HuskyNan
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Up to 6. Sorry about the ad, I couldn’t get rid of it. AP Top 25 Women's College Basketball Poll | AP News
Goes to show the writers were enamored with Iowa's great run to finish the season. Now that they couldn't add to the, "What have you done for me lately?" scenario, they get dropped in the polls. What else would you expect?Indiana loses in their conference tournament and goes up a spot. Iowa wins their conference tournament and goes down a spot.
You saw the same old TN and ND in the seeding though. No way Tennessee should have been a host with the dismal season they had.I would say that it’s refreshing to see Indiana and Iowa at the number 2 and 3 spot rather than say off the top of my head same old same old TN and ND
FWIW, Jeff Linder of the Cedar Rapids, Iowa Gazette does a PHENOMENAL job of covering Iowa Girls High School basketball. They have 5 classes and he's on top of all of them: puts out next season predictions after the state tournament, predicts regional pairings for EVERY team as the season winds down, etc. Really puts in a lot of work. Happy to see someone like him agrees with me: I have UConn at #2 as well!Folks, the AP Women's basketball poll has evolved quite a bit since Mel Greenberg of the Philadelphia Inquirer started it way back in the late 1970s, and unfortunately, not all for the better. While many of the voters perform due diligence in their weekly analysis and review, there are a handful of voters who pander to their readership constituency and adjust their votes accordingly to appease their base. This results in anomalies, usually manifesting themselves towards the bottom of the poll (to include "Others receiving votes"), or in gigantic voting swings from week-to-week. For example, Maggie Hendricks, from Bally Sports out of Las Vegas raised Arizona a full 10 spots on her ballot this week (from #24 to #14) even though Arizona lost its last three games - go figure!
In contrast, the three AP voters with ties to UConn (Carl Adamec, Roger Cleveland and Rebecca Lobo) almost never have large vote swings, and one could argue that they seem to go out of their way to avoid the appearance of bias. This week, for instance they slotted UConn into #4 (Adamec and Cleveland) and #7 (Lobo), which all seem rational at face value.
From week to week it is fascinating to watch how different AP voters react to UConn. Right now, we have a vote range from #2 (one voter, Jeff Linder from the Cedar Rapids Gazette in Iowa (who by the way, dropped Iowa two slots to #4)) all the way to #9 (two voters, Kevin Tresolini from Delawareonline (who actually moved the Huskies down two spots this week!) and the aforementioned Maggie Hendricks). The other 27 voters fall out as follows: #4 (four voters), #5 (5 voters), #6 (4 voters), #7 (8 voters) and #8 (six voters). Quite a spread!
My takeaway? When I was a kid, the AP and UPI polls were gospel. Of course, everything has evolved over the past half century, and yet I foolishly keep holding onto the notion of journalistic integrity, which is what drives me to analyze voting patterns from week to week across the AP voters. Fortunately - at least by my assessment - the majority of AP voters show a consistency, which I I like to think of as a critical component of journalistic integrity. That being said, I don't put much stock in the results of the polls. To me, they are more of a weather vane showing media (or coaching) sentiment towards the teams I want to follow. I won't lose sleep over them!
Go Huskies!
Time to get rid of the polls. It's clear they're nothing more than popularity contests. People literally just voting their favorite teams, so if no one is taking these things seriously, then they serve no purpose.I prefer to explore the individual voting to see which voters just flew in from Mars. One of the esteemed media members moved LSU up 5 places from their previous spot That same voter sent Virginia Tech tumbling 4 spots. Another voter moved LSU up 6 places to third, raised ND up a spot (ignoring injuries) and send UConn down 2 places to ninth on their ballot. That individual has consistently low-balled UConn all season and that person’s voting is considered anything but objective. The last one I will mention is the voter who moved LSU up four spots and cratered out Villanova down 8 spots to eighteenth. There are plenty more examples if anyone wants to check it out.
I just read YKCornelius’ post before submitting this post. Everything he reported is accurate and he said it better than I did.
That’s the one, besides UConn, that jumped out at me. What are the AP writers smoking?Indiana loses in their conference tournament and goes up a spot. Iowa wins their conference tournament and goes down a spot.