He is right about one thing. Our "great" record this year came against very weak competition. Miles got lucky. It probably bought him another year.
He is right about one thing. Our "great" record this year came against very weak competition. Miles got lucky. It probably bought him another year.
All of which have nothing to do with Miles coaching ability, which is average, at best.This team is bigger, longer, stronger, faster, more athletic, deeper, and more skilled than the 4th place Husker team in 2013-14. YOu don't know what the hell you're talking about.
Then in your mind, which part wasn’t he right?He is right about one thing. Our "great" record this year came against very weak competition. Miles got lucky. It probably bought him another year.
All of which have nothing to do with Miles coaching ability, which is average, at best.
I'm disputing the "luck" factor. This team is good, and better than the last NCAA tourney team for the Huskers.
Hell, one could argue the Huskers were "unlucky" because Michigan is the only team in the top 5, the Huskers were able to play at home.
They can't have it both ways. PSU, until yesterday, was considered a tough customer that beat OSU twice and took Purdue to the wire...Michigan is a ranked media darling that we beat by 20 already. If we pull off a W against them again, we are in. Well unless the 2 officials who called technical fouls on two of the premier dunks of the year have influence on the selection committee. Sick
I think you can argue that this team is better than the 2014 team but recognize they haven’t necessarily demonstrated it to the committee. The 2014 team wasn’t a lock to get selected and was 3-3 against top 25 rpi teams that included national headline wins against #3 RPI Wisconsin and at #12 MSU. The 2014 team had a SOS of 30. Current team is in the 90s.
I’m not sure the committee is going to spend a lot of time breaking down film of how we looked against teams outside the RPI top 50
If the committee utilizes top tier wins as a big factor we are in trouble.
Nice breakdown Corn.Sure... However, Nebraska never got the chance to play a team of Wisconsin's caliber at home during the conference season.
And this Michigan State team is in a completely different stratosphere than the Spartan team of 13-14.
My point though is about refuting the idea that Tim Miles suddenly got "lucky" vs. a weakened Big Ten. This current team is better than the last team that earned a bid to the dance.
Benny Palmer wouldn't even sniff this roster unless he wanted to play charades as a walk on at the end of the bench.
David Rivers was a full time starter in 13-14. He would barely play 7 minutes per game on this current roster.
Shavon Shields was an excellent Big Ten player, but he would be the 6th man on this team.
Walter Pitchford would be a reserve long range specialist for 10 to 15 minutes a game.
Leslee Smith would play LESS than Duby Okeke.
Gallegos would be another reserve used in limited minutes.
Peltz wouldn't even sniff the floor.
Petteway would be the only starter right now.
I'm not arguing about resumes or selection criteria. I'm disputing the idea that Nebraska somehow got lucky to win 13 Big Ten games this season.
They can't have it both ways. PSU, until yesterday, was considered a tough customer that beat OSU twice and took Purdue to the wire...Michigan is a ranked media darling that we beat by 20 already. If we pull off a W against them again, we are in. Well unless the 2 officials who called technical fouls on two of the premier dunks of the year have influence on the selection committee. Sick
Sure... However, Nebraska never got the chance to play a team of Wisconsin's caliber at home during the conference season.
And this Michigan State team is in a completely different stratosphere than the Spartan team of 13-14.
.
You've bought the east cost media's propaganda hook line and sinker. Do you think Creighton wants to play NU right now? No way and then just beat Nova. Good heavens give NU and Miles some credit. 22 wins with a number of top 100 recruits and "he's lucky". Bullsh##. We should be so "lucky" every year. .He is right about one thing. Our "great" record this year came against very weak competition. Miles got lucky. It probably bought him another year.
Yeah. We were so lucky, that Nebraska won more conference games than apparently 100 unlucky years of teams.Sure... However, Nebraska never got the chance to play a team of Wisconsin's caliber at home during the conference season.
And this Michigan State team is in a completely different stratosphere than the Spartan team of 13-14.
My point though is about refuting the idea that Tim Miles suddenly got "lucky" vs. a weakened Big Ten. This current team is better than the last team that earned a bid to the dance.
Benny Palmer wouldn't even sniff this roster unless he wanted to play charades as a walk on at the end of the bench.
David Rivers was a full time starter in 13-14. He would barely play 7 minutes per game on this current roster.
Shavon Shields was an excellent Big Ten player, but he would be the 6th man on this team.
Walter Pitchford would be a reserve long range specialist for 10 to 15 minutes a game.
Leslee Smith would play LESS than Duby Okeke.
Gallegos would be another reserve used in limited minutes.
Peltz wouldn't even sniff the floor.
Petteway would be the only starter right now.
I'm not arguing about resumes or selection criteria. I'm disputing the idea that Nebraska somehow got lucky to win 13 Big Ten games this season.
PSU RPI was in the 70s - it was a good win but only lowered our RPI by 2. The Illinois loss raised our RPI by 5. I believe despite going 2-1 in our last 3 games our RPI has gotten worse
The 2014 team had an RPI going into the conf tourney of -I think- 41 and was on the bubble. We are sitting at 58 presently.
While a great accomplishment for our program, keep in mind that we started playing 18 conference games in 2012 after we joined the Big Ten. The Big 12 didn't change from a 16-game conference schedule to 18-game (double round-robin with 10 teams) until the season after we left. In the Big 8, we played just 14 regular season conference games.Yeah. We were so lucky, that Nebraska won more conference games than apparently 100 unlucky years of teams.
