I am getting in a fight with that T3 bracketology guy
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That's a lot of basketball in a row. Would someone explain these implications to my wife?The scheduling plays out well for pulling for this:
First we have to win at 1.
Then Kansas needs to win at 3 at houston.
Then Tech needs to beat Baylor at 5 to give us the 1 seed.
link so i can follow?I am getting in a fight with that T3 bracketology guy
link so i can follow?![]()
I know it always depends on other games but if UNC wins this weekend @Duke how far would Duke have to go in the conference tournament to get back into 2 seed consideration?Had some time this afternoon to put out an updated bracket after last night's games. Usually, I wait for Thursday games but it's mostly Pac-12 tonight so shouldn't affect things too much.
View attachment 125117
Related to some of the chatter in here about NCSOS, I've built a simple little regression model to help me in seeding teams when I build my bracket. So I've looked at one-to-one simple correlation for metrics on the committee teamsheets to what the final seed list was for the 2022 and 2023 tournaments. NCSOS typically doesn't correlate to a team's spot on the seed list. Not saying that couldn't change this year with new committee members, but in the past, I think it has factored in more for deciding who those final at-large spots are moreso than it does for seeding teams safely in the field.
- I moved ISU up to #7, Baylor up to #8, and Kansas up to #9 over Marquette. Maybe I'm overreacting and perhaps the committee will place less weight on last two Marquette losses without Kolek, but their computer metrics have dipped a bit. 17th in KPI, 9th in SOR. 14th in both BPI and Kenpom.
- ISU rooting interests for the weekend should be Texas Tech to beat Baylor, Villanova to beat Creighton, Xavier to beat Marquette, and then whomever wins Duke/UNC, we want the other one (or someone else entirely) to win the ACC Tourney. If Duke beats UNC and wins ACC Tourney, I could see them passing us. If UNC wins both, no chance of us catching them (I'm not sure there is anyway to be honest). If we had to pick one to win both, it's UNC.
- I won't tell anyone how to root in KU vs. Houston as far as weighing seeding vs. conference title share. That's a "to each their own" situation.
- Texas, Oklahoma, Texas Tech, and TCU are all hovering around that 7-8-9-10 seed line. Might create for some complicated bracketing if Big 12 has one 1-seed in Houston and two 2-seeds.
- Sunday could very well decide if state of Iowa gets 3 teams into the field or just 1 with MVC final and Iowa hosting Illinois. I don't know how Big 10 tournament bracket is looking as far as opening round matchups, but if I'm Iowa, I'd want a challenging first game (think Michigan State, Nebraska, Northwestern). Chance to get a good win or no chance for a bad loss.
View attachment 125119
As of today, the matrix has us as the last 2. Just for fun looking at what our matchups would be based off what they have, we would play the first 15 seed Oakland. Committee probably doesn't do it this way, but the first 7 seed is Florida and the last 10 is Villanova. The 7's are Florida, St Marys, Texas Tech, and Gonzaga while the 6's are South Carolina, Wisconsin, Utah State and Dayton. I think I'd actually prefer the 6's over the 7's.
Teams are bracketed according to the s-curve. #1 overall seed gets the worst 2 seed (#8 overall), best 3 (#9 overall) and worst 4 (#16 overall) in their region, continue through the 64 teams. The only deviations from the curve are to avoid geographic advantage for a lower seeded team (i.e. Nebraska in Omaha), and avoid conference rematches. That all stops at some point, don't remember where. Except for committee desired matchup conspiracies, those never stop.The 7 seed would be placed at their closest locations.
In this scenario, Iowa State would be in Omaha, Arizona in Salt Lake, UNC in Charlotte and Marquette in Indy.
Florida would go to Charlotte with UNC.
St. Mary's would go to SLC with Arizona.
Texas Tech would go to Omaha actually (its allowed if we only play them once).
Gonzaga would go to Indy.
10 seeds would be similar.
Nebraska would go to Omaha
Michigan State to Indy
Florida Atlantic to Charlotte (FAU vs Florida would be fun)
Villanova to SLC.
If Baylor jumped Iowa State, the 3 seeds would be Iowa State and Kansas in Omaha, Duke in Charlotte and Creighton in Pitt I think.
6 seeds would be.
South Carolina to Charlotte
Wisconsin to Omaha
Utah State to Omaha
Dayton to Pittsburgh

I know it always depends on other games but if UNC wins this weekend @Duke how far would Duke have to go in the conference tournament to get back into 2 seed consideration?
Teams are bracketed according to the s-curve. #1 overall seed gets the worst 2 seed (#8 overall), best 3 (#9 overall) and worst 4 (#16 overall) in their region, continue through the 64 teams. The only deviations from the curve are to avoid geographic advantage for a lower seeded team (i.e. Nebraska in Omaha), conference rematches, and that all stops at some point, don't remember where. Except for committee desired matchups conspiracies, those never stop.
When teams are placed into opening round sites the 1 seeds go to their closest site, then the 2s, then the 3s, then the 4s. The matchups have already been set prior to assigning opening round sites (again outside fixing geographic advantage for lower seeded teams to a point)
looks right to meView attachment 125167
Does this look right?
Brooklyn = (2) Connecticut, (13) Alabama
Charlotte = (4) Tennessee, (6) North Carolina
Indianapolis = (1) Purdue, (7) Marquette
Memphis = (3) Houston, (9) Baylor
Omaha = (8) Iowa State, (10) Kansas
Pittsburgh = (11) Duke, (12) Creighton
Salt Lake City = (5) Arizona, (14) Illinois
Spokane = (15) Kentucky, (16) Auburn
You start from the top, assign each team to its closest site, cap the sites at two each, and eventually Kentucky and Auburn get dumped in Spokane because nobody else was anywhere near that?
Teams are bracketed according to the s-curve. #1 overall seed gets the worst 2 seed (#8 overall), best 3 (#9 overall) and worst 4 (#16 overall) in their region, continue through the 64 teams. The only deviations from the curve are to avoid geographic advantage for a lower seeded team (i.e. Nebraska in Omaha), and avoid conference rematches. That all stops at some point, don't remember where. Except for committee desired matchup conspiracies, those never stop.
When teams are placed into opening round sites the 1 seeds go to their closest site, then the 2s, then the 3s, then the 4s. The matchups have already been set prior to assigning opening round sites (again outside fixing geographic advantage for lower seeded teams to a point)