ByronHoustonsSweatyPalms
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They will need to learn how to win on the road.
It's the home losses that worry me.
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They will need to learn how to win on the road.
Eight wins in the Big XII with a solid non-conference is going to get you in.
Eight wins in the Big XII with a solid non-conference is going to get you in.
The Selection committee left out a 21 win Syracuse team who went 10-6 in the Big East for smaller schools back in 2006-07.
Syracuse is a larger catalyst $ wise for attendance and TV viewers than Marcus Smart...not even close.
That team didn't have a Marcus Smart though. And that's he point he's making.
I'm sorry... I see this notion pop up every year and it's patently ridiculous.
How does having Marcus Smart (or any single player) do anything for the NCAA (or CBS)?
The media rights for the NCAA tournament have been locked up for quite some time. They sign multi-year deals with CBS, who pays for the media rights. CBS then sells ads to pay for the media rights. Those are also typically done far in advance, well before Selection Sunday, and often through multi-year deals.
Neither the NCAA nor CBS gets any kind of extra "bump" if a random player from a random team makes 1 or 2 games out of 63 moderately "more interesting" to the general public.
There would be no way to quantify it, anyway. There is always noise in the ratings from year-to-year, depending on what else is going on, what teams are in, how CBS distributes the games across their network of broadcast and cable channels, etc.
So the idea that the Selection Committee actually is sitting there saying something like...
"...well... you know team A doesn't really deserve to get in, but damn it, they've got [Player A] who might raise the rating of two games from a 2.1 to a 2.2 among white males, ages 24-25... we've just GOTTA put them in!"
... is some tin-foil-hat level thinking there.
On topic, I think OSU has about a 50-55% chance of making the Tournament right now. I think that falls to like 25% if we lose in Lubbock on Saturday.
Yes. Even if they are a bubble team their star power will get them in.
I'd love to hear about some actual examples of when this happened.
Why? I didn't see any proof in your mumbo jumbo about multi-year deals, media rights and ratings that didn't mean a thing when it comes to what happens with the selection committee behind closed doors.
If you can prove that a star player is not part of the conversation on occasion, produce the evidence. Until then, you're entitled to your opinion, while SoonerinNC and myself will continue to see it differently.
I'd love to hear about some actual examples of when this happened.
Why? I didn't see any proof in your mumbo jumbo about multi-year deals, media rights and ratings that didn't mean a thing when it comes to what happens with the selection committee behind closed doors.
If you can prove that a star player is not part of the conversation on occasion, produce the evidence. Until then, you're entitled to your opinion, while SoonerinNC and myself will continue to see it differently.
Do you even logic, bro?
I'm at least backing up my opinion with logic and a reasonable explanation.
You're just basically saying, "They give preferential treatment to bubble teams with a star player.... I have no examples of this happening and I can't tell you how the NCAA or CBS benefits, but I know that they do it!"
I'm sorry if you can't follow my "mumbo jumbo" that clearly supports my argument.
Let me make it very simple:
Argument: The selection committee has no reason to let a bubble team into the tournament just because they have a "star player."
Premise: Neither the NCAA nor its broadcast partners see any incremental benefit by allowing a given team with a "star player" into the tournament over a more deserving team without a "star player."
Support: Media rights and advertising deals are completed well in advance of the Selection Committee meetings in any given year.
It does not take a rocket scientist to know that if Duke and Tulsa have the same records and beat similar competition that Duke would get the benifit of the comparrison because it is Duke and has a history. Can I pull out examples to show this know, but I can say its human nature to pick the school you are more familiar with, and most people would say would make a better story/matchup then Tulsa for the first round game. Tulsa would only become a story if they made it to the sweet sixteen in this sceniro.
It does not take a rocket scientist to know that if Duke and Tulsa have the same records and beat similar competition that Duke would get the benifit of the comparrison because it is Duke and has a history. Can I pull out examples to show this know, but I can say its human nature to pick the school you are more familiar with, and most people would say would make a better story/matchup then Tulsa for the first round game. Tulsa would only become a story if they made it to the sweet sixteen in this sceniro.