Road games and blue bloods



  • @ZIG I mentioned it for UNC because I screwed up. It doesn’t change my basic theory that they have 3 real road games, plus the Indiana game.

    @jaybate-1.0 I live for PHOF’s. I figured you’d see beak to beak on this one and award it to me! Greed might be the key word in all of this. I don’t think teams like ours gain much at all by playing cupcakes. The only cupcake I don’t mind is the first game of the tourney when we play a cupcake unless their name begins with B.

    @kjayhawks. I tried to leave those out of the true road games category because they’re ‘forced’ on us by some TV network. For money.

    @REHawk If what you say is true, then depth is a problem with us. Other than the Wiggins year when we lost Joel, were injuries a problem other than the usual bumps and bruises? I mean every team gets those. And last year we were not injured come tourney time @Crimsonorblue22 were we?

    I personally don’t see a problem with guys playing 34-35 minutes a game. They’re young, energetic, elite athletes. I watched with pride my freshman in HS daughter play a full varsity soccer match 80 minutes, no TO’s, no subbing, then stay on the field for 60 more minutes in the JV match. 140 minutes in one night! Wilt famously played one NBA season for all but five minutes of one game. Never fouled out, never was subbed in for. If an elite athlete can’t handle two 40 minute games in one week for 4-5 months out of the year then, well, they’re not elite.



  • And speaking of Wilt, since this isn’t worth a new topic. Some NHL player scored 4 goals in his debut the other night. The sports talk guy I was listening to compared his performance with other amazing first game performances.

    Wilt’s topped the cake. 43 points and 28 rebounds! First game as a pro. The man was a freak!



  • @wissoxfan83 Selden was always injured. Mason was gimpy two years ago. Greene had knee surgery a couple of years ago too. Embiid was a BIG loss 3 years ago. KU generally has good health, but sometimes we fans don’t know the extent of the injuries until after the season if ever.

    But overall KU basketball has had very good luck in the health department.



  • @dylans a definite credit to Hudy.



  • @wissoxfan83 we did lose to the winner. Seeding stunk last year. Wayne had knee surgery after season, Perry had hernia surgery. Perry played on a very serious knee injury suffered during the wv game at home the year before. Got hit in the face during the wsu game. But, you are right, everyone gets worn down. We also played in the wug games the summer before. Remember the KU basketball program has to pull a lot of weight💰 For the athletic department. I wouldn’t call it greed. I don’t think playing all minutes of a game 2x a week has anything to do w/being an elite basketball player. I doubt if your daughter is putting her body thru anything similar to what a d1 bb player does, do you? Think Frank, for instance.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 Seeding stunk or we lost to a hot team because you can’t have both. I was glad when I saw Villanova on the bracket. They usually suck in the tourney. I thought we’d had a pretty easy path to the FF.



  • @wissoxfan83 IMO they should have been top 2 seed. Doesn’t matter now.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 had they not crapped the bed against Seton Hall in the big east tournament they would have been a one seed. Yet Nova fans think their team was on another level the entire year. I watched that game - they let Hall’s best player beat them. They definitely just got hot in the tourney.



  • @wissoxfan83

    “Are we scheduling so we are best prepared for March?”

    That gets tricky. When we schedule games we don’t know how good our opponent will be. Teams are always one injury away from near collapse.

    And we tend to look at March results through a very narrow vision… only based on winning it all.

    We have a solid chance in March this year. If we win it all, who will question Self’s March record then? Don’t we already have the longest March tourney streak for getting in?

    I’m not defending our losses. We should never lose! But realistically… look at our program today, compare it to 5 years ago. Are we making gains in our program as a whole? I don’t think we were in that very top elite program status, perhaps even 5 years ago. Yes, Kansas has always been elite… but at the very top of the basketball world?

    I think a lot is happening in the next 5 years. That is when we will finally get a true reading on conference strengths. I don’t feel like these supernova super conferences are going to look good. How can they. They are an abortion of structure. They have been pimped out only to attempt to make more money. Beyond that… they stink and their entire conference season play doesn’t mean diddly! They are playing for nothing. They prove nothing in their entire year of conference play. Scheduling is the only thing that counts in those conferences.

