s a road game.
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@drgnslayr Did you watch the end of that game? I swear Scott Drew must have got his guys in the huddle and told them, “Hey look fellas, I got a big chunk of change riding against us on this thing, so let’s just throw this one, okay? Promise I’ll get you ice cream and pizza on the way home. And don’t worry. Nobody will think less of you as players. After all, I’m you’re coach. It’ll be no surprise!”
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@wissoxfan83
You have not factored that the other Conferences have a lot more members so they will naturally have more wins, right?
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KU might not have a superstar like Danny but the supporting cast, when hitting on all cylinders, is better.
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@JayHawkFanToo Most of those years the other conferences haven’t had a lot more members. For a decade or so our conference had 12 which was more than the big 10, Pac 10, and I think more than the ACC? SEC too was a 12 member league.
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@wissoxfan83 @JayHawkFanToo Big East is the only one that’s had more members until the most recent realignment. But, it’s not just how many members are in the conference, but how many bids there are, and how the teams do. As noted above, last year we had the most bids, nothing withstanding fewer teams in the conference. But, 5 other conferences had as many or more wins and 6 had a better W-L %. 2 years ago, 7 conferences had more wins in the tournament, even though only two conferences received more bids. We are simply falling short. The question is why?
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@DCHawker Not only KU but B12 have been falling short for years-and I am. Tired of our poor performance!,
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@wissoxfan83
I don’t believe the SEC had less than 10 members in your time frame and now has 14, The ACC did not have less than 8 and now has 15, the Big 10 did not have less than 10 and now has 14. The PAC 12 did not have less than 10 and now it has 12. Before 1997 the Big 12 was the Big 8 and had only 8 members and since 2012 it has only 10 members…so yes, most of the time the other conferences have had more teams than the Big 8/Big 12. Not really that important anyway.
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@HighEliteMajor it is THE standard of excellence in the eyes of the college basketball world. And yes, I think it is a fair judge of excellence.
Welcome aboard–I’ve been posting that same sentiment for about 5 years. Only two Big12 Final Four appearances in the last ten years. And only by Kansas. Doesn’t come close to the record of the other major conferences. That’s why I don’t take much satisfaction from winning our conference every year.
Hopefully, posters here will refrain from gloating over our conference coaches ‘failures’ unless they’re willing to hold our coach to the same standard.
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My favorite Danny Manning and ISU story.
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@wissoxfan83
I see three ways to interpret the post 1979 data.
Interpretation 1: Most of the Big 12 schools are from low population states (except the Texas schools) and they have to depend heavily on out of state recruiting and most of them lack a basketball legacy rich enough to attract as high of quality of players in as great of numbers as the schools in the conferences closer to the hot beds of recruiting. So: the Big 12 isn’t as good overall and doesn’t win as much in the Madness.
Interpretation 2: There is a significant seeding and officiating bias growing out of the need for the NCAA to make money off its tournament by ensuring lots of EST time zone teams and large population center teams survive and advance; this makes it harder for the Big 12 teams to win as much as the other conferences that generate more eyeballs.
Interpretation 3: Both.
Since Barry Hinson was just interviewed by Kevin Haskins in a story on CJOnline.com and said tournament seeding decisions are heavily driven by considerations of what makes the most money for the NCAA, I am going to go out on a limb here and say the correct interpretation has to be either Interpretation 2, or Interpretation 3.
But how can we decide between Interpretation 2 and 3?
I guess the best way would be to compare the conferences pre-conference winning percentages indexed for strength of opponents.
I am going to need some help with this.
What I recall is that the Big 12 supposedly faired well in the pre conference season this year and that is a big reason why the Big 12 has been so highly regarded this season and why it got so many teams into the Madness.
What I also recall is that this year’s phenomenon is not unusual. The Big 12 teams often achieve a pre conference record against good competition that gets the Big 12 rated pretty well and gets quite a few teams in.
If I were to be correct in these recollections that the Big 12 fares well (not better than all of them, just some) over the years in pre-conference performance relative the the performances the conferences that exceed it in the Madness, well, then I guess it would be Interpretation 2 that would have to be defaulted to.
And if that were the case, then I reckon it would fair and appropriate to start indexing total number of rings, Finalists, and Final Four teams for the inherent bias in the seeding and officiating of the tournament.
For example, KU has 2 rings since 1979 before indexing but after indexing for seeding and officiating bias, KU should probably have an adjusted tally of say, 3, or 4 during the same period, where as, say, Kentucky, UNC, or Duke, should each have 1, or 2 subtracted for their adjusted totals.
Are you with me on this, Brother Wiss?
Do I hear an amen, from Jayhawk nation?
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Amen and good night. Get some rest before the big game in the morning JB!
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Will do. Rock Chalk!
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@drgnslayr Okay I’m settled down - so I’ll ask. Do you think B12 teams are just too worn out & beat up from its long hard battle of a season to perform well in the NCAA tourney? I knew Baylor wouldn’t go far thanks to its coach, but geez ISU? This makes KU look bad!! Guess KU will have to send its opponents home including UK with Bad Ball!! KU will have to go get respect for the rest of B12!
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I will defer my comment until tomorrow. RCJH!
