Spaceman Spiff wrote: ↑Wed Feb 09, 2022 11:01 am
Agreed on high floor. I sort of disagree in that I think if you're top ten, elite is a fair characterization.
Kinda splitting hairs here about word usage but to me instead of using super duper elite for top 3 teams, I just use elite. Rest of the top 10-12 are great, and so on. But going even further it's not necessarily top 3 to be elite imo, it's more fluid year to year and sometimes it's top 5 sometimes it's just 1 team - for example the gulf in between this year's kenpom's top tier offense/defense...
Offense
N°1: Purdue -- 126.7
N°2: Gonzaga -- 123.8
N°3: Kansas -- 120.4
N°4: Kentucky -- 118.5
N°5: Ohio St -- 118.1
Here there's a clear #1 team, with Gonzaga being distant but closer than the rest of the pack, from Kentucky and below for a dozen sports where the only difference is a decimals or a point or two. With Kansas sitting in between, here I consider Purdue and Gonzaga elite, Kansas is close.
Defense
N°1: San Diego St -- 85.0
N°2: Texas Tech -- 85.1
N°3: LSU -- 85.5
N°4: VCU -- 86.9
N°5: Tennessee -- 88.2
N°5: Arizona -- 88.2
N°6 Boie St -- 88.3
Here there isn't as a biggest of a gap as offense but here I consider the top 3 to be in elite territory with Vcu being close to it. Once you get past 5 and lower the difference is decimal points or a point or two.
Spaceman Spiff wrote: ↑Wed Feb 09, 2022 11:01 am
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.ncaa.c ... cent%3famp
The point that stands out to me:
"The last nine men's basketball national champions had an average AP poll ranking of 6.7 on Jan. 1, compared to an average kenpom.com ranking of 7.0."
This is with the bias of UConn and Nova dragging the averages down:
"The only two champions among the last nine that had a difference greater than two spots were UConn in 2014, which was ranked No. 17 in the AP poll on Jan. 1 but No. 40 on kenpom.com, and Villanova two years later, when it was No. 16 in the AP poll but No. 2 on kenpom.com."
The article lists the offensive and defensive breakdowns later, the trend I'd derive is 7 of 9 title teams were top 10 in AdjO, 6 of 9 were top 10 in AdjD. Expand to top 20 and you have 7 of 9 teams in both categories.
So, if you're pushing top ten in both AdjO and AdjD, you're good enough to win a title. If you are outside top 20 in one metric, the other had better be top 5 or you need to be UConn and have cut a deal with Satan to win nattys against all statistical probability.
For Arizona, which we care about most, if we keep our current metrics, they're natty level.
I mean i don't know how this disproves or disagrees with what I posted about top 10 offense/defense teams.
Arizona has had top 20 in both recently (supposed championship territory) and not won a championship let alone made a F4. There's always multiple teams every year that reach the metrics minimum who don't win, just one does.
Top 20 in offense/defense doesn't guarantee it, and neither does top 10. Like I said, I'd rather be top 3 and elite in one category and top 12-15 in the other.
The Villanova or North Carolina model (if I can't be top 3-5 in both which is the best possible scenario)