    I read a comment on the KUSports site this morning. Someone barking about Kansas needing to jump quickly to the Big 10. No way! That move would only happen if they change the Big 10 to a super conference of 16 teams. F that! The Kansas basketball program would melt into the wallpaper within a few years.

    We need to nurture what we have in our conference. A conference that determines a REAL conference champion! And I don’t want to hear anyone say that our conference streak doesn’t mean anything. It is our conference streak that has given us an advantage on all other elite programs in the country! It is our conference streak combined with everything else that has put us on that very top shelf of elite teams.

    Kansas has everything to lose by becoming desperate and reaching for straws. We need to look in a mirror and appreciate who we are and where we are!



  • @Crimsonorblue22 They surprised me for sure. And what they did to Oklahoma? Wow. That was the biggest beatdown in the final four since we smacked UNC in 08 and Marquette in 03.



  • @wissoxfan83 interesting it was only about a 13 or 14 point game 13 minutes to go in the second half. I think ou just gave up or something.



  • @wissoxfan83

    KU is positioning itself to improve its RPI so it can have a better seeding… Better seeding = playing lower ranked teams…at least in theory. Having a better seed does not mean you are going to do well or poorly in the tournament, it simply means that you will be playing lower seeds early which roughly translates to weaker teams. Sometimes, the NCAA grossly under-seeds teams and a high seed ends up playing a stronger team than it should, such as #2 KU playing a grossly under-seeded #7 Wichita which should really have been no lower than #4 seed. S#&t happens



  • The tournament is all bout matchups and luck. You have to have favorable matchups which are not necessarily reflected in the seeding. #10 Stanford was a bad match up for #2 KU, particularly since Embiid was out. You also have to have a lot of luck and the right combination wins. Based on how good the teams were, KU had no business winning it all in '88 any more than UConn did a couple of years ago or many other teams over the years. KU and UConn had the perfect storm of good matchups and a lot of luck and won the tournament. in '08, KU had a great team but needed Mario’s miracle to win the game the same way that Villanova needed a highly unlikely. desperation shot at the end of the game to win the tournament in '16.



  • The point of the thread (imo) is…how can we do better in the tournament? We all know we will playing in the toughest bracket, so we have to come loaded for bear. I also think as great as a shooting team as we were last year, one poor shooting game can derail a great season, like the Nova game. So, I like JB’s idea of playing some hi-lo to get close shots in those high pressure games where every possession is a grind. I also like the fact our team will be taller and more athletic, which should lead to more runouts, and a whole bunch more rebounds. Was the Nova loss a statement of our team’s poise which could be solved by more road games? I don’t believe that. You don’t win 17 in a row by not showing great poise. But, I think the team’s limitations from last year showed up, and bit us at the wrong time. We were simply too reliant on jump shots to score, and although LL helped immensely on the boards, we weren’t dominant down low. We didn’t have a game changing bench guy that could come in and spark the offense ( except for occasional Svi and Jamari sightings). We didn’t have the size we could bring in to spell our bigs, which is why we were playing a 6’6 guy at the post at times last year. We’re much deeper than last year in every way, and the upgrade from BG to LV is going to be huge, imo. We’re on the right track to be playing for the title this year.



  • @KUSTEVE mirrors my thinking



  • Michigan state

    Gavin Schilling has suffered a right knee injury which will require surgery. A timetable for his return is yet to be determined.



  • @JayHawkFanToo

    Clearly scheduling cannot be entirely about RPI, or an elite team would likely schedule 6 elite opponents home AND away so as to assure its opponents generate RPI’s also.

    Nor can it be entirely about the gate at home or one would schedule ALL home games.

    Apparently there are tradeoffs between quality of opponent, margin of victory, and where the margin is biggest (road, home, and neutral) that encourage playing tough opponents on neutral sites, where cash splits can be 50/50?