The Ville is 4-6 in the last 10, TX 5-5, Baylor 5-5. Nebraska is 8-2.
And when we lost multiple very close games last year it was all because our coach was crappy then too and we weren't unlucky.Yeah. We were so lucky, that Nebraska won more conference games than apparently 100 unlucky years of teams.
RPI is over rated when it comes to end of year evaluations of teams. It WAY over states the importance of those early non-conference games where most teams are just starting to figure out how to play together. I know it's the only across conference numerical tool we have, but it is NOT an accurate predictive tool at year end. Do you think the sharps in Vegas really look at RPI when they bet games in February and March?RPIs of those last 12 (last 4 in, first 4 out, next 4 out)
USC - 27
Lville - 39
Boise St - 45
Cuse - 46
Wash - 51
UCLA - 54
Texas - 55
Utah - 57
Neb -58
Miss St - 62
Baylor - 63
ND - 68
I would think with an RPI of 27 USC is in -- so you have 11 other schools competing for the 3 remaining slots and we are currently sitting 8th - all very, very close and will likely come down to play in the conf tourneys - I think our RPI would have been ~ 53 if we beat Illinois
certainly not out of it
And when we lost multiple very close games last year it was all because our coach was crappy then too and we weren't unlucky.
RPI is over rated when it comes to end of year evaluations of teams. It WAY over states the importance of those early non-conference games where most teams are just starting to figure out how to play together. I know it's the only across conference numerical tool we have, but it is NOT an accurate predictive tool at year end. Do you think the sharps in Vegas really look at RPI when they bet games in February and March?
I wondered that same thing.you have no argument from me - but the index was developed by the NCAA committee and is used to various degrees from year to year Oddly enough we might have been better off having the same record and being the 5 seed which would give us the opportunity for an additional win on the resume because unless we win the tournament we are going to have an additional loss. .
I am pretty sure the “lucky” part comment was in reference to the schedule and the league being down. Which in theory allowed Nebraska to win more games.
The Big Ten is very top heavy in 2017-18. The top 3 teams have lost a combined 8 league games, last year the top 3 lost 16. Last year the bottom 4 teams win 22 league games, this year only 15.
Traditionally good teams like Maryland and Wisconsin are having down years. That hurt perception as well.
The league regular season champ is 16-2. The top 3 teams all finished with a better regular season record than last year’s champ (Purdue 14-4). The 13th place team last year was 6-12, this year the 10th place team is 6-12.
The league was simply more competitive last year. When the teams are more evenly matched the perception is that top to bottom the league is better. Whether or not that is true is up to you.
I don't see it as we were lucky with the league being down. Sure, that probably tacked on some wins....but, I would say we were very unlucky the league was down. I would take this team over most at home. Any regular Big Ten year we would be racking up good wins. The Big 10 being down and us not getting the top three teams @ home very much made us unlucky in how it all played out.
It is one part frustrating and one part amusing to watch the experts try to devise a 100.0% objective formula. So what about a team that has some close but bad early season losses due to star player being out with injury for the first several weeks? Is there a mathematical formula to accommodate that- or our scenario of many new players figuring things out as the season went on and peaking late (inexplicable Illinois loss aside)? Got a be a postulate or theorem to apply to that!?!more good stats -
Top-50 Finishes are Key
Since the 1999-2000 season, just 70 teams with a top-50 RPI come Selection Sunday have missed the NCAA Tournament. That's just nine percent of all teams in that stretch with a top-50 RPI, or an average of 4.4 teams per season missing. It's also heavily influenced by a weird two-year stretch (2006 and 2007) where 16 top-50 teams missed the Big Dance. You may recognize one of them immediately. In 2007, Syracuse had an RPI of 50 and a SOS of 2, yet were famously left out. Outside of that two-year stretch, the average was just 3.4.
The last top-50 RPI ACC team to miss the NCAA Tournament was all the way back in 2006-07, when Florida State's SOS of 94 stopped them from being selected.
Our current RPI rank is 58 with a SOS of 105
I also saw one site give Neb a 65% chance of making the tourney
This team is bigger, longer, stronger, faster, more athletic, deeper, and more skilled than the 4th place Husker team in 2013-14. YOu don't know what the hell you're talking about.
It is one part frustrating and one part amusing to watch the experts try to devise a 100
00% objective formula. So what about a team that has some close but bad early season losses due to star player being out with injury for the first several weeks. Is there a mathematical formula to accommodate that- or our scenario of many new players figuring things out as the season went on and peaking late (inexplicable Illinois loss aside)? Got a be a postulate or theorem to apply to that!?!
The part he did not get right is that he seems so definite we won't make the big dance. Win one game in the B1G tourney and I think we are in.Then in your mind, which part wasn’t he right?
If you watch this team and just think they are lucky to have won the games they won, I don’t know what to tell you. This team hasn’t even tapped all their potential yet.
Miles has been great with lineups, adjustments, and prepping this team this year. It hasn’t been luck, it’s been bad luck that the Big Ten schedules like crap, which put an asterisk on this teams resume.
However you look at it the league is down and top heavy.
Michigan against a tougher schedule had the same record as Nebraska. If Nebraska and Michigan switched schedules, would that still be the case, would they have had the same record?
The schedule didn’t give them the opportunity.Playing one of the top 3 at home and beating them and we wouldn’t be having this conversation.