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@HawksWin said:
Do you think B12 teams are just too worn out & beat up from its long hard battle of a season to perform well in the NCAA tourney?
No. The Big12 just isn’t that good.
Omg–I’m going to try to be nice here, but…are you really serious with that? Do you really think no other conference has a tough conference race? Puh-leeze!!! I guess to extrapolate the point, you could say that the Big12’s poor showing the NCAA is proof of how good our conference actually is. You don’t really wanna go there with that, do you?
Bottom line–the Big12 just isn’t that good. Period.
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I like to stay away from bias theories generally, except for east coast bias, so what you wrote makes sense. Raise another banner for KU, we deserve it!
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@drgnslayr re: Having a Chip. See these quotes?
“Wayne is always talking about, ‘We can’t be like last year. We have to take every game one game at a time and not take anything for granted,’’’ Oubre said of sophomore Wayne Selden Jr., who has mentored Oubre this season.
“I feel they (returning Jayhawk players) have a chip on their shoulder from last year. I’m just here trying to help my teammates and our team have the best chance to win,” Oubre added.
Selden concedes it has been important for him to learn lessons from the early exit his freshman campaign.
“I felt like last year went by way too fast, and just like that we were done,” Selden said. “This year (I’m) trying to take a different approach and focusing in on the little details.”
“I’ve got to make sure everybody’s mind is right. We’ve got to be turned up this game,” Traylor said. “It’s an early game. I feel everybody has to be a lot more into it and focused. I’ve been talking to the guys. We’ll be ready for it.”
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What if all four B12 teams win today, does that suddenly mean we have a tough conference?
Yesterday was disappointing but I’m going to reserve judgement for at least another 24 hours.
If we put 2 or 3 teams in the sweet 16 or 1 or 2 in the F4 then the B12 can still save some face.
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@KUinLA I am puzzled by this comment…which has been made by a lot of people. Baylor would beat G. State and ISU would beat UAB 7 or 8 out of 10 times… The primary reason they lost is the reason most teams lose in the tournament…the pressure brought on by the hype and the one and done nature. The higher seed feels the pressure…the lower seed plays free and easy with nothing to lose. The tournament is a different animal when compared to the regular season. I don’t think those loses say anything about which the better team is…and hence I don’t think those loses say much about the strength of the respective conferences. Can you comment?
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I completely disagree with your comment, Top to Bottom the Big 12 Conference is the best. Now, we might not have top 5 or even top 10 team but 7 conference teams are ranked in the top 30 in all rankings. Some conferences such as the ACC are top heavy with 3 or 4 good team but there is a big drop after that, The SEC is even worse with one superior team, UK, and then a drastic drop after that. Having 70% of its teams make the Tournament proves that top to bottom the Big 12 is the best.
So yes, the Big 12 is very good but it just does not have an elite team,
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“re: Having a Chip. See these quotes?”
This is the kind of stuff I look for in a team!
I hope they match their words throughout March!
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I agree that it is hard for the B12 teams to play the injury card. If our conference is so rough… what would that say about the Big 10? Those guys play total mug ball.
I think our conference is very good, just not a great conference taking their show on the road. I don’t know why this is. It is just my opinion.
I think had Kentucky been in the B12 this season, there is no way in heck they would still be undefeated.
Or maybe I am thinking about this all wrong. Maybe our conference really isn’t very good, but just plays exceptional at home.
There has to be an explanation why Kansas is the only B12 team playing reasonable ball in March.
There is time left for this to change in this tourney. KU won today, and the last time I looked WVU was winning. Maybe we will carry 4 teams forward after today. Maybe.
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@Hawk8086 & @JayHawkFanToo & @drgnslayr I’m basing my opinion on the Big 12 on tournament performance, and year in and year out, they just don’t do it, whether they’re the higher seed or not. This year, just like most, they seem to have the highest % of teams that don’t advance in their first game.
Look at the other power conferences results–they had 4, 5 or 6 teams advance, except the SEC with only 2. Even the lowly Pac12 has five teams playing a second game. Only three of the seven Big 12 teams advance, after hearing all year about how strong the conference is.
They’re definitely better this year, and I was really surprised to see Baylor & Iowa St get upset. I had them going to the 16 round, along with Oklahoma and maybe Kansas. I do find it interesting that the Big 12 coaches that did advance seem to be the ones with the most tournament experience.
And I also base my opinion on Big 12 Final Four appearances in the last ten years. Only two, both by Kansas. That lags way behind the other conferences. It’s hard to argue against that.
And I think the simple fact that one team can dominate a conference for so long is evidence that the overall conference can’t be that good. Kansas isn’t that much better than the rest of the conference. They’re not like UCLA in their heyday, when they dominated the whole country. They’re closer to Gonzaga, who simply dominates their conference.
I’ve posted for several years that the Big 12 isn’t a strong enough conference and playing in it doesn’t do enough to prepare Kansas for the big tournament. I think maybe Bill recognized this also and decided to toughen up his schedule lately.
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@KUinLA You make some good points. The longer term results are better indicators than the upsets in any one individual year. The Big 12 appears o be strong year in and year out…a deep conference with good teams…but without any elite teams…other than, for the most part, KU. I take exception when the announcers, pundits, etc. say that, as a result of the 1st round upsets this year, it proves the Big 12 is not strong.