    Clearly risk of loss rises with quality of opponent, and you’d rather lose on the road than at home to keep the fans reinforced for coming to AFH.

    It’s a fascinating system that seems to generate inflated RPIs for those that aptly game the system, as the elites seem to do.



  • @KUSTEVE said:

    We all know we will playing in the toughest bracket

    Here’s the difference between me and many posters. I try not to, although I do fall into this thinking sometimes, but I try not to play the NCAA’s against us card. I don’t buy the tournament engineering theory too much. Maybe I’m naive. But you’re right the point is how can we do better in the tourney. For that, I still maintain we go on the road a couple more times, preferably here to Baton Rouge!



  • Don’t forget we go to places based on recruiting hot beds too!



  • @Crimsonorblue22 Yes, like Baton Rouge. Come on coach, come to Baton Rouge to the so called deaf dome! Javonte Smart, stud junior here in town. Come to Baton Rouge!!



  • @wissoxfan83 said:

    Here’s the difference between me and many posters. I try not to, although I do fall into this thinking sometimes, but I try not to play the NCAA’s against us card. I don’t buy the tournament engineering theory too much.

    I know you don’t. You also don’t believe in Josh Jackson, or that we’ll be as good as last year. There’s a lot of things you don’t believe in.



  • @wissoxfan83 I didn’t before they paired us with WSU in 2014, which was BS we shouldn’t have got a 2 seed with Cliff not playing, Perry and Seldon hurt. They had no reason to be less than a 4 seed let alone a 7. I also didn’t like the UNI pairing they lost 2 games all year and was ranked 20th I believe but had a 9 seed. But yet Gonzaga gets a one seed in 2013 with worse RPI and SOS then the before mentioned teams. They do match ups that think will get viewers after the first weekend like UK and Indiana last year and the 3 times we have played UNC.



  • I’ve been disappointed with too many of our OADs. So I just need Josh to make me a believer. Last years team was very good. Losing Perry, Wayne, & BG (that was a joke) is a lot of points and toughness to replace. So I am just a wee bit less optimistic. I am still optimistic!



  • @wissoxfan83 I would agree for the most part that the OAD hasn’t been all that positive for us when you at how far we went in the NCAAs and how good they actually were. Henry has decent as a player but we lost in the second round not all on him of coarse tho, Selby was ok but was suspended by the NCAA and had a stress fracture that wouldn’t go away so hard to judge him, but we did make the elite 8 which is as good as we have done with a OAD (he barely was drafted and is a ghost now should’ve stayed). Wigs and Joel team had a high ceiling but Joel was hurt and Wigs was inconsistent this team also lost in the second round. Next you have Cliff and KO which I liked both of there potential but we got beat again in the second round, I actually was shocked KO went in the first round think he could grow to a solid player but should have stayed. Last year we really didn’t have a OAD that mattered with Diallo hardly playing but he we did make the elite 8. Its obvious Bill Selfs best teams have been upper class heavy with 08 and 12 honorable mention 04,07, 11 (OAD) and 16 (technically OAD).



  • @KUSTEVE Oh I’m a Doubting Thomas type believer. Show me the nail holes in the hand and I’ll believe. I’m a fanatic, but not a blind fanatic. So if Josh Jackson is what most people think he’ll be, then sure, I’ll believe. You really can’t begrudge me because I want to see results first, can you?

    Last year was a very special team which got KO’d by the national champs. We were top ranked half of the season, were the most talked about team all season. It’s kind of tough to top last season right now, unless of course we play on the final weekend, are highly ranked all year, etc. This time you’ve put words in my mouth, because I’ll send you a Cajun food gift pack if you can find where I wrote I don’t believe we’ll be as good as last year. We can be mind you, but let’s see how it plays out.



  • @jaybate-1.0 well obviously it isn’t completely about RPI.

    It is about getting the best RPI, while making the most money, while getting young players experience, while playing games midseason that allow for recruiting coastal cities, and playing teams that allow you to rest some players for the conference grind.

    Scheduling is an art.



  • As far as the bracket goes: you have to beat the 6 teams in front of you. If you are the best you can win all games inspite of venue, refs, and opponent. Villinova didn’t exactly have a cake walk either.

    Tough brackets can become easy brackets when Duke loses to Lehigh. Or the rare case of MSU bowing out early. It stinks when you have to play an under seeded team while being overseeded yourself. However, if you are truly the best you will over come these obstacles and more as if pre-ordained. You can even come back from a seemly insurmountable deficit in the final 2 minutes (helps to have 4 awesome guards) with a little Miracle.



  • @Kcmatt7 perfect! Not always an exact science since scheduling has to be done a year out, but our guy is pretty good at it.



  • @jaybate-1.0

    I agree. If you read my post you will see that scheduling is a combination of Money and setting up to increase the RPI. Mobney drives the train and big programs need big money. Big name programs do not want to play on the road because, much like KU, they prefer to do it at home where ist is safer and considerably more profitable. The game with ave with e bigger progr5ams are a trade off alternating home and away, and also, the head to head with other Leagues (used to be the PAC 10 and now the SEC for the Big 12) allows, or maybe forces, bigger programs to play each other. Neutral court games, have a payout but it is probably half of what a home gate brings; exposure is the main benefit. Even games in KC athe Sprint Center are not nearly as profitable as home games but it is something KU does regularly for the large KU fan base in the KC area.

    Again, Coach Self explained in detail (GIYF) how a good scheduler projects which teams are due to have good seasons, and by extension RPIs, well ahead of time and schedules accordingly while trying to keep as many games as possible at home (within limits) and scheduling games that will enhance KU’s overall RPI. Coach Self indicated that KU’s scheduler is the best in the business, since KU regularly ends up at or neat the top in SOS and with a great record to boot. Makes sense?



  • @JayHawkFanToo

    Not only makes sense, but it makes one wonder If big shoe, big gaming, and big TV won’t eventually take over regular-season scheduling, same as postseason , so they can achieve the same engineering effects they apparently do in postseason. Seems like kind of a no-brainer waiting for the right time and conditions to happen.



  • @wissoxfan83

    You cannot prepare for the Tournament other than becoming a better overall team. At the tournament you don’t know how the team will be seeded, where you will play and more importantly, who you will play.

    Like I said before, the tournament is all bout matchups and luck. There a lots of times when a high seed matches up better with a another high seed than it does with a lower seed… A good example is Stanford, a much lower seed, which under normal conditions KU wins by double digits, but with Embiid out and all the bigs they had available presented a doomsday scenario for KU who had no inside answer,



  • @jaybate-1.0

    One would hope it never get to that point, but given the state of our society where what used to wrong is right and what used to be right is wrong…you never know.



  • @JayHawkFanToo

    Self is savvy. He likely sees what most see in tournament engineering; this I believe is why he gears the team above all to win conference, where the engineering is either neutral or in his favor, plus a title and a good RPI serve seeding criteria. Were there less apparent tournament engineering and less apparent recruiting engineering on top PGs and top Bigs, then he likely would have schemed his team’s development curves since 2008 for the tournament more.

    I also think he started with a statistical philosophy of the tournament that even in an unengineered tourney the structure and size of the tournament made going to the trouble of developing a team that plays it any way they want make sense to Self. Is who he was. What he cannot anticipate, he prefers to hedge on . Gambling is a tactic for self. Hedging is a strategy

    Self appeared naively to expect (as many of us did) that winning a ring would enable him to start getting a fair share of the OAD and 5 star talent at 1 and 5. It didn’t. The apparently deep asymmetries of tournament and recruiting engineering appeared to spike sharply and blatantly. So he apparently started to fall back even farther into peaking for conference and building teams that were so neutrally balanced they could play the teams apparently seeded to exploit his worst match ups. Increasingly Self’s players rarely had their peak performances in the March Carney, which is a dead giveaway of how Self was approaching the tourney. Other elite teams had their OADs and 5 stars giving some of their peak performances in the tourney. Over this many years it seems not a coincidence